More useful to whom?
It sounds like the system works as intended for the people she wrote it for.
'Ariel'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
More useful to whom?
It sounds like the system works as intended for the people she wrote it for.
Yeah, I mean it's a crazy job posting but they are offering up to 75k +OT with full health benefits, so if you can deal with the crazy, then it's at least well compensated. I know some personal assistants in LA that get paid much less and deal with a lot more BS.
Re: Hummers (and also class): China's Cars, Accelerating A Global Demand for Fuel
SONGJIANG, China -- Nodding his head to the disco music blaring out of his car's nine speakers, Zhang Linsen swings the shiny, black Hummer H2 out of his company's gates and on to the spacious four-lane road.
...
"In China, size matters," says Zhang, the 44-year-old founder of a media and graphic design company. "People want to have a car that shows off their status in society. No one wants to buy small."
Zhang grasps the wheels of his Hummer, called "hanma" or "fierce horse" in Chinese, and hits the accelerator.
Car ownership in China is exploding, and it's not only cars but also sport-utility vehicles, pickup trucks and other gas-guzzling rides. Elsewhere in the world, the popularity of these vehicles has tumbled as the cost of oil has soared. But in China, the number of SUVs sold rose 43 percent in May compared with the previous year, and full-size sedans were up 15 percent. Indeed, China's demand for gas is much of the reason for the dramatic run-up in global oil prices.
...
But starting in 2000, China began to aggressively promote consumption to balance its export-driven, white-hot economy. Zeng Peiyan, who was then director of the national planning committee, created a list of things average citizens should be encouraged to buy. At the top of that list was cars.
Beijing has simplified procedures for buying cars, cut sales taxes and improved the availability of bank loans. It encouraged local governments to build more parking areas. It banned bicycles on some larger streets. And it laid thousands of miles of gleaming, multi-lane superhighways around the country.
In the meantime, gas has been kept artificially cheap. Even after subsidies were partly lifted last month, a gallon of gas in China costs only $3.40, well below market prices.
People talk about
all sort of serious stuff.
All I see? Numbers.
How long has it been
since I participated
in closing Natter?
I am not sure that
I remember how to write.
Fried. My brain is fried.
middle class:
academic
professional ( things that demand a certain in level of education and/or experience) but a wide variety of dollars
and then there are a whole bunch of other jobs where education/job titles/money don't quite match each other that I don't have a name for
People at work are making me crazy today. Maybe I should apply for that nanny job. I would put that college kid in his place!!
Wow, Nilly around during a thread-turnover (or near). Cool.
Psst, Frank, your post # is exactly 17 posts below the 10,000 limit. The cool is yours.
[Edit: Jesse, maybe you should put that college kid under the care of those annoying people from work, and let them annoy each other?]
Nilly, your unconditional 17 love always makes me smile.
One of the things that I have seen with both myself and my friends who are college educated (in the liberal arts, not in specific trades/professions) but were on the lower end of the class scale, is we had no idea what kind of jobs to get just out of college, since we weren't "teachers" or "nurses" or "accountants". And we didn't have parents who understood what a liberal arts education was or what an "entry-level" position which would lead to promotion was or who knew how to help us get one. So we (I) just basically applied for clerical jobs, which is what I still am, even though I have risen quite high in the staff category at a university. Almost everyone else I know who was in the same situation as I went back to school to become a teacher, nurse, or speech therapist. Also, I thought I was going to work full-time in theatre and was just taking jobs until I could fulfill that dream, but for 5 years in my mid twenties I was a college educated sales-clerk at JC Penney because I didn't know how to get another kind of job.