No Demand for Skilled Jobs: “Millions cannot find work because the jobs simply are not there”
Posted by UncommonSense 10 years, 2 months ago to Education
This is real news here. Ultimately, how do you think this engineered crisis will end? Either A) they'll go overseas to work or B) The college degree paper-mill~Federally funded industry will collapse or C) both will happen.
I think the breaking point is getting close. I wonder how many of the grads are actually John Galts who have decided to "Go Galt"?
I think the breaking point is getting close. I wonder how many of the grads are actually John Galts who have decided to "Go Galt"?
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I suggest you read the "Dear Hillary letter" ~ link is provided for your convenience: http://www.eagleforum.org/educate/marc_t...
Otherwise, I enjoyed the reading.
Next I was downsized out of a very well-paying job that I liked, the tech industry was pretty much collapsing, we went from consulting rates of over $100 an hour for even basic stuff to something like $20 & $30 and it didn't make sense, so I started a real estate company (without knowing much about it other than basic financials) and went on to employ 170 people. I didn't have 20 cents to rub together either for capital on either of those business startups but both were worth over a million dollars at some point.
After running businesses for 12 years, I'm now VERY valuable and am very highly compensated for running a division of a military contractor. Do I attribute my degree to that? No, not really. Do I attribute my military experience? Maybe 30% of it, the discipline yes, but sweeping up hydro fluid in an aircraft hangar wasn't really a preparation for cyber security. Running a business, managing people, selling, and the "Will-Do" attitude is what my personal success is.
Most of these people think that getting a degree is the magic bullet... no.. its not. It's a piece of a puzzle that you have to fit together, and I'll add that the snotty types that claim the 'school of hard knocks' is their education, are also a bunch of fools when interviewed. If education didn't mean anything, Africa and Mexico would be full of millionaires.
It's a leg to a 3-legged stool, but without one, the stool tips over. If I ask a non-educated but 'skilled' technician to write a technical solution proposal for a cyber security project, I'm going to get a pile of garbage that wouldn't work for recycled Christmas wrap. But if I ask that same task of someone with a bachelors or masters, with a lot of experience, and experience selling, I'm going to get something that might be useful.
Same argument, the pure-science degrees that are being pushed these days lack the communication skills of the English Literature minor or something that used to be popular. Now the candidates struggle there too.
Ask the typical graduate if they would consider a career in sales, and about 90% of them will say "no way"... why? Because they want to be paid for sitting at a desk somewhere. Without acknowledging that NO BUSINESS survives without sales, and none of them thrive without a very integrated and very competent sales strategy and ability to bring a product or service to market.
Have I bored you yet? Yes, I'm sure I have... but its God's honest truth. This is all a myth being pushed by academia, which themselves, don't understand sales, or strategy, or technical innovation.. if they did, they wouldn't be soaking up that county-level Govie' k-12 job and parking their butt waiting for the pension to pay out.
We don't have a crisis of education, education is educating just fine. We have a lack of society to teach survival skills... we have assumed that we have already mastered the universe. That the basics of selling a product for $3.00 that it cost you $1.00 to make is much better than selling a service from a professional that you pay $120,000 a year to for $45 an hour probably isn't going to keep you in business very long...
Please, if you can, stay with it. I have found the Gulch a rewarding and interesting place to be, with real people I can truly interact with. I hope that you will find, as I did, that there really is a Galt's Gulch and we are really there.
Maybe 25 or so years ago... let's see, I was in my early forties, so yes, that would have been about right... my manager came to me one Friday afternoon and said, "Alan, I really like how you do your job here... so responsive to your customers' needs and such... Can you suggest how I should choose new people for our department so I can get 'more people like you'?"
I told him I'd like to think about The Answer over the weekend, and he agreed.
Monday morning, he came to my desk and asked if I'd decided on The Answer.
"Yes," I replied, "and the answer is: Don't hire anyone under 40."
Virtually all of the New Hires couldn't do critical thinking, wanted to be CEO within five years of getting their MBA, thought they were God's Gift To Business and Industry and aside from not being able to construct a grammatically close-to-correct sentence, didn't give a rat's butt about actually serving their clients/customers. Gimme a paycheck and leave me alone.
Oh, Yes, there WERE a few, but the Average was well below that kind of attitude And Performance.
One guy demanded a Company Car along with a promotion, and the Corporate Policy was that Nobody At His Level Ever Got A Company Car. But he lobbied for it for years. Talk about Entitlement and mooching....
And his decision-making skills barely justified the promotion in the first place. Of course, we already had some second and third level managers with similar lack of skills, so he had mentors galore to emulate.
And the company has been 'downsizing to success' ever since.
Sad. But true.
Highest bucks for non-degreed folks today? Oil Rig Pipe Jockeys, among other similar 'dirty' jobs.
Everyone seems to want $15 an hour without having to break a sweat, get dirty or be polite to a customer.
Talk about fucking "moochers"!
"plusaf > ... Ah, Joe Lizak... would you please elaborate a bit on what "free" means in your comment above?
My understanding is that Nothing Is Free... if a product or service is offered or consumed, SOMEONE, somewhere, has PAID for it. Maybe in taxes; maybe in a direct cash (or credit) transaction.
So if a Community College offers "free" education to someone (or anyone) who wants it, does the College get a 100% exemption from all property taxes on their land and buildings? Do ALL of the teachers and admins pay NO Income Tax on their wages?
Oh, wait! Their Wages!... Where does THAT money come from?
And if you even Think of Saying "the government", you have So Totally lost the argument/discussion, it's just too embarrassing for even me to continue...
Cheers... Now go think it over.
Thanks..."
The internet was invented on the premise of neutrality, and for almost all its history, has honoured that principle. If neutrality were abolished, it would be similar to a highway which sets a 10miles/hour speed limit for cars driving to K-Mart and a 100miles/hour speed limit for cars going to Wal-Mart. It also increases the opportunity for businesses with more cash and inferior products to erect barriers against newer startups with superior products and less cash.
I strongly agree that government agencies on the whole are not to be trusted, but in this issue, the FCC (possibly despite itself) has actually got it right.
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