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well, we know that there are actually plenty of jobs out there, ready for takers at pretty much any time.
but then again, many people prefer unemployment to taking these jobs, which they consider to be beneath them.
i write this as i read an article about how despite California's ridiculously high unemployment rate, San Diego manufacturers just can't find any workers
Are the manufacturers advertising their location or positions? Are they paying a wage that supports California rents?
That kind of reminds me how South GA farmers claim they can't find anyone or anyone good enough to work their fields. In the article they are attributed as random farmer.
well, we know that there are actually plenty of jobs out there, ready for takers at pretty much any time.
but then again, many people prefer unemployment to taking these jobs, which they consider to be beneath them.
i write this as i read an article about how despite California's ridiculously high unemployment rate, San Diego manufacturers just can't find any workers
These types of manufacturing jobs require thinkers... Last I checked, those people were all working on their finance degrees...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Music1812
Don't know if this is the article referenced by tomadwood86, but it might be:
After reading the article, I was surprised to read their estimate that 40% of manufacturing jobs will require post-secondary education. How can anyone say that when many people go to college so they don't have to work in a factory? These places are often hot, noisy, sometimes dirty... Is that any place anyone want's to hang their degree?
No doubt about it, if this country is still going to be a leader in manufacturing (number #1 still today), there will be a critical shortage of workers. Nearly 60% of the current workforce is going to be retiring in the next decade. These companies are either going to have to up the entry level wages, or bring back the apprenticeship programs like the old days. Work 8 hours a day and attend classes at night.
These jobs available are not just repetitive, brainless work anymore. You can't just take a highschool kid and plop him in front of a half a million dollar machine, or three at the same time for that matter, and expect to make some money. With unemployment so high in this country, it's ironic that the sector that made this country rich can't seem to find workers with mechanical aptitude and/or brains...
That article says that those manufacturers are having a hard time finding employees with the "required skill sets" they are looking for... not that there aren't many people who want those jobs.
So that article is not about people who "prefer to be unemployed" as tomadwoods suggests.
well, we know that there are actually plenty of jobs out there, ready for takers at pretty much any time.
but then again, many people prefer unemployment to taking these jobs, which they consider to be beneath them.
i write this as i read an article about how despite California's ridiculously high unemployment rate, San Diego manufacturers just can't find any workers
You obviously haven't been out of work in the last 2 years.
Having been in manufacturing over 30+ years, plants who constantly complain they can not find decent workers is because they do not pay a decent wage and most likely do not provide benefits of any sort.
He is an M.D. in Psychiatry. He is a paraplegic from a diving accident his first year of med school. Spent a year in hospital while continuing his medical studies. Some of his political views are conservative but is mostly liberal on social issues.
I've been looked at as liberal from my extreme neo-conservative peers (I live in Florida) but how else couldn't I with them being so entrenched to one side? haha
But I've learned I am very conservative in a lot of areas like belief in small government, states rights, freedom of business practices, right of arms etc. The reason these things fell to the waste side is people just abused the hell out of them and totally threw morals out the window business wise (neo-cons. in big business) just look at how big the Bush gov't was. Obama is obviously all for huge gov't so nothing to say there, we already know. Liberals tend to believe in the babysitter ideology which is just asking for financial problems like we see ourselves in right now. ala "Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime."
I like the conservative view on a strong family unit. Which is totally lost these days.
I just don't get into politics because It is such a worthless/unworthy game IMO. There's always going to be chaos and with such extreme oppositions the only ways people will work together is in times of serious crisis. Which is pitiful but reality here. I do like to discuss it with people though (which being in Florida, NO ONE likes to talk politics, HUGE taboo. They blindly participate but don't discuss it which is hilarious to me.)
But yeah, thanks for pointing this guy out, smart dude, although I disagree with his foreign policy some.
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