The job market is really pissing me off.

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ck_taft325is
    replied
    Originally posted by rwh11385
    I don't think someone's contribution to society is reflected solely by their income. Take K-12 teachers who are not well paid but greatly important. Their influence is immeasurable, but because there's a supply and demand at hand and many people can do it (TFA, etc.) they cannot bring in that much. If the job isn't that fun, then there is a premium to encourage a healthy supply of labor. A unique desire to work in a field few others aim for could mean a great reward doing something you enjoy. But popular careers can weigh down the income because of people wanting to do it, or more are capable of doing it. That doesn't mean the contribution is less valuable to society because more people enjoy the work they do.

    A bit long winded there, but I agree! ;)

    With my company work is slow because work is slow. Construction always has seasons. Always has. Always will, probably. Having been an Electrician apprentice for almost two years and watching the work ebb off, it is in large part due to the economy. Just the way it is. Their (Electrician company I worked for) clients of 20+ years started bid shopping. Not because we were high priced or gouging them, just because they were told to by their bosses and their bosses, bosses.

    As it stands, I started a company. I know taxes are too high. It's a fact and reality. They are going higher. This is a direct result of Government taking what's not theirs. I'll be fine, but I'm having to pass a lot (I mean, A LOT) of costs onto clients. Hell, 3 out of 5 people don't realize that there's sales tax on the work I do and they have to pay it. I've lost 3 bids in the past month because they thought it was a "bogus" charge. It's not cheap and the more work (bigger the job) the more that sales tax is. Most people come into a job they want done (remodel etc) with just enough to cover it. Throw the tax on a $10,000 job and suddenly you realize you just don't have the overhead.

    Can anyone do my job? Yes, sure they could. Could everyone do my job right? No. Of course they can't. Could they do my job for less with the quality of work? Maybe, but where experience comes in it can literally, I shit you not, save thousands of dollers.

    Leave a comment:


  • bimmer_E30
    replied
    hmmm what can i say? because of this economy i am driving a civic now.

    Leave a comment:


  • rwh11385
    replied
    I don't think someone's contribution to society is reflected solely by their income. Take K-12 teachers who are not well paid but greatly important. Their influence is immeasurable, but because there's a supply and demand at hand and many people can do it (TFA, etc.) they cannot bring in that much. If the job isn't that fun, then there is a premium to encourage a healthy supply of labor. A unique desire to work in a field few others aim for could mean a great reward doing something you enjoy. But popular careers can weigh down the income because of people wanting to do it, or more are capable of doing it. That doesn't mean the contribution is less valuable to society because more people enjoy the work they do.

    Speaking of which - I hope that this economy helps to underline for people in college to study something they enjoy and want to do, rather than looking at salary averages to determine what they want to do for 40+ years of their life.

    Once again, I also think the government should motivate people to fill gaps and areas of need more than they currently do. I know MI is retraining auto workers for chemical jobs, and that's a start. Everyone is running with their heads cutoff, and not really getting enough info on where they could go.

    Leave a comment:


  • ck_taft325is
    replied
    I think a point missing here is that Society and Monetary gain/income are not all that one can contribute to society. Sorry, it's not. There's an incredible amount more that's done by many I know under the $50,000 bracket.

    I don't think anyone is inherently wrong here, just different sides of the same elephant.

    Leave a comment:


  • z31maniac
    replied
    Originally posted by StereoInstaller1
    No, not even remotely true.

    In fact, I say value is value, and income is income. That is why there are 2 separate words for those 2 concepts.

    I would say that it is my opinion that income is what society has decided make a person have higher or lower value.

    That whole "Value to society" thing is why hot young bitches still fuck fat old men.
    I would say your value determines your income.

    2 concepts that are inter-related.

    Leave a comment:


  • ck_taft325is
    replied
    Originally posted by StereoInstaller1
    No, not even remotely true.

    In fact, I say value is value, and income is income. That is why there are 2 separate words for those 2 concepts.

    I would say that it is my opinion that income is what society has decided make a person have higher or lower value.

    That whole "Value to society" thing is why hot young bitches still fuck fat old men.

    I just can't see the flaw in Luke's logic on this one

    Leave a comment:


  • StereoInstaller1
    replied
    Originally posted by rwh11385
    Luke was the one equating income with value to society.
    No, not even remotely true.

    In fact, I say value is value, and income is income. That is why there are 2 separate words for those 2 concepts.

    I would say that it is my opinion that income is what society has decided make a person have higher or lower value.

    That whole "Value to society" thing is why hot young bitches still fuck fat old men.

    Leave a comment:


  • Hallen
    replied
    Originally posted by analogjesus
    I only read one line in you're post and would like to refute it:
    "This whole downturn is the fault of government intervention in the markets, as was the great depression"

    The Great Depression was a result of Margin-Buying. Where banks would invest stored money. This system eventually fell apart because the stocks reached prices that were absolutely absurd. Once the bubble burst the investments stopped paying, the banks lost the money that Americans entrusted them with. This caused a rush of Americans who wanted to withdraw their money. Basically the whole entire economy "froze up"

    I am not educated enough in the subject of the current recession to make a comment, but I don't think government intervention was the main cause. I think it had something to do with people taking out loans for more than they could actually afford, and mass foreclosures ensued.
    Your talking symptoms and results rather than causes. The stock market boom of the late 20's and 30's are exactly the same as the housing boom of the auts (you know, the first 10 years of this century). The 20's and 30's boom was caused by loose monetary supply by the Fed, just like the housing boom was fed by the same source. Of course, this latest thing was also fueled by really stupid regulations on housing mortgages, and by the lack of risk to banks because they knew they were "too big to fail" and would get bailed out if things went horribly wrong.
    Anyway, the great depression was caused by excessive amounts of money being put into the system. It had to go somewhere, so it got dumped into the market which created a feeding frenzy and perceived lack of risk. When the bubble burst, well, we know what happened.



    Originally posted by StereoInstaller1
    You are aware that plumbers make as much or more than Engineers, right?

    Kinda refutes your statements...if the income is the barometer, plumbers are certainly worth more to society, as they have basically similar incomes, are far more versatile in their choices of habitat (as in employment is EVERYWHERE) and are not limited by the size of the company/community plus their skillset requires far more adaptive thinking.

    All in all, were I forced to live in a place that basic infrastructure had collapsed (Tsunami, Earthquake, other major natural disasters, whatever) If I had a choice between casting my lot with an engineer or a plumber, I will take the plumber.
    I know this sounds arrogant and bigoted, but it's still true: the value you provide to society is represented by what you get paid. At least, that's how it should work if we actually had a free market. That value would change continually based off of the needs of society. I should also state that Society = the economomy; it's the same thing.

    Obviously, there are things that we value that has no price tag associated with it. Those things cannot be bought or owned so you must disregard them in this conversation (things like love and compassion and you mom) But, in all things that provide value, we must measure with a dollar amount since we can't measure it any other way.

    Do not confuse the value of the human being with the value they provide to society. They are two completely different things. So, a top fund manager, or a skilled engineer in a valuable field, are going to make lots more than a plumber. Why? Simple: the guy who can be that engineer could be a plumber, but most plumbers have no hope of ever being that engineer. Either because of intelligence or aptitude or attitude. Plumbers are great and we are all willing to pay them a good amount to come fix my broken pipes. They provide a ton of value. But not nearly as much as others. I can figure my own piping out, thanks very much (not very well, but well enough). I can't figure out how to make a computer from scratch. That's the difference. (plus, a plumber can only provide value to one person at a time. That engineer designs one widget that could be used by millions at the same time. He has much, much higher earning potential.)

    Anyway, it isn't personal, and it isn't about who is better than who. I'd much rather hang out with a plumber than a fund manager (the fund manger would smell too bad).

    Leave a comment:


  • drift
    replied
    Originally posted by joshh
    Jobs up here are screwed. I need something that's just part time and can't find shit.

    I keep seeing how things are getting better....definition of getting better= losing less jobs. Seriously.

    My wife just got a pay cut as well. Shit ain't looking good. And this Government is fucking it up more imo. I'm really getting pissed.

    Place your rants here ....
    How old are you?
    What's your primary skill, level of education & accomplishment ?
    Did you work for government or private company?
    How much did you make from your previous job(s)?
    How many job applications did you submit?
    How many interviews turned you down?
    How long have you been receiving unemployment benefit?
    How much you owe (anyone)?

    Leave a comment:


  • ck_taft325is
    replied
    Originally posted by rwh11385
    I read it, but it assumed I said things I didn't and was missed the point entirely. Volume does not equal to value.

    I don't think I was just replying to you.

    Leave a comment:


  • rwh11385
    replied
    Originally posted by ck_taft325is
    You obviously failed to read what I wrote since you think I type too much.

    Let me sum it up for you.

    I agree.

    Good?
    I read it, but it assumed I said things I didn't and was missed the point entirely. Volume does not equal to value.

    Some people in the world are simple and only consider what they can see in front of them or what directly impacts them. Ignoring engineers' contribution to society because you don't observe it is like thanking the deli guy for your meat and withholding any acknowledgement of the hardwork of the cattleman.

    Leave a comment:


  • Farbin Kaiber
    replied
    ^ Now you are getting it.

    Leave a comment:


  • ck_taft325is
    replied
    Originally posted by rwh11385
    ck_taft325is, you type too much.

    I was disagreeing that engineers are not practical because they are thinkers, and the world is more benefited by someone with a pipe wrench that can fix your toilet. Every time you go to fill up your car with gasoline (which I assume people are familiar with being on a car enthusiast website), that is made possible by chemical engineers. Surely not as obvious as your toilet flushing but if you are too narrow-minded to see how they influence you... then that is your problem.

    Luke was the one equating income with value to society.

    And plumbers can make a stable, relocatable salary since they are needed everywhere and regularly, but a few outliers who do well doesn't justify previous statements that they do better in general than engineers. The law of averages have most plumbers making less than what engineers pull fresh out of college working 40 a week or 8/90 with paid holidays and vacation, 4% match 401k, etc. There are merits of a technical profession, but its contributions to society no matter how obvious do not trump those of engineers just because you are somewhat "disconnected" at times from their impact.

    You obviously failed to read what I wrote since you think I type too much.

    Let me sum it up for you.

    I agree.

    Good?

    Leave a comment:


  • rwh11385
    replied
    ck_taft325is, you type too much.

    I was disagreeing that engineers are not practical because they are thinkers, and the world is more benefited by someone with a pipe wrench that can fix your toilet. Every time you go to fill up your car with gasoline (which I assume people are familiar with being on a car enthusiast website), that is made possible by chemical engineers. Surely not as obvious as your toilet flushing but if you are too narrow-minded to see how they influence you... then that is your problem.

    Luke was the one equating income with value to society.

    And plumbers can make a stable, relocatable salary since they are needed everywhere and regularly, but a few outliers who do well doesn't justify previous statements that they do better in general than engineers. The law of averages have most plumbers making less than what engineers pull fresh out of college working 40 a week or 8/90 with paid holidays and vacation, 4% match 401k, etc. There are merits of a technical profession, but its contributions to society no matter how obvious do not trump those of engineers just because you are somewhat "disconnected" at times from their impact.

    Originally posted by StereoInstaller1
    You are aware that plumbers make as much or more than Engineers, right?

    Kinda refutes your statements...if the income is the barometer, plumbers are certainly worth more to society, as they have basically similar incomes, are far more versatile in their choices of habitat (as in employment is EVERYWHERE)
    Last edited by rwh11385; 04-03-2010, 12:27 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Farbin Kaiber
    replied
    Look I already told you, I deal with the @#$% customers so the engineers don't have to. I have people skills! I am good at dealing with people, can't you understand that? WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH YOU PEOPLE?!

    Leave a comment:

Working...