Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just post after post with the “open to work” logo from people who are highly qualified for jobs that don’t exist anymore. All these people with fancy PhDs and highly specialized experience that I can’t imagine would be useful outside the federal government. I really hope that the private sector cuts them some slack.
I think they are very useful. It would also be nice to no longer deal with nitwits as realtors, mortgage brokers, financial advisors, general managers etc. What a wonderful world where we get some intelligent people in these relatively well paid private sector jobs.
News flash, PhD does not equal intelligent. I mean, it can. But in most cases they are earned by people of privilege who could afford to stay in school while they figured out what to do with their lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just post after post with the “open to work” logo from people who are highly qualified for jobs that don’t exist anymore. All these people with fancy PhDs and highly specialized experience that I can’t imagine would be useful outside the federal government. I really hope that the private sector cuts them some slack.
That you can't see the irony in what you wrote here is astounding.
NP and I don't see the irony. The beauty of government jobs is that the mission can be helping people. It doesn't have to be profit. There are hundreds of thousands of professionals who have built specialized careers around helping people, and now their entire field is gone. I see no irony in that.
Dp. Your response makes me slide towards agreeing with the orange’s goal (still not the process).
A government’s job should be to support our society so it can become a better functioning society, eventually resulting in a better economic position. Not just ‘helping people.’ Helping people to what end that will benefit society as a whole?
That’s what the mission should be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just post after post with the “open to work” logo from people who are highly qualified for jobs that don’t exist anymore. All these people with fancy PhDs and highly specialized experience that I can’t imagine would be useful outside the federal government. I really hope that the private sector cuts them some slack.
That you can't see the irony in what you wrote here is astounding.
NP and I don't see the irony. The beauty of government jobs is that the mission can be helping people. It doesn't have to be profit. There are hundreds of thousands of professionals who have built specialized careers around helping people, and now their entire field is gone. I see no irony in that.
Dp. Your response makes me slide towards agreeing with the orange’s goal (still not the process).
A government’s job should be to support our society so it can become a better functioning society, eventually resulting in a better economic position. Not just ‘helping people.’ Helping people to what end that will benefit society as a whole?
That’s what the mission should be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just post after post with the “open to work” logo from people who are highly qualified for jobs that don’t exist anymore. All these people with fancy PhDs and highly specialized experience that I can’t imagine would be useful outside the federal government. I really hope that the private sector cuts them some slack.
I think they are very useful. It would also be nice to no longer deal with nitwits as realtors, mortgage brokers, financial advisors, general managers etc. What a wonderful world where we get some intelligent people in these relatively well paid private sector jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just post after post with the “open to work” logo from people who are highly qualified for jobs that don’t exist anymore. All these people with fancy PhDs and highly specialized experience that I can’t imagine would be useful outside the federal government. I really hope that the private sector cuts them some slack.
That you can't see the irony in what you wrote here is astounding.
NP and I don't see the irony. The beauty of government jobs is that the mission can be helping people. It doesn't have to be profit. There are hundreds of thousands of professionals who have built specialized careers around helping people, and now their entire field is gone. I see no irony in that.
Dp. Your response makes me slide towards agreeing with the orange’s goal (still not the process).
A government’s job should be to support our society so it can become a better functioning society, eventually resulting in a better economic position. Not just ‘helping people.’ Helping people to what end that will benefit society as a whole?
That’s what the mission should be.
Nah- my mission in life is not to make more money and just live for money. Have you ever heard of church/synagoge/temple? I don’t go, but I hear they teach about the importance of helping people over just making money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t realize LinkedIn was still a thing…
I've never used it, but my college-age kids swear by it! (I'm serious!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just post after post with the “open to work” logo from people who are highly qualified for jobs that don’t exist anymore. All these people with fancy PhDs and highly specialized experience that I can’t imagine would be useful outside the federal government. I really hope that the private sector cuts them some slack.
That you can't see the irony in what you wrote here is astounding.
NP and I don't see the irony. The beauty of government jobs is that the mission can be helping people. It doesn't have to be profit. There are hundreds of thousands of professionals who have built specialized careers around helping people, and now their entire field is gone. I see no irony in that.
Dp. Your response makes me slide towards agreeing with the orange’s goal (still not the process).
A government’s job should be to support our society so it can become a better functioning society, eventually resulting in a better economic position. Not just ‘helping people.’ Helping people to what end that will benefit society as a whole?
That’s what the mission should be.
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t realize LinkedIn was still a thing…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t realize LinkedIn was still a thing…
https://imgur.com/kOf3Dzb
Anonymous wrote:I find it depressing also, but for different reasons. I am 48 and have the same job I had at age 20. There's nowhere to move up, I can't do any other job, and it's pretty boring.
Everyone else on my timeline does interesting things, they go to Puerto Rico or Hawaii for work trips, they have interesting aspects of their jobs. I have none of that, and will never get it.
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t realize LinkedIn was still a thing…