Posted on 11/02/2002 1:13:06 AM PST by Bobby777
Vehicle sales plunge in October
Big 3 automakers figures drop over 30 percent vs. last year
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
DETROIT, Nov. 1 Auto sales fell in October, despite stepped up interest-free financing and other discounts, amid tough comparisons with an unusually robust performance a year earlier.
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.com ...
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/777526/posts
It was corporate lobbyists that demanded and received protectionism. The H1-B program is a direct result of intense lobbying due to the false premise that there was a shortage of skilled workers here in the US. You're right, protectism IS counterproductive. We simply want the unnecessary protections given to corporations be abolished.
I can't get a job doing what I've done for 17 years, never mind a job that I have no experience for. You think one can just walk into a company's HR department and demand a job?
2. I consistantly find positions not filled internally because many companies have realized that the internal route causes too many inbred problems.
80% of the managers that I have worked for had come up the ranks from within the company. The ones that were hired from outside the company had significant experience in management.
3. Although I do see many H-1 employees out there, I have experience at many major firms and have yet to see an H-1 in a management position.
The founder of the last company I worked for was from India. At the last interview I was on (in 2001), 3 out of the 5 people I interviewed with were foreign nationals. One Chinese national had such a thick accent I couldn't understand half of what he said.
I not saying there are none out there, but I'm not seeing that trend.
You might be more in the Information Technology segment. On the engineering side of the fence, foreign managers aren't only common, but prevalent. As an aside, I took a 50% pay cut to get into this industry 10 years ago, I do not have a tech degree and I am more than doubling everyone on that list except for the Pharmacist.
After 17 years you must have a great deal of business knowledge that is marketable and you can leverage. I have been on both sides of the fence so please don't think I am being condescending, Im just trying to be helpful.
Oops, that part of your post was off my edit window. To respond to that part of your post, as you say that was 10 years ago. I'd gladly take a 75% cut in pay to get back to work, but there's virutally nobody hiring in my field. And the companies can be EXTREMELY picky about who they hire, as they receive hundreds if not thousands of resumes from highly qualified individuals for every position they announce.
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I wouldn't brag about it. When Nasser was president of Ford he introduced himself to a group meeting of company management by saying, "I see a lot of white faces here," and started firing caucasians on that basis. The day I buy a Ford product is the day the sun will go from West to East.
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Nasser never should have been in town in a decent company. Ford has had a habit of putting subversives and kooks into their presidency going back to the time of Robert McNamara.
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Stay in marketing and sales. That's where you belong. As an economist or analyst of and depth, you ain't going to make it.
Sorry about the tone of my last post, I misread what you wrote. I think I might have been a bit punchy and not altogether in a good mood after reading a post where somebody else tried to tell me that there's no such thing as a software engineer and that we don't deserve to get paid.
Thanks for the bump.
Utopian naiveness. I'm not in marketing and sales but I do own a business that provides me with an income far beyond that of the average hourly-wage union whiner. I've been doing it successfully for 12 years and give more away than you likely make. Your condescending tone reeks of the blue-collar union mentality that thinks all management is evil and selfish. I've been on both sides of the issue. I've worked blue-collar union and white-collar management. I don't think you've been beyond the wage scale barrier.
The prices ARE dropping! I just bought an 03 Eddie Bauer Expediton for 18% off retail. A friend just bought an 02 Winstar for 25% of retail. Usually the most you could expect was 10 or 11%. It is not a matter of inflated prices, however. I purchased a 98 EB Expediton for about $2k more. It had fewer standard features, less horsepower, less gas mileage and less sophistication.
I think you should follow your own advice and ask your boss to pay you less than you think your worth. You want to stay competitive you know...
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