Forum Replies Created
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DWCAP
ParticipantAugust is summer recess for congress, and health care is drowning out everything else in the media. Dont worry, I am sure congress will pay off the bribes of the RE industry with tax payer dollars in October.
DWCAP
ParticipantNot in the tech world, so cant comment specifically to the OP and why he has trouble finding the tallent he needs. But one line really got me.
“Why are you going to do this on our dime?”
Have you not allocated any dimes to continuing eduction, personal training, or something similar? None? Really? You want someone who can walk into a company, in what I am understanding is a very limited/new/hot/diverse market, and do everything perfectly from day one? Seriously? I am not a tech/computer guy, but I doubt you’ll ever find that.
Sounds more like a budgeting/expecations problem than a talent problem. Maybe your job is differnt FLU, but just about any other one I have ever heard of expects a learning curve for new hires.
DWCAP
ParticipantNot in the tech world, so cant comment specifically to the OP and why he has trouble finding the tallent he needs. But one line really got me.
“Why are you going to do this on our dime?”
Have you not allocated any dimes to continuing eduction, personal training, or something similar? None? Really? You want someone who can walk into a company, in what I am understanding is a very limited/new/hot/diverse market, and do everything perfectly from day one? Seriously? I am not a tech/computer guy, but I doubt you’ll ever find that.
Sounds more like a budgeting/expecations problem than a talent problem. Maybe your job is differnt FLU, but just about any other one I have ever heard of expects a learning curve for new hires.
DWCAP
ParticipantNot in the tech world, so cant comment specifically to the OP and why he has trouble finding the tallent he needs. But one line really got me.
“Why are you going to do this on our dime?”
Have you not allocated any dimes to continuing eduction, personal training, or something similar? None? Really? You want someone who can walk into a company, in what I am understanding is a very limited/new/hot/diverse market, and do everything perfectly from day one? Seriously? I am not a tech/computer guy, but I doubt you’ll ever find that.
Sounds more like a budgeting/expecations problem than a talent problem. Maybe your job is differnt FLU, but just about any other one I have ever heard of expects a learning curve for new hires.
DWCAP
ParticipantNot in the tech world, so cant comment specifically to the OP and why he has trouble finding the tallent he needs. But one line really got me.
“Why are you going to do this on our dime?”
Have you not allocated any dimes to continuing eduction, personal training, or something similar? None? Really? You want someone who can walk into a company, in what I am understanding is a very limited/new/hot/diverse market, and do everything perfectly from day one? Seriously? I am not a tech/computer guy, but I doubt you’ll ever find that.
Sounds more like a budgeting/expecations problem than a talent problem. Maybe your job is differnt FLU, but just about any other one I have ever heard of expects a learning curve for new hires.
DWCAP
ParticipantNot in the tech world, so cant comment specifically to the OP and why he has trouble finding the tallent he needs. But one line really got me.
“Why are you going to do this on our dime?”
Have you not allocated any dimes to continuing eduction, personal training, or something similar? None? Really? You want someone who can walk into a company, in what I am understanding is a very limited/new/hot/diverse market, and do everything perfectly from day one? Seriously? I am not a tech/computer guy, but I doubt you’ll ever find that.
Sounds more like a budgeting/expecations problem than a talent problem. Maybe your job is differnt FLU, but just about any other one I have ever heard of expects a learning curve for new hires.
DWCAP
ParticipantI must not get it, but I dont understand why that article was so bad. So the recession is ending, when you define recession as simply a decreasing GDP, and recovery as a not decreasing GPD. Techincally, considering the unpressidented amounts of money spent/printed in the past 12 months, it shouldnt be suprising that GDP is rising. Cash 4 clunkers made alot of people go out and buy a car, raising GDP. 3.5% FHA loans induce people to buy houses, especially when that 3.5% came from a tax rebate for buying that house. Billions were lost saving the automakers, and AIG, and a few banks (though that will be interesting to see in the end how much we lose). And those billions are circling the economy, slowly, making people buy/spend.
That is all the article was about. The Federal reserve is reporting that GDP is no longer declining, the techinical definition of an end of a recession.
Now I (and alot of other people) think this is the upward slope of a W recession, as consumer spending is still down, consumer credit is still contracting and at a higher rate (ie no consumption rebound) and techinical factors like inventory stocking for the Xmas season end in January. Especially when this Xmas season is gonna suck for alot of retailers.With all the cash the government has flooded the economy with, it shouldnt be a suprise we see a ‘calming of the waters’ for a while. Shouldnt the media report that? Even if anyone who is paying attention with more than a kindergarden education knows that the level of intervention it took to get this isnt sustainable.
DWCAP
ParticipantI must not get it, but I dont understand why that article was so bad. So the recession is ending, when you define recession as simply a decreasing GDP, and recovery as a not decreasing GPD. Techincally, considering the unpressidented amounts of money spent/printed in the past 12 months, it shouldnt be suprising that GDP is rising. Cash 4 clunkers made alot of people go out and buy a car, raising GDP. 3.5% FHA loans induce people to buy houses, especially when that 3.5% came from a tax rebate for buying that house. Billions were lost saving the automakers, and AIG, and a few banks (though that will be interesting to see in the end how much we lose). And those billions are circling the economy, slowly, making people buy/spend.
That is all the article was about. The Federal reserve is reporting that GDP is no longer declining, the techinical definition of an end of a recession.
Now I (and alot of other people) think this is the upward slope of a W recession, as consumer spending is still down, consumer credit is still contracting and at a higher rate (ie no consumption rebound) and techinical factors like inventory stocking for the Xmas season end in January. Especially when this Xmas season is gonna suck for alot of retailers.With all the cash the government has flooded the economy with, it shouldnt be a suprise we see a ‘calming of the waters’ for a while. Shouldnt the media report that? Even if anyone who is paying attention with more than a kindergarden education knows that the level of intervention it took to get this isnt sustainable.
DWCAP
ParticipantI must not get it, but I dont understand why that article was so bad. So the recession is ending, when you define recession as simply a decreasing GDP, and recovery as a not decreasing GPD. Techincally, considering the unpressidented amounts of money spent/printed in the past 12 months, it shouldnt be suprising that GDP is rising. Cash 4 clunkers made alot of people go out and buy a car, raising GDP. 3.5% FHA loans induce people to buy houses, especially when that 3.5% came from a tax rebate for buying that house. Billions were lost saving the automakers, and AIG, and a few banks (though that will be interesting to see in the end how much we lose). And those billions are circling the economy, slowly, making people buy/spend.
That is all the article was about. The Federal reserve is reporting that GDP is no longer declining, the techinical definition of an end of a recession.
Now I (and alot of other people) think this is the upward slope of a W recession, as consumer spending is still down, consumer credit is still contracting and at a higher rate (ie no consumption rebound) and techinical factors like inventory stocking for the Xmas season end in January. Especially when this Xmas season is gonna suck for alot of retailers.With all the cash the government has flooded the economy with, it shouldnt be a suprise we see a ‘calming of the waters’ for a while. Shouldnt the media report that? Even if anyone who is paying attention with more than a kindergarden education knows that the level of intervention it took to get this isnt sustainable.
DWCAP
ParticipantI must not get it, but I dont understand why that article was so bad. So the recession is ending, when you define recession as simply a decreasing GDP, and recovery as a not decreasing GPD. Techincally, considering the unpressidented amounts of money spent/printed in the past 12 months, it shouldnt be suprising that GDP is rising. Cash 4 clunkers made alot of people go out and buy a car, raising GDP. 3.5% FHA loans induce people to buy houses, especially when that 3.5% came from a tax rebate for buying that house. Billions were lost saving the automakers, and AIG, and a few banks (though that will be interesting to see in the end how much we lose). And those billions are circling the economy, slowly, making people buy/spend.
That is all the article was about. The Federal reserve is reporting that GDP is no longer declining, the techinical definition of an end of a recession.
Now I (and alot of other people) think this is the upward slope of a W recession, as consumer spending is still down, consumer credit is still contracting and at a higher rate (ie no consumption rebound) and techinical factors like inventory stocking for the Xmas season end in January. Especially when this Xmas season is gonna suck for alot of retailers.With all the cash the government has flooded the economy with, it shouldnt be a suprise we see a ‘calming of the waters’ for a while. Shouldnt the media report that? Even if anyone who is paying attention with more than a kindergarden education knows that the level of intervention it took to get this isnt sustainable.
DWCAP
ParticipantI must not get it, but I dont understand why that article was so bad. So the recession is ending, when you define recession as simply a decreasing GDP, and recovery as a not decreasing GPD. Techincally, considering the unpressidented amounts of money spent/printed in the past 12 months, it shouldnt be suprising that GDP is rising. Cash 4 clunkers made alot of people go out and buy a car, raising GDP. 3.5% FHA loans induce people to buy houses, especially when that 3.5% came from a tax rebate for buying that house. Billions were lost saving the automakers, and AIG, and a few banks (though that will be interesting to see in the end how much we lose). And those billions are circling the economy, slowly, making people buy/spend.
That is all the article was about. The Federal reserve is reporting that GDP is no longer declining, the techinical definition of an end of a recession.
Now I (and alot of other people) think this is the upward slope of a W recession, as consumer spending is still down, consumer credit is still contracting and at a higher rate (ie no consumption rebound) and techinical factors like inventory stocking for the Xmas season end in January. Especially when this Xmas season is gonna suck for alot of retailers.With all the cash the government has flooded the economy with, it shouldnt be a suprise we see a ‘calming of the waters’ for a while. Shouldnt the media report that? Even if anyone who is paying attention with more than a kindergarden education knows that the level of intervention it took to get this isnt sustainable.
DWCAP
ParticipantAs for the employees trying to get an increase in their pensions, did they ever stop? DO they ever stop? Boom/recession/depression/bankrupcy, I think we can add another item to the list of things that are unavoidable. Death, taxes, and perpulatly increaseing public pensions.
DWCAP
ParticipantAs for the employees trying to get an increase in their pensions, did they ever stop? DO they ever stop? Boom/recession/depression/bankrupcy, I think we can add another item to the list of things that are unavoidable. Death, taxes, and perpulatly increaseing public pensions.
DWCAP
ParticipantAs for the employees trying to get an increase in their pensions, did they ever stop? DO they ever stop? Boom/recession/depression/bankrupcy, I think we can add another item to the list of things that are unavoidable. Death, taxes, and perpulatly increaseing public pensions.
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