These are the liberals who claim that Trump voters are uneducated and ignorant. Those costumes have me convinced! ![]() Clearly liberal intelligentsia on display here: ![]() |
Oh good. You got a head start. I love posting these because it gets the Trump idiots all riled up. They are so easily roused. Nine months later and they are still OBSESSED with these. ![]() ![]() |
So many good ones.... ![]() |
There were millions of participants yet I didn't see a single person dressed as a vagina and I was in the densest part of the protest. Your "intelligence" swaps >0.1% for the 99.9%. No wonder you are so freaked out over trivial details while missing all of the important ones. |
The pubic hair is awesome. ![]() |
Shhhh. It's funnier when they get all worked up over these. |
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Hey look! Even the older ladies are getting in on the action. Take note, DOTARDS!! ![]() |
^^Hillary's base ![]() ![]() |
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Come on mr Z. You are keeping us in suspense What say you about h2bs????? Good or bad for US workers? |
Wow, I used to think the vagina was a beautiful part of the body. But after seeing those pictures above I have changed my mind. Not beautiful at all. |
Hey look! Even the older ladies are getting in on the action. Take note, DOTARDS!! ![]() I promise you, no one and I mean no one, has touched that old broad's vagina in a hundred years. No one. |
Lack of indicators of a shortage Starting with its first big campaign to convince Congress to expand the H-1B in 1997, the tech industry has asserted a tech labour shortage. Yet, other than one survey conducted by the industry trade group ITAA (ITAA, 1997), no study has ever confirmed the shortage claims (See Matloff, 2003 for a survey of the studies conducted around that time). Vivek Wadhwa, a former tech CEO who now writes about the tech industry, conducted his own survey and found no evidence of a shortage. He remarked that the industry's claim of a “shortage” is actually “a shortage of engineers below market price that work day and night like slave labor” (Overby,2007). In 2011, wages of experienced workers in Silicon Valley had increased only 3% since 2009 (Carey, 2011). Interestingly, the online jobs board Dice.com gave anecdotal evidence of a shortage but then admitted that tech salaries had risen less than 1% during 2009-2010 (Dice, 2011). Costa (2012) found that wages in computer and mathematical occupations have been increasing only 0.5% per year since 2000. None of these figures indicates a shortage. |