Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
meadandale
Participant[quote=Eugene][quote]With the unemployment rate over %12 in Klownifornia, exactly where in the private sector are these people highly sought after?[/quote]
The unemployment rate is over 12% for people without college degrees. December ’09 (nationwide) unemployment rate for people with bachelors’ degrees was 4.7%.
Everyone’s ire is understandable, but, with the city economy as bad as it is, last thing we need is incompetent leadership. And that’s what we’ll get if we try to squeeze their salaries. I’m sure that Sanders has enough connections that he can quit his job any day and jump directly into a higher management position of some private company, on a 200k+ salary.[/quote]
He’s welcome to go…and leave his pension behind.
meadandale
Participant[quote=Eugene][quote]With the unemployment rate over %12 in Klownifornia, exactly where in the private sector are these people highly sought after?[/quote]
The unemployment rate is over 12% for people without college degrees. December ’09 (nationwide) unemployment rate for people with bachelors’ degrees was 4.7%.
Everyone’s ire is understandable, but, with the city economy as bad as it is, last thing we need is incompetent leadership. And that’s what we’ll get if we try to squeeze their salaries. I’m sure that Sanders has enough connections that he can quit his job any day and jump directly into a higher management position of some private company, on a 200k+ salary.[/quote]
He’s welcome to go…and leave his pension behind.
meadandale
Participant[quote=Eugene][quote]With the unemployment rate over %12 in Klownifornia, exactly where in the private sector are these people highly sought after?[/quote]
The unemployment rate is over 12% for people without college degrees. December ’09 (nationwide) unemployment rate for people with bachelors’ degrees was 4.7%.
Everyone’s ire is understandable, but, with the city economy as bad as it is, last thing we need is incompetent leadership. And that’s what we’ll get if we try to squeeze their salaries. I’m sure that Sanders has enough connections that he can quit his job any day and jump directly into a higher management position of some private company, on a 200k+ salary.[/quote]
He’s welcome to go…and leave his pension behind.
meadandale
Participant[quote=jpinpb]
“At current salary levels, all well-qualified candidates must either have independent sources of income, or be willing to live on an income far below what their skills and experience would likely command in the market place”[/quote]With the unemployment rate over %12 in Klownifornia, exactly where in the private sector are these people highly sought after?
Oh, and considering that they get lifetime pensions with medical, even for serving part of a term, they don’t deserve anything close to private sector salaries.
Even after getting convicted for his role in the pension scandal, Michael Zucchet is getting a taxpayer funded pension payment…for life.
meadandale
Participant[quote=jpinpb]
“At current salary levels, all well-qualified candidates must either have independent sources of income, or be willing to live on an income far below what their skills and experience would likely command in the market place”[/quote]With the unemployment rate over %12 in Klownifornia, exactly where in the private sector are these people highly sought after?
Oh, and considering that they get lifetime pensions with medical, even for serving part of a term, they don’t deserve anything close to private sector salaries.
Even after getting convicted for his role in the pension scandal, Michael Zucchet is getting a taxpayer funded pension payment…for life.
meadandale
Participant[quote=jpinpb]
“At current salary levels, all well-qualified candidates must either have independent sources of income, or be willing to live on an income far below what their skills and experience would likely command in the market place”[/quote]With the unemployment rate over %12 in Klownifornia, exactly where in the private sector are these people highly sought after?
Oh, and considering that they get lifetime pensions with medical, even for serving part of a term, they don’t deserve anything close to private sector salaries.
Even after getting convicted for his role in the pension scandal, Michael Zucchet is getting a taxpayer funded pension payment…for life.
meadandale
Participant[quote=jpinpb]
“At current salary levels, all well-qualified candidates must either have independent sources of income, or be willing to live on an income far below what their skills and experience would likely command in the market place”[/quote]With the unemployment rate over %12 in Klownifornia, exactly where in the private sector are these people highly sought after?
Oh, and considering that they get lifetime pensions with medical, even for serving part of a term, they don’t deserve anything close to private sector salaries.
Even after getting convicted for his role in the pension scandal, Michael Zucchet is getting a taxpayer funded pension payment…for life.
meadandale
Participant[quote=jpinpb]
“At current salary levels, all well-qualified candidates must either have independent sources of income, or be willing to live on an income far below what their skills and experience would likely command in the market place”[/quote]With the unemployment rate over %12 in Klownifornia, exactly where in the private sector are these people highly sought after?
Oh, and considering that they get lifetime pensions with medical, even for serving part of a term, they don’t deserve anything close to private sector salaries.
Even after getting convicted for his role in the pension scandal, Michael Zucchet is getting a taxpayer funded pension payment…for life.
meadandale
Participant[quote=briansd1]
I still think that Toyota makes superior products.
Look at the new Prius. The stamping and body work on that car are beautiful. The creases on the metal are perfectly executed. Compare that to a round, bulbous Ford.[/quote]
Yeah, cause you are gonna care about style and all that green bullshit when the accelerator is stuck and you crach into a ditch on the side of the road.
You have your priorities straight, that’s for sure.
meadandale
Participant[quote=briansd1]
I still think that Toyota makes superior products.
Look at the new Prius. The stamping and body work on that car are beautiful. The creases on the metal are perfectly executed. Compare that to a round, bulbous Ford.[/quote]
Yeah, cause you are gonna care about style and all that green bullshit when the accelerator is stuck and you crach into a ditch on the side of the road.
You have your priorities straight, that’s for sure.
meadandale
Participant[quote=briansd1]
I still think that Toyota makes superior products.
Look at the new Prius. The stamping and body work on that car are beautiful. The creases on the metal are perfectly executed. Compare that to a round, bulbous Ford.[/quote]
Yeah, cause you are gonna care about style and all that green bullshit when the accelerator is stuck and you crach into a ditch on the side of the road.
You have your priorities straight, that’s for sure.
meadandale
Participant[quote=briansd1]
I still think that Toyota makes superior products.
Look at the new Prius. The stamping and body work on that car are beautiful. The creases on the metal are perfectly executed. Compare that to a round, bulbous Ford.[/quote]
Yeah, cause you are gonna care about style and all that green bullshit when the accelerator is stuck and you crach into a ditch on the side of the road.
You have your priorities straight, that’s for sure.
meadandale
Participant[quote=briansd1]
I still think that Toyota makes superior products.
Look at the new Prius. The stamping and body work on that car are beautiful. The creases on the metal are perfectly executed. Compare that to a round, bulbous Ford.[/quote]
Yeah, cause you are gonna care about style and all that green bullshit when the accelerator is stuck and you crach into a ditch on the side of the road.
You have your priorities straight, that’s for sure.
meadandale
Participant[quote=briansd1]
Remember that the current bailout was a Bush-Paulson-Bernanke-Geithner creation. The AIG giveaway to the French bank, SocGen, was a Republican deal.If you don’t like the bailout, you should punish Republican lawmakers first.[/quote]
First of all, your President and his Democratically controlled congress threw good money after bad and passed the almost $800 billion stimulus plan…despite enormous Republican opposition.
Geitner is Obama’s Treasury Secretary…you can’t blame him on Bush.
And I’ll certainly hold any Republicans responsible who voted for either the stimulus OR the bank bailouts.
Sadly, it is obvious that you will do nothing of the sort.
-
AuthorPosts
