Posted on 12/30/2018 6:14:10 AM PST by Galatians328
A new data analysis by ProPublica and the Urban Institute shows more than half of older U.S. workers are pushed out of longtime jobs before they choose to retire, suffering financial damage that is often irreversible.
(Excerpt) Read more at propublica.org ...
Curious, what writing service did you use?
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Go Resume. Not very expensive and has proven its worth over and over. I work serial contract jobs, so just one good hit is not enough; I need repeat and new business all the time.
I find the new style of resumes obnoxious. They are barely literate, are boastfully extreme, and stuffed with buzzwords, but most are initially screened by computers so the awkward new style does work.
If someone finds themselves stalled out while shopping a classic resume around, Id advise them to give such services a try.
Thanks, ya I saw that. Might not hurt to check it out.
I was thinking I should.
(Psalm144 and I share a disdain for a fake who rolled his face in Cheetos - lol)
Bmk
I’m doing 1/5 of what I did for the Major.
That’s all I need.
“Always good to have some names for the RolodexOOPS dating myself.”
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I retired, taking a package, two years ago when my Center Manager took a package. It was unforeseen as I loved doing the work. Thanks to my beloved’s planning we were in good shape. January 2019 is the start of my SS. Yea!
Back to Rolodexes... I am very old school and believed strongly in using multiple ways of documentation storage. Rolodexes came in very valuable, and not just for names and #s. Folks who knew me knew exactly which Rolodex to go looking for depending on what exactly they wanted. LOL
Even in my retirement I am still using Rolodexes! There is absolutely nothing wrong with using old school systems. If I lose my phone, I still have it all backed up on paper. If I lose my paper documentation there is the electronic back-up. For really sensitive stuff, there’s still other systems. LOL
I admit when I rummage through my Rolodexes, I so enjoy the feeling of seeing information at my fingertips!
Nice story.
I will be 61 in 2019 and have a manager (hired several years ago) who got rid of all the original people in my dept and nearly 20 more since who were hired then fired or driven off like the others with me the only one left. He did try to get rid of me too by treating me and the others like dirt. He still bad mouths those in the dept. He only fired one person last year.....
I figure I file a age discrimination suit if I do lose my job. I figure he slowed down the firings as it made him look bad to his bosses plus his boss has a new boss who fired several hire ups so he and his boss do not want to make waves.
Bean counters know the cost of everything and the value of nothing. A company where I used to work is just about totally mismanaged out of business one cut at a time.
The best thing to do is to compete against them.
Most of the analysis I see emphasizes maximizing the amount one can collect from SS. That seems wrong headed.
Enjoy!
Thanks for the better explanation of what I was trying to say - I forgot to mention positional burnout as clearly as you did - I both observed it and suffered from it.
If you think this started with Obamacare then you're naive. This has been going on for years and years.
Sometimes managers don’t appreciate that for some work you need experience as well as smarts. The new hire had the latter, not the former. But sometimes you can’t tell someone the truth and have them accept it if their mind is already made up. Then they learn the hard way.
With the retiring (and dying) of the original American movers & shakers in the industry, the shift I see happening is not giving me a warm-fuzzy for the future, or the future of my grandkids.
I have the title and outline already, and I need to write my behind-the-scenes book that I have been threatening for years...
First time I’ve seen disdain used so gently!
:-)
Our main customers were programmers at Microsoft, no one had a faster machine than ours. We even had it tested at MS labs and they thought it was broken since it finished the routine in 5 minutes compared to others taking more than an hour. That is how we became the go to local computer company for MS top programmers.
I totally agree with this assessment, Age discrimination is cool and politically correct. People over 55 are routinely discriminated against in the work force.
Yes, some industries need workers. I think nurses can always get jobs as well as salesmen.
Kenneth Lane Thompson (born February 4, 1943), commonly referred to as ken in hacker circles,[1] is an American pioneer of computer science. Having worked at Bell Labs for most of his career, Thompson designed and implemented the original Unix operating system. He also invented the B programming language, the direct predecessor to the C programming language, and was one of the creators and early developers of the Plan 9 operating systems. Since 2006, Thompson has worked at Google, where he co-invented the Go programming language.
Other notable contributions included his work on regular expressions and early computer text editors QED and ed, the definition of the UTF-8 encoding, his work on computer chess that included creation of endgame tablebases and the chess machine Belle.
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