Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of trade jobs, go find a new career.
My dad is a mason. I wanted to go into masonry and my dad said absolutely no way. One time some his friends were home and we were taking about it and they were all like kid to go college get yourself a nice job in an office and don't kill yourself doing what we are doing. A lot of people who are doing manual labor don't always want their kids to do the same. And it's not for everyone. When people say trade they often mean manual labour. You think your son who spent all his time playing video games expecting to go to college barely did any manual work at home is suddenly going to be interested and find success doing manual labor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of trade jobs, go find a new career.
My dad is a mason. I wanted to go into masonry and my dad said absolutely no way. One time some his friends were home and we were taking about it and they were all like kid to go college get yourself a nice job in an office and don't kill yourself doing what we are doing. A lot of people who are doing manual labor don't always want their kids to do the same. And it's not for everyone. When people say trade they often mean manual labour. You think your son who spent all his time playing video games expecting to go to college barely did any manual work at home is suddenly going to be interested and find success doing manual labor?
Anonymous wrote:I’m in Florida. Absolutely no signs of recession here. House sales cooling down over the last year, but that was expected after the triple price increases after Covid. We could use a recession for sure, but there are hiring signs up everywhere, and I’ve had multiple friends with high level professional jobs switch employers in the last six months. This feels more like a dc thing. I’m an attorney and my work is insanely busy, large corporate clients all over the couple. I know companies are laying off, but that feels more company specific than about national trends.
Anonymous wrote:The last bad recession was in 2008. This was almost 20 years ago. Those who invested wisely since have done incredibly well. It's been awhile since we had a major slowdown and I think in the next couple of years we will have another recession not like 08, but a bit worse than the smaller (or invisible ones) we had in between
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m in Florida. Absolutely no signs of recession here. House sales cooling down over the last year, but that was expected after the triple price increases after Covid. We could use a recession for sure, but there are hiring signs up everywhere, and I’ve had multiple friends with high level professional jobs switch employers in the last six months. This feels more like a dc thing. I’m an attorney and my work is insanely busy, large corporate clients all over the couple. I know companies are laying off, but that feels more company specific than about national trends.
I just got back from a long weekend in the Keys and even if it's not hitting your industry yet it's absolutely bonkers to say there are no signs of recession in Florida. Key West was a ghost town. Empty restaurants, empty streets, no traffic, shuttered businesses (some with signs on the doors announcing that they'd been open for 20+ years and will miss everyone); it felt like there was nobody anywhere. I've been there before in August and this was shocking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of trade jobs, go find a new career.
My dad is a mason. I wanted to go into masonry and my dad said absolutely no way. One time some his friends were home and we were taking about it and they were all like kid to go college get yourself a nice job in an office and don't kill yourself doing what we are doing. A lot of people who are doing manual labor don't always want their kids to do the same. And it's not for everyone. When people say trade they often mean manual labour. You think your son who spent all his time playing video games expecting to go to college barely did any manual work at home is suddenly going to be interested and find success doing manual labor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m in Florida. Absolutely no signs of recession here. House sales cooling down over the last year, but that was expected after the triple price increases after Covid. We could use a recession for sure, but there are hiring signs up everywhere, and I’ve had multiple friends with high level professional jobs switch employers in the last six months. This feels more like a dc thing. I’m an attorney and my work is insanely busy, large corporate clients all over the couple. I know companies are laying off, but that feels more company specific than about national trends.
Strong "if you're not a canary, what's there to worry about" energy here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plenty of trade jobs, go find a new career.
My dad is a mason. I wanted to go into masonry and my dad said absolutely no way. One time some his friends were home and we were taking about it and they were all like kid to go college get yourself a nice job in an office and don't kill yourself doing what we are doing. A lot of people who are doing manual labor don't always want their kids to do the same. And it's not for everyone. When people say trade they often mean manual labour. You think your son who spent all his time playing video games expecting to go to college barely did any manual work at home is suddenly going to be interested and find success doing manual labor?
Anonymous wrote:I’m in Florida. Absolutely no signs of recession here. House sales cooling down over the last year, but that was expected after the triple price increases after Covid. We could use a recession for sure, but there are hiring signs up everywhere, and I’ve had multiple friends with high level professional jobs switch employers in the last six months. This feels more like a dc thing. I’m an attorney and my work is insanely busy, large corporate clients all over the couple. I know companies are laying off, but that feels more company specific than about national trends.
Anonymous wrote:I’m in Florida. Absolutely no signs of recession here. House sales cooling down over the last year, but that was expected after the triple price increases after Covid. We could use a recession for sure, but there are hiring signs up everywhere, and I’ve had multiple friends with high level professional jobs switch employers in the last six months. This feels more like a dc thing. I’m an attorney and my work is insanely busy, large corporate clients all over the couple. I know companies are laying off, but that feels more company specific than about national trends.