Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maga stupids have no idea what they have done none
There brains are so rotted all they care about is trolling the libs. Enjoy it, losers.
Yes, because your brain seems like one I should aspire to š
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maga stupids have no idea what they have done none
There brains are so rotted all they care about is trolling the libs. Enjoy it, losers.
Anonymous wrote:This is why I blew up at my parents this week. They made an insensitive comment about return to work and āitās how work should be conductedā, and she didnāt see past RTO to grasp that both of her children might not have jobs to RTO! Good job mom and dad, trying to make America better for your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Iām so sorry, itās been a shock of a week. And it wonāt just be feds. With the new situation at NiH, it will spread to academia, universities, etc and many more people will lose their jobs. A recession is ahead. Plan now for how to get through the next few years.
What a mess.
The Federal workforce is around one percent of the economy, and firing one percent of them doesn't move the needle at all.
An economist could argue that this will be good for the economy--freeing up skilled workers to work on more productive things in the private sector (see, for example, Argentina).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Iām so sorry, itās been a shock of a week. And it wonāt just be feds. With the new situation at NiH, it will spread to academia, universities, etc and many more people will lose their jobs. A recession is ahead. Plan now for how to get through the next few years.
What a mess.
Agreed. The impact will not be limited to feds. And with regulatory agencies and DOJ frozen, biglaw will take a big hit.
This is my fear, that we're heading toward a recession. Didn't Elon say it was going to be painful?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any MAGAs here ith jobs of the line? Is this what you expected?
It's safe to say that many people voted for Trump knowing that it may cost them their job.
I'm not trying to be a jerk, but do you remember what you were all saying when Biden shut down coal? You said they need to "upskill". Learn to code, etc. These were coal miners from generations of coal miners, working in horrible conditions, dying of job related cancer, etc, living out in remote places like the hills of West Virginia. And literally no one on the left cared about these people. It's a lot to ask that these people, and the many people who've been beaten up by Biden's policies, suddenly care about well educated, highly paid people. So, take your own advice. If you think you're too niche to work outside the government (which I doubt), then unskill to something marketable. The government workforce tends to come from a lot of privilege-- leverage it. Network. Do not pity yourself and be a victim.
Yes, the party advocating for UBI, universal healthcare, and job training for displaced workers donāt care.
Wanting to reduce pollution and help them find jobs that arenāt killing generations of them: heartless
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You will not be the first person to lose their job due to cutbacks and you wonāt be the last. Polish the resume and start networking, life hits you fast!
Iām afraid itās a bit more serious than that. Most of us are very specialized and even though there is always some movement in and out of private industry, there are not going to be hundreds/thousands of openings all at once. And certainly not all in DC. If I lost my job I have no ilusiones - my salary would be significantly reduced and Iād probably end up getting a law school friend to help me get hired doing doc review at their firm. Would not be pretty.
Anonymous wrote:Maga stupids have no idea what they have done none
Anonymous wrote:Everyone, we need to be worried about losing our jobs. Forget about telework for now. They let the DEI people go at the swipe of a pen. Any of us could be next. They could decide they do not like Intel analysts--gone. They don't like public affairs staff--gone. And on and on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did you complete ignore the comment regarding NIH grants. Also, every article regarding Argentinaās recent austerity measures describes them as having caused a massive recession and record-high poverty.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Iām so sorry, itās been a shock of a week. And it wonāt just be feds. With the new situation at NiH, it will spread to academia, universities, etc and many more people will lose their jobs. A recession is ahead. Plan now for how to get through the next few years.
What a mess.
The Federal workforce is around one percent of the economy, and firing one percent of them doesn't move the needle at all.
An economist could argue that this will be good for the economy--freeing up skilled workers to work on more productive things in the private sector (see, for example, Argentina).
The IMF and World Bank both predict 5 percent GDP growth for Argentina this year. That could be us next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm absolutely worried about my job and not RTO. White collar job market is not doing well right now.
So move to blue collar jobs - learn a trade; go into hospitality
Anonymous wrote:Why did you complete ignore the comment regarding NIH grants. Also, every article regarding Argentinaās recent austerity measures describes them as having caused a massive recession and record-high poverty.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Iām so sorry, itās been a shock of a week. And it wonāt just be feds. With the new situation at NiH, it will spread to academia, universities, etc and many more people will lose their jobs. A recession is ahead. Plan now for how to get through the next few years.
What a mess.
The Federal workforce is around one percent of the economy, and firing one percent of them doesn't move the needle at all.
An economist could argue that this will be good for the economy--freeing up skilled workers to work on more productive things in the private sector (see, for example, Argentina).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Iām so sorry, itās been a shock of a week. And it wonāt just be feds. With the new situation at NiH, it will spread to academia, universities, etc and many more people will lose their jobs. A recession is ahead. Plan now for how to get through the next few years.
What a mess.
The Federal workforce is around one percent of the economy, and firing one percent of them doesn't move the needle at all.
An economist could argue that this will be good for the economy--freeing up skilled workers to work on more productive things in the private sector (see, for example, Argentina).
Where do you think all of these private sector jobs are magically coming from?