Posted on 12/30/2016 12:07:12 PM PST by Indy Pendance
Mike Rowe has been known to speak his mind on several issues here in America. However, his most recent outburst is a result of the suffering job market, and he explained exactly why its been happening with one blunt word that will undoubtedly infuriate liberals.
The American job market has been suffering for years. There are many people out of work, unable to make ends meet. However, former host of Dirty Jobs, Mike Rowe, recently exposed why our countrys job market is suffering, and he did it with one brutal word that has gotten whiny libs infuriated all because the truth hurts.
Rowe admitted that the U.S. job market is suffering not for lack of opportunity, but because American workers are just spoiled. If weve learned anything from the events following this years presidential election, its that there are many whiny, entitled, brats roaming our nation.
According to Young Cons, Rowe recalled that he kept hearing reports of joblessness across the country. However, when he would go perform dirty, blue-collar work for his television program, he would often see help wanted signs along the way, indicating that there are blue collar positions available everywhere theyre just not the jobs people think they deserve.
According to The Blaze, there are nearly 100 million people not in the labor force today. Sadly, many of these entitled brats could land themselves a well-paying blue collar job anywhere across America, but because they feel they are more qualified or deserve a white collar job, they would rather collect unemployment or merely be unpaid than to accept a blue collar position. They want to get paid good money, but they want to do it without getting their hands dirty.
Clearly, America has a growing problem: entitlement. When your family is suffering, you do whatever it takes to get food on the table and pay your bills even if it means accepting a dirty job when youve previously been in positions higher up on the corporate ladder. Personally, the people who work these blue collar jobs are the people who keep America thriving, and if a few more people got their hands dirty, our country could quite possibly be in a completely different situation.
What makes you think he didn’t ? Nothing in the post said he was offering low wages.
The article also doesn’t pertain to low wages, but that too many people don’t even INQUIRE about blue collar jobs because they see it as beneath them. There might be jobs out there paying $100/hr to shovel manure, but these people wouldn’t know because they are afraid of manual labor or “low class” work.
It is silly. The people in my neighborhood who had the boats and jetskis in the driveway were plumbers and construction workers. Toys I could never afford as a six figure IT manager. Of course, the IRS KNEW about all of my income and helped themselves to half of it ...
True. College is not for everyone, and state schools should not even be offering courses that have no employment value. Unfortunately, even those who pursue rigorous degrees in science and engineering find employers favor H1B visa holders.
H1B visas should have a $500,000 fee attached to them so that they are only used by employers that REALLY cannot find American talent, not as a way to undercut wages for American talent. And when employers open offices overseas instead, charge them the visa cost anyway for those workers.
“Salary surveys” are a double-edged sword. As an IT manager, I used them to be sure my people were being paid competitively to pre-empt them leaving. Unfortunately, when there has been a history of employers successfully filling jobs at a low wage, that appears in salary surveys and employers are loath to “overpay” regardless of how much trouble they are having in filling a position. Especially, if they have a large group of existing employees working for the lower wage, they can’t justify hiring someone new at more than they are paying those existing employees.
Our welfare state has a lot to do with this.
I want to see the feds move in and confiscate a McDonalds, jail the illegals for using stolen social security numbers and for other crimes, jail the managers, and sell the store at auction causing the bank to lose their investment. THAT would make a significant difference.
We don’t need more laws, just enforce the ones we already have.
I see those cranes towering hundreds of feet above Manhattan and I believe they earn every penny of it too.
Have you lived in Wheaton long?
wheaton is about 5 minutes away. I’ve lived where I am at since 1990. Worked 10 minutes from here from 84-94.
I grew up there. Left in 1986. I still have some family there, but they know I don’t do well in that environment, both the overcast cold winters/ hot and humid summers, or the densely packed suburban situation, so I haven’t been back in many years now. It was VERY good to me during the building boom of the Reagan era as I was a carpenter, building many of those expensive homes, taking part in all the development of what used to be farm fields and small forests.
After going to the link you provided listing job openings, I wondered how someone could afford to live there on such low wages. I have a cousin who still lives in the area, so I asked him his thoughts on such. Here’s his reply:
“Illinois has the highest real estate taxes in the country. It’s a fiscal disaster and gets worse every year. The state debt grows exponentially each year to the point where I think they’ll have to declare bankruptcy, whatever that means. Whatever happened to Greece, I don’t remember.? Anyway, Illinois is Greece.”
“I think the under 30 crowd has seen the lunacy of the materialistic, must-have-more-even-at-the-cost-of-crushing-debt mindset. My kids have that’s for sure. None have television, all would rather put that monthly expense into an investment fund and forego spending now for a much larger return later. If you were smart with your money I think you could survive on a warehouse job here. Wouldn’t be easy and you’d only be “surviving”.”
“Downtown Wheaton has become a mess, in my opinion. That means that every attempt has been made to appeal to every interest. Therefore it looks nothing like it did even 20 years ago.
There’s like 30 restaurants, Starbucks, trendy hipster snack bars, stupid curio shops,... To be downtown Wheaton stresses me out as everyone stomps around angrily and in a hurry to get to their destination. It’s like everyone came to this quaint suburban to get away from the city and now it has all the features they were running from. I paint a dark picture but my reference point goes back many years. Someone whose experience begins only 10 years ago would think I’m insane.”
“There’s a train every fifteen minutes through downtown Wheaton so you will always get stuck at the crossing. There’s so many people that it’s hard to park. They’ve built what I call the world’s ugliest building, a five story junkball Apartments building. It is literally a piece of crap. I watched it go up and observed the cheap materials used, it’s hideous. I can’t overstate what an eyesore it is. But you know what? It’s seen as THE place to live. It’s called Wheaton 121. So now if you are a mal-adjusted, unfriendly, urban, psychotic, materialistic, Chicagoan and want to escape - you can join other like-minded people and move to Wheaton!”
“There’s now a homeless shelter where you can get three hots and a cot. During the day you can take up prime seating on the only two beaches on Main Street. Fuck the old ladies that need to rest for a moment, I need to stretch out here and sleep!”
“I’m ranting now.”
“I have a lot of wonderful memories of downtown Wheaton and it’s hard for me to see the changes, as you can tell. But then again the entire world has changed in these same ways.”
The day following that response, he happened to be in downtown Wheaton and started sending me photos of all the remodeled buildings with new businesses that took the place of what once were sort of ‘landmarks’. I can recognize the streets and all, but it seems I don’t know the town I grew up in.
I remember when the Wheaton Center apartment building went up, and how very few people liked it. He sent photos of that “121” building, and I have to agree with him how very ugly it is.
I’m thankful that I was raised there, but I’m even more grateful that I don’t live there anymore. The opportunity to make plenty of money in that area is high, but I much prefer living rural, the trade off being few and much lower paying jobs.
Wheaton area certainly isn’t typical of most the rest of the country, job wise. I speak with my mother, who still lives there, and she really does believe the fake news about what a great recovery the nation is in, and if all a person could see of the nation was just that area, I can see why she thinks that.
Oh well. Yesterday was sort of a trip down memory lane for me, looking at all the photos and the memories they conjured up.
Hope you have a happy new year!
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