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LET'S TALK ABOUT "YOUR" JOBS
Nealz Nuze ^
| Wednesday, February 18, 2004
| Neal Boortz
Posted on 02/18/2004 5:12:57 AM PST by beaureguard
Jobs .. and the economy. Those seem to be the issues that are driving many, if not most, of those who are supporting the Kerry candidacy.
First of all ... I'm going to repeat this simply because it makes the whiners so unbelievably angry. Listen up. They're not your jobs! The jobs belong to the employers .. not to you! You have job skills and, presumably, a willingness to work. Your task in a free economy is to get out there and find some employer with a job who needs your skills ... and strike a deal.
If you do not have the particular set of job skills that an employer needs, of if you have priced your labor out of the marketplace, guess what? It's not the employer's fault. The fault lies with you. Either develop a new set of job skills that are actually in demand, or adjust your pricing. The employer knows what he's looking for you. If you're not it .. it's your problem, not his.
Now ... you say you're going to vote for a Democrat this year because of jobs? You mean to tell me that you're going to vote against George Bush this year because you don't have a set of job skills that are in demand in our free marketplace? Yeah .. that makes a lot of sense, doesn't it?
Tell me. Just what do you want the president to do? You information technology people out there .. just what are you demanding? Do you want companies to stop outsourcing IT jobs to India? OK ... tell me how to do that. These companies aren't shipping parts overseas and completed products back. All they do is ship information overseas by phone lines or the Internet. Then that information is modified and shipped back the same way. What do you want the government .. the president to do? Do you want some federal law that prohibits companies from transmitting information overseas by the Internet, having that information transformed or modified, and then shipped back? And tell me just how do you enforce that law? Does that law then apply to you also if you seek information from a company that is located overseas, thus depriving a domestic company of your business?
Ditto for manufacturing. I've already told you the story about the California company that makes computer mouses. (computer mice?) This company ships the components to China. The mouse is assembled in China and shipped back, then sold for around $40. Why? Because the assembly is cheaper in China than it would be in the US. So, you say you want the president to force this company to have that mouse assembled in the US? Fine .. then the price for the mouse goes up to about $70 a pop and sales drop. As the sales drop the jobs of the people in this country who manufacture the components for that mouse go away. Then the 100 marketing jobs this company supports in California also go away. You see, perhaps you can succeed in forcing this company to assemble these mouses in the US, but there just isn't any way you can force the American consumer to pay 80% more for the "made in America" version.
As Bruce Bartlett says in an article listed in my reading assignments, "No nation has ever gotten rich by forcing its citizens to pay more for domestic goods and services that could have been procured more cheaply abroad."
What we are seeing here is a demonstration of the "government owes me" mentality of far too many Americans. Every time you arrive at a speed bump in your life's journey you start screaming to the government for help. Sure, the speed bump is going to slow you down a bit ... but just keep moving forward and things inevitably pick up speed again. Americans are becoming helpless whiners. The more helpless you are, and the more you whine, the more likely it is you're going to vote for a Democrat. Democrats specialize in stroking the malcontent.
Congratulations, whiners. At a time when America if fighting World War IV, the war against Islamic terrorism ... you're going to vote for a candidate who wants to treat terrorism as a freaking law enforcement problem because you've made some pitiful jobs choices. Pitiful.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: boortz; jobmarket; nealznuze
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To: novacation
just talked to a friend who told me AOL's customer service is in Bombay India.This does not bode well for our future. where do the profits from this decision go?
To: A. Pole
Yes.
And I see no reason at all to support that.
262
posted on
02/18/2004 8:29:19 AM PST
by
Jhoffa_
To: The Mayor
Mayor, what a shame - a man with your talents. The unions have a death grip on the western NY area in fact all of NYS. Until that changes, independents like yourself stand little chance of expanded construction opportunities.
Just curious...I notice that places like Home Depot use or contract out their own construction people to do jobs. Have you investigated that?
263
posted on
02/18/2004 8:29:53 AM PST
by
eleni121
(Preempt and Prevent)
To: MrB; hchutch
If someone is willing to do the SAME JOB for less money, that's the true value of that job - and those demanding more compensation better up their skills to be able to demand higher pay.No, they should use the coercive power of government to demand higher pay, and then use the coercive power of government to demand that prices be lowered, and then use the coercive power of government to prevent employers from laying off employees until the employers are bankrupt.
BTW, the above paragraph is SARCASM.
264
posted on
02/18/2004 8:30:44 AM PST
by
Poohbah
("Would you mind not shooting at the thermonuclear weapons?" -- Maj. Vic Deakins, USAF)
To: LowCountryJoe; FITZ
Probably not to the person that you've described. But, to a protectionist-conservative who posts in the FR, that has yet to see the consequences of his/her backwardness thinking - I hope so!Actually, it is the Free Traitors that don't know we are not actually in a 'free trade' situation...but a highly artificial, highly influenced 'market'. A market aggressively subsidized by the Chinese and Indian governments...and our own...to the end of rewarding U.S. companies that are relocating U.S. production. This is not free trade. Nor is it 'backward thinking' to forsee a time when the U.S. is reduced by such predatory nations...who are fully defended by a phalanx of protectionist trade policies....to a state of complete dependency.
265
posted on
02/18/2004 8:33:13 AM PST
by
Paul Ross
("A country that cannot control its borders isn't really a country any more."-President Ronald Reagan)
To: MrB
> Outsourcing is only a "problem" if the Indians can do the same job for less money.
Ya, I love these people who lament the fact Paper Tiger IT jobs have been shown as the dufus job they were over the last few years.
I work as a software company and IT guys are my customers. Some are smart, but some are just plain dumb as rocks. They have no analytical skills, no motivation and no communication skills. If it isn't in their MSCE cheat book, then they can't go there.
I wonder how many dot-com nonjobs there were during the Clinton admin? The only thing that really sucks is that "Wired" is still in business.
"PLEASE, Mr President. Bring back those wonderful dot-com jobs where we did nothing and ordered stuff from Kozmo all day!"
These pukes make me sick.
266
posted on
02/18/2004 8:34:56 AM PST
by
Rate_Determining_Step
(US Military - Draining the Swamp of Terrorism since 2001!)
To: Taliesan
Bush didn't force you spend your tax cut on anything.You are right. However, they did play on the fears of Americans that if they didn't spend it the economy would not improve and it would be our fault.
267
posted on
02/18/2004 8:36:27 AM PST
by
raybbr
(My 1.4 cents - It used to be 2 cents, but after taxes - you get the idea.)
To: Paul Ross
This is not free trade. Nor is it 'backward thinking' to forsee a time when the U.S. is reduced by such predatory nations...who are fully defended by a phalanx of protectionist trade policies....to a state of complete dependency. Mercantilism is not free trade. Bump
To: beaureguard
I lost my job on Oct 1 2003 and was the best day of the year. At 6:30 AM I told my boss to TTJASI and by 8:30 was working at my own new company. Course I am one of the 2 million jobs lost and not one of the new companies formed according to Comrade Kerry. Life is good under W.
Pray for W and The Truth
269
posted on
02/18/2004 8:37:15 AM PST
by
bray
(Comrade Kerry's got some splainin to do!!!)
To: raybbr
The problem with super-capitalists is that they refuse to see the symbiotic relationship between the employer and employee. They think the employer is more important by an order of magnitude than the employee. Your "symbiotic relationship" thesis sounds strikingly familiar: Marx said the same thing.
What undermines your position is that anyone can be a capitalist in a free market system...a fact that Marx was either too ignorant or too angry and envious to understand.
270
posted on
02/18/2004 8:37:59 AM PST
by
eleni121
(Preempt and Prevent)
To: freeeee
> That's right. Any one of us could accept a $0.00 per hour wage and after government interference in the free market it would still be cheaper to employ a foreigner!
Interesting point. Fed regs that making employing Americans expensive is not the fault of the free market.
271
posted on
02/18/2004 8:42:20 AM PST
by
Rate_Determining_Step
(US Military - Draining the Swamp of Terrorism since 2001!)
To: bray
I understand your case is not unique. Of the 2 or 3 million who have lost their jobs over the last several years, just over 500K of those folks have started their own business. Big news, but the administration is not saying anything about it.
To: traumer
Did you see where Walmart is suddenly spending big bucks (over $1 million) to PACs and lobbyists to defend its Chinese import racket?
273
posted on
02/18/2004 8:44:35 AM PST
by
Paul Ross
("A country that cannot control its borders isn't really a country any more."-President Ronald Reagan)
To: eleni121
Your "symbiotic relationship" thesis sounds strikingly familiar: Marx said the same thing.Hah! Call out Marx's name and that completely cancels out reality.
What undermines your position is that anyone can be a capitalist in a free market system...
So... only employers can be capitalists? Geez, you super-capitalists really have a terrible opinion of your fellow Americans. Everybody is dumb and inept unless they want to own a business.
274
posted on
02/18/2004 8:46:34 AM PST
by
raybbr
(My 1.4 cents - It used to be 2 cents, but after taxes - you get the idea.)
To: A. Pole; All
"free trade" = global government, loss of sovereignty and economic harmonization with other countries, especially if they are needy of US taxpayer dollars.
While everyone is arguing about outsourcing, meetings are quietly held to push along the FTAA, which is due to be impelented in January 2005.
The FTAA, Free Trade Area of the Americas impact on American citizens will dwarf the impact of outsourcing on the American citizen.
The Treaty of Maastricht created the EU in 1992 as an economic zone or free trade area.
Then in 1999 the African Union was created.
We also got ASEAN, the Association of South East Asian Nations about that time.
The fall of the Soviet Union generated a reformation of itself in the CIS or Council of Independent States, another 'free trade region'.
The only region left that isn't quite under the belt of the free traders is the middle east. However there is an organization formed that will become the regional government for the middle east called the OIC, the Organization of the Islamic council.
What do all these groups have in common?
They are predicted in the UN document called "Our Global Neighborhood". Each and every one, including the "free trade area" the United States will be forced to belong to" has the language in its charter--that the organizations are organized "within the framework of the United Nations" and that they only follow international law (bye bye Constitution, it was nice knowing you.)
Each and every one of these organizations has exactly the same structure, a president, a parliment, a permanent council, an observers council, and a secretariat (there is an amazing uniformity of government here for such a diverse group, is there not?)
Each and every one of these organizations is founded on the principles of "peace, justice and solidarity"... which sounds awfully marxist to me
End of part I
To: Cronos
Yes, it needs to be strong, etc. but don't all countries need to do so? No, they don't. If you have a warm climate, plentiful resources and isolation you can take it easy.
276
posted on
02/18/2004 8:50:06 AM PST
by
A. Pole
(The genocide of Albanians was stopped in its tracks before it began.)
To: A. Pole
Ah yes, found the track. Russia could save a huge amount by getting rid of most of it's nukes. It doesn't need so many and monitoring them would be a problem. It's main threat is China, so as long as they outnumber the chicom nukes 2 to 1 they should be fine. The number they own now are to match the US and waaay in excess of the 2-1 vs the Chinese.
277
posted on
02/18/2004 8:54:08 AM PST
by
Cronos
(W2K4!)
To: StatesEnemy
meanwhile the gap between the our Corporate masters and the rest of us, continues to grow. I don't understand why a "gap" is a concern to you. Are you saying that great wealth should not be acquired? Do you believe above a limit the wealthy should be taxed 100%?
What bothers me about "gap" analysis is that presumably the participants are all satisfied with the contract, else they would be looking for a better job for themselves. Who do you expect to make everything more equal?
278
posted on
02/18/2004 8:55:49 AM PST
by
KC_for_Freedom
(Sailing the highways of America, and loving it.)
To: Paul Ross
The market is heavily subsidised by Japan and the EU with their subsidies to farm and other industries. They are the real big players.
279
posted on
02/18/2004 8:56:11 AM PST
by
Cronos
(W2K4!)
To: bray
And you are earning more than just being a slave to some big a** corporation?
280
posted on
02/18/2004 8:57:45 AM PST
by
Cronos
(W2K4!)
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