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It's All Over Representatives are Screwing Americans
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| 11/15/02
| FlyingA
Posted on 12/16/2002 7:06:21 AM PST by FlyingA
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1
posted on
12/16/2002 7:06:21 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: FlyingA
Well its time to celebrate! I looked at the 2002-2003 Occupational handbook which is put out by the US Govt at the bookstore. Do you know what the job title with the best outlook for the next 10 years is? You guessed it. Computer Engineer. #1, Numero Uno, tops. Software engineer was only a place or two behind. So why would any of us, most who have been computer engineers and software engineers for the last 10 to twenty years, consider changing careers to one that has a much dimmer outlook?????
2
posted on
12/16/2002 7:08:45 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: FlyingA
Overseas Outsourcing A Possibility For Federal IT Projects
Two top federal IT policy makers don't philosophically object to the government's outsourcing some IT work overseas.
By Eric Chabrow, InformationWeek
Dec 13, 2002 (12:00 AM)
URL: http://www.informationweek.com/story/IWK20021213S0035
In an interview with InformationWeek editors, Rep. Tom Davis, the Virginia Republican who chairs the House Subcommittee on IT and Procurement Policy, says contracting overseas programmers to write nonsensitive, nonstrategic government software could be a way to save taxpayer money. "I don't have a problem if work for the government--if it's done cheaper, same quality, talking about best values--is going offshore." Davis points out that most of the overseas work would likely be part of outsourcing contracts awarded to American firms. "I see my job as trying to be an honest broker here to get the best value for the country."
Outsourcing IT work overseas doesn't bother Bush administration IT czar Mark Forman, either. "We don't care if it's built overseas or in the U.S., as long as it's built to the same high standards," says Forman, chief enforcer of the fed's IT policy as associate director for IT and E-government at the Office of Management and Budget.
But Forman doesn't see much of need to outsource IT work overseas. Offshore outsourcing would be employed mostly to develop customized apps or tailor off-the-shelf software, he says. Government agencies should use packaged software as it comes out of the box. Says Forman: "We don't want to spend taxpayers' money turning off best practices embedded in off-the-shelf software."
Copyright ©2001 CMP Media LLC
3
posted on
12/16/2002 7:10:09 AM PST
by
ppaul
To: FlyingA
Actually, TSA agent pays over $60K to sit around and chat with other TSA agents at the coffee shops in empty airports.
But shortly, the USA will come down to two types of people (outside of the corrupt elites); hungry peasants trying to get security jobs and security people trying to control the masses of hungry peasants.
Note this situation will gradually drive security work down to minimum wage where it should be anyway. So in my mind, the hottest job (OR ONLY JOB) the next ten years in America will be low pay security/police officer.
On the bright side, at least Americans no longer will have to buy airplane tickets to visit the third world: they will live in it.
4
posted on
12/16/2002 7:10:19 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: FlyingA
5
posted on
12/16/2002 7:10:54 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: FlyingA
Hmmm..... maybe I'll travel to India and have an Indian family adopt me. Then I could return to the US as a H-1B worker with a guarantee of a job. What do you think...?
6
posted on
12/16/2002 7:13:51 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: FlyingA
ouch.
7
posted on
12/16/2002 7:14:43 AM PST
by
PokeyJoe
To: PokeyJoe
ALERT: NEED TO IMPORT MORE INDIAN WORKERS IMMEDIATELY TO COVER THIS NEWLY CREATED WORKER SHORTAGE. For example, International Truck, just now has 250 new openings.
Cable Giant Charter to Impose Layoffs
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Cable television giant Charter Communications Inc. plans to streamline its operation in a move that will cost a "significant" number of workers their jobs, the company said Tuesday.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=528&ncid=528&e=11&u=/ap/20021212/ap_on_hi_te/charter_layoffs_2
OM Group to Cut Jobs, Miss Expectations
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Specialty chemicals company OM Group Inc. (NYSE:OMG - news) plans to cut its work force by 12 percent and sell assets under a restructuring plan aimed at improving cash flow and its balance sheet, the company said Thursday.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=568&ncid=568&e=21&u=/nm/20021212/bs_nm/chemicals_omgroup_dc_1
International Truck to Lay Off 250
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) - International Truck & Engine Corp. plans to lay off 250 workers next month and cut truck production because of declining demand, the company said Thursday.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=509&ncid=509&e=39&u=/ap/20021212/ap_on_bi_ge/truck_layoffs_1
Yahoo! Lays Off Broadcast Services Workers
SUNNYVALE, Calif. (AP) - Internet powerhouse Yahoo! Inc. said Tuesday it has laid off an unspecified number of workers in its broadcasting services division as part of the company's financial makeover.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=528&ncid=528&e=19&u=/ap/20021210/ap_on_hi_te/yahoo_layoffs_2
Pink slips coming in January at Allfirst
An undetermined number of Allfirst Financial Inc. employees will learn in mid-January whether they will be dismissed after the bank's takeover by M&T Bank Corp.
http://www.sunspot.net/business/bal-bz.allfirst11dec11,0,7071033.story?coll=bal%2Dpe%2Dbusiness
AOL to lay off 60 in Mtn. View
CUTBACKS ARE INCLUDED AMONG 300 NATIONWIDE
One week after detailing its turnaround plan, troubled America Online said Wednesday that it is laying off 300 employees, including 60 at its Mountain View location.
http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews/business/4722533.htm
8
posted on
12/16/2002 7:17:23 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: FlyingA
"...as an unemployed IT consultant and US CITIZEN..."Was here too, for 6 months. Took an IT related job for a 58% cut in pay, I had to do something. Still looking for a real job. The only other work around here is just over minimum wage insurance jobs and factory work that really requires you to come from a union family to get into.
To: FlyingA
That is about the only way you will work in IT in the USA.
10
posted on
12/16/2002 7:18:48 AM PST
by
harpseal
To: harpseal
I would like to suggest a book called The Coming Internet Depression by Mandel. It was written in 2000, long before we could imagine the depths of this situation. He states that it is imperative that the govt supports demand to stop us from spiraling out of control. On page 71 (remember that this was written in 2000) he has a table:
Early Signs of the end of the tech boom:
simultaneous fall in tech stocks and slowdown in tech spending
Slowdown in the rate of price declines for tech goods
Decline in the flow of venture capital and IPOs
To get out of this, we need to both cut taxes and boost spending. The book is a little technical, but I am sure that you guys can handle it.
11
posted on
12/16/2002 7:19:49 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: FlyingA
This lady is completely out to lunch and totally out of touch with what is going on.
The administration needs to act with the same kind of anxiety that us unemployed feel in order to get things back on track.
I won't feel confident until the White House dumps her as well.
I think her picture says it all, just smile and act like a robot:
http://www.dol.gov/
12
posted on
12/16/2002 7:21:55 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: gnarledmaw
Analysis: Silicon Valley insiders profited while companies flopped
The newspaper examined records of stock sales by executives, board members and venture capitalists at 40 companies that have become almost worthless since March 2000. It found that the insiders walked away with $3.41 billion from the sales while, by Sept. 30, their companies' total market value fell 99.8% to $229.5 million.
"This money was taken from investors who didn't have the same information as these insiders and lost their money," said Charles Elson, director of the Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware.
"They sell the stock and then they restate the earnings," Minow said. "That brings it one step closer to being a Ponzi scheme."
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/techinvestor/2002-12-09-tech-insiders_x.htm
13
posted on
12/16/2002 7:23:31 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: FlyingA
The propaganda sold to Americans was that we would lift the boats of the third world, they didn't tell us it would be by sinking ours, but anyone with common sense would have known that.
It is past time for angry Americans to show up in D.C. and demand high tariffs, and that 80% of goods sold to us be manufactured in the United States, tear up NAFTA and GAT, hurl the U.N. out of the U.S. by the nape of the neck. It's past time for representatives to start representing. What's it going to take?
To: MissAmericanPie
Bump - Ping
15
posted on
12/16/2002 7:32:15 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: FlyingA
Having spent over 20 years in IT I am aware of what is happening. H1B visa people are imported to write sloppy code that barely manages to function and applications that actually supoported the business and its unique needs is trashed in favor of vanilla software that the alter so the company gets the worst of all possible worlds. A package that has been altered so that standard improvements can not be used and a workforce that can not communicate and really do the job. I work as a consultant that comes in makes the system work again and then they go back to the samne disaster in waiting.
Most of America's competitive advantage in the workplace was a result of intensive IT spending that actually boosted productivity of the American worker. No we have decided to outsource to the lowest bidder who delivers products that do not really have the functionality required and are incompatable with the legacy systems they are replacing and except for the fact they run on a PC network would not even be considered as equivalent to the systems they replace. But boy do the reports look nice and all the MBA's in the corporate HQ can use those reports really easily besides we do not really need to make anything anymore.
Stay well - Stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown
16
posted on
12/16/2002 7:33:13 AM PST
by
harpseal
To: FlyingA
Americas investors and corporate Boards are squarely to blame for all of this.
Now days, there is nothing resembling "long-term thinking" or vision in most US companies. Everything is "quarter-driven" (e.g. "What have you done for me THIS quarter??"). There is constant pressure on costs to enhance companies' bottom lines, so corporate execs do whatever they feel they can do (or have to do) to cut costs.
Here's a big hint: What's the single largest cost to ANY employer??
To: harpseal
Ditto harpseal
Ping
18
posted on
12/16/2002 7:35:03 AM PST
by
FlyingA
To: gnarledmaw
I got laid off a year and a half ago from EBM (telecom, fans trays).
I am now a construction worker, and I work part time nights at Stop & Shop sweeping floors.
Good thing I got a mechanical engineering deree in Connecticut.
To: RightOnline
Agreed
20
posted on
12/16/2002 7:36:36 AM PST
by
FlyingA
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