Posted by: Boldwin
- [2210132620] Sat, Nov 27, 2010, 00:48
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165
Building 7 Leader
ID: 171572711 Mon, May 21, 2012, 10:34
My wife worked at the same place for 37 years. She got 4 or 5 weeks of vacation. 2 weeks is entry level.
166
sarge33rd
ID: 353491011 Mon, May 21, 2012, 10:42
depends on where B7. In more than a few industries, paid vacation doesnt exist at all. Most commission paid positions, time away from work = time with zero income.
167
boikin
ID: 532592112 Mon, May 21, 2012, 10:59
It's a sad state of affairs where we've turned into a society that values going into work and producing things more than our personal happiness and spending time with friends and family and exploring the world. The Europeans have this one right.
while I agree with the idea of 35 hour work week and more holidays historically your statement above is just false. Nothing in society has turned right now average hours worked per week as an all time low in America, so if you like maybe we should turn back to a time when the 50 hour week was standard.
168
sarge33rd
ID: 353491011 Mon, May 21, 2012, 11:09
avg hrs worked by nr of working age Americans may be at a low, but only because the nr of unemployed Americans is at a high.
Rather than be a harpie, perhaps you could acknowledge that what many of us want, is for a return to a single income supporting a household thus allowing the spouse to be there to raise kids. One can only wonder, if that would not result n a drop in crime and a rise in HS graduation and college attendance.
169
Perm Dude
ID: 3210201915 Mon, May 21, 2012, 11:33
average hours worked per week as an all time low in America
Among those who work (which are, of course, the vast majority of adults in this country), the opposite is true. Americans have been working long hours for some time.
170
Boldwin
ID: 3944693 Mon, May 21, 2012, 12:40
Sarge#168
Where is the feminist apology to women for condemning them to the workplace and estrangement from their kids? This is usually presented as a triumph, one they'd like to complete.
171
Perm Dude
ID: 3210201915 Mon, May 21, 2012, 13:14
Hahaha. An apology for giving women the choice to work. Nice.
I revise my estimate of Boldwin's "golden period" backward, from the 1950's to the 1890's.
Here's the thing about freedom: It means you have to live with ideas that you despise.
172
boikin
ID: 532592112 Mon, May 21, 2012, 13:50
re 168 and 169, this is not a recent results the numbers have been trending down constantly since the turn of century.
It should also be noted Europeans have traded standard of living for those less hours worked. You will not see many McMansions in Europe. If you wanted to live in small 50's house drive one car own one tv, no cable not internet, no cell phone...then you could still live on one income the point is we have traded extra hours of work for extra material goods.
173
DWetzel
ID: 49962710 Mon, May 21, 2012, 14:05
They don't have cable, or Internet, or cell phones in Europe?
Man, that sucks to be them.
174
DWetzel
ID: 49962710 Mon, May 21, 2012, 14:05
(And yes, I know that's an oversimplification.)
175
Perm Dude
ID: 3210201915 Mon, May 21, 2012, 14:09
#172: I've said this elsewhere here (I think in the jobs thread) but I believe that we as a country are beginning to turn around on that point a bit (which is a good thing, IMO). The recession has caused many people to reevaluate the constant pursuit of, well, stuff. And now that the economy is picking back up a bit, the fact that some are choosing not to go back to work is a good thing.
176
boikin
ID: 532592112 Mon, May 21, 2012, 15:31
re 173, no you are correct cell phones are dirt cheap there, though internet can be quite high. though I was actually referring to a time in America when single incomes were more common. I don't actually know the rate of single incomes in Europe but I would think it is similar to USA.
re 175, I think that is accurate and some studies have indicated this is why they think hours works have continued to decline in the past 20 years.
177
DWetzel
ID: 31111810 Mon, May 21, 2012, 16:45
Boikin, did you not mean to say "It should also be noted Europeans have traded standard of living for those less hours worked." ?
178
boikin
ID: 532592112 Mon, May 21, 2012, 17:10
probably should have said something like this:
It should also be noted Europeans have traded standard of living for those less hours worked. You will not see many McMansions in Europe.
You can still live on a single income, if you wanted to live in small 50's size house drive one car own one tv, no cable not internet, no cell phone...then you still could live on one income.
The point is we have traded extra hours of work for extra material goods.
In 1950, min wage, required 56 hrs to pay a months rent.
1960, 71 hours...
1970, 67.5 hrs...
1980, 78 hrs...
1990, 118 hrs
2000, 117 hrs...
2010, 109 hrs.
Thats 3 1/2 weeks pay, for 1 months rent. Doesnt leave much, does it?
180
Frick
ID: 14082314 Tue, May 22, 2012, 08:28
How are they defining rent? Just apartments or does that include people who are paying mortgages as well?
Home sizes have increased on average. I'm not sure on apartment sizes, but it seems like they are larger, on average, as well.
181
Perm Dude
ID: 3210201915 Tue, May 22, 2012, 10:48
The link talks about "median rental price" which seems a little off to me, particularly in NYC where much of the rental market is rent controlled (who knows if the numbers are for non rent controlled or everyone? The underlying data isn't available).
Rent does consume more and more of the worker's paycheck. But one side benefit of the housing market collapse is that is starting to reverse itself a bit.
182
Frick
ID: 14082314 Tue, May 22, 2012, 11:55
I don't disagree that rents are rising, what I was questioning is what are you getting for the money. If in 1950 you were able to rent a 1 bedroom 300 sq ft apartment for 56 hours, it isn't fair to compare that to a 1 bedroom 750 dq ft apartment. And that doesn't account for the the location and the price differences associated with specific neighborhoods. It also isn't accounting for what the differences in property taxes possibly are.
183
Boldwin
ID: 43492714 Wed, May 30, 2012, 07:44
Victor Davis Hansen floats down the Rhine radar trained on the zeitgeist re EU breakup and awash in historical irony.
184
Boldwin
ID: 18643169 Mon, Aug 06, 2012, 21:01
You've heard of derivatives [which were not allowed to unwind and are still as big a problem as ever], the EU looming precipice, but add to that the Chinese Golden Elephants.
Opaque investment vehicles, offered by shadow banks outside the normal banking regime, paying twice the average return, and backed by empty building projects in ghost towns.
While France is at no serious risk of a debt crisis...youth jobless rate rising to a record 27pc...The economy may have tipped into recession already...
The employers group MEDEF said business was "in revolt across the country", warning that bankruptcies were accelerating and firms were slashing investment.
"Large foreign investors are shunning France altogether," it said.
Mr Hollande has sought to rein in his industry minister Arnaud Montebourg, who first lashed out at the Peugeot family and then threatened to nationalise ArclerMittal's steel operations in Lorraine, describing Lakshmi Mittal as "unwelcome" in France.
The state's share of the economy has risen to Nordic levels of 55pc of GDP, without Nordic labour flexibility.
The International Monetary Fund warns that France risks being left behind by Spain and Italy as they cut costs and grasp the nettle of deep reform.
Reserve currency bubble, and explains why inflation hasn't yet caught up to world-wide monetary supply inflation. And what will probably be the trigger or tipping point producing runaway inflation.
Pancho Villa
ID: 59645318 Sat, Jan 19, 2013, 01:30
Doug Casey is an interesting and entertaining guy. His economic takes generally tag him as a gold bug, which lessens his credibility. Wonder if Boldwin shares his views on Muslims and the War on Terror.
The War on Terror is being fought mainly in Muslim countries. It's not being called a War on Islam, but to the people living in those places, it's increasingly looking like a War on Islam, and the fact that most U.S. allies in the Islamic world are oppressive regimes doesn't help at all. Iraq, Afghanistan, Egypt, Saudi, and Pakistan, among others, are all run by quislings, puppets, or stooges of the U.S. The average citizen of those places despises his corrupt government, and recognizes that the U.S. is propping it up – which gives them good reason to hate the U.S. The demographics in these places are a time bomb – half the population is under 30, and they're mostly unemployed. Many would form terrorist groups out of boredom, except they have much better reasons. The U.S. doesn't have any real friends in those suppressive governments anyway; those people will change sides in a New York second. And it's getting worse.
What do the people in those countries perceive? Christian soldiers kicking in doors and shooting people – echoes of fighting that's gone on for over a thousand years.
The West may think they are fighting a War on Terror, but Muslims are going to see it increasingly as a War on Islam. And when they react accordingly, it will become so.
That fool Bush said the U.S. was attacked because "they hate our freedom." I can't imagine a more ridiculous assessment. Especially when Bin Laden clearly spelled out why the 9/11 attack occurred – three reasons. One, foreign troops in Muslim countries. Two, the U.S. propping up puppet regimes in Muslim countries. Three, the U.S. supporting Israel, which they view as a usurper of Palestinian land. In point of fact, these are reasonable objections on his part.
What should be done about this insane War on Terror, before it gets totally out of control, and you get everything from the kind of attacks we've discussed above, all the way up to nuclear explosions going off in U.S. cities? While the U.S. is bankrupting itself? I suggest the manly and honorable thing to do is sincerely apologize for past aggressions. Combined with disinvolvement of the U.S. Government and military from the Mideast. If they don't do that, this thing will almost certainly escalate, and get out of hand.
When it comes to the next generation of warfare, terrorism, the only way to win is not to play. link
Pancho Villa
ID: 59645318 Sat, Jan 19, 2013, 11:48
I agree with every word
I missed those posts of yours where you were sympathetic to Muslims perceiving Christian soldiers kicking in doors and shooting people – echoes of fighting that's gone on for over a thousand years...Muslims are going to see it increasingly as a War on Islam
Also missed those posts where you agreed with the suggestion that the manly and honorable thing to do is sincerely apologize for past aggressions. Combined with disinvolvement of the U.S. Government and military from the Mideast.
There actually are cycles of violence. Jihadi outrages will be a constant for the foreseeable future. Reactions will be inevitable. Not reacting to totalitarian jihadis doesn't lead to a peaceful outcome either. That is the factor the author overlooks. There is no possible peaceful outcome with jihadis at this time.
As the Bible says, the nations are being led along as if by a ring thru the nose at this time.
Germany has asked for their gold back from storage in the USA. Which was met with a refusal.
Germany asked for an audit of their physical gold in the USA which was met by a refusal.
Germany was told they could retrieve their gold over the next seven years.
The 'powers that be' have been using 'fractional lending' to leverage their control over gold into greater wealth and power. The gold isn't there. ----- In unrelated *cough* news, France was at the time of his overthrow, refusing Khadafi's requests for his Euros in French banks back, so that he could establish the African Gold Dinar made from actual physical gold, as a new currency.
Prepare for the inevitible change in world reserve currency and a crash of the dollar's value as everyone cashes in and all those overseas dollars come winging their way back home.
Yeah. They need to, and probably will at some point, tell the Russian mobsters to suck it, and do as the icelanders did. They need to ruminate on that for a while first, however.
If you aren't reading ZeroHedge you are just in the dark. So many huge items in today's edition it boggles the mind.
97% of bankrupt Spain's SS pension fund is held in the bankrupt country's bankrupt government bonds.
This whole nanny state of the west is designed to fold.
Italian leader says there is no plan B and suggests confiscating bank deposits become the template to follow.
Gold bars being used to circumvent currency rules and facilitate capital flight from the less solvent portions of the EU. Cars loaded with bars stopped at the border.
A guide to hiding your cash from the coming haircut.
The purpose of the media's anti-offshore banking slant and leaked offshore financial info. Spooking deposits into circulation since traditional methods have not increased velocity.
Eric Holder preparing to let Enron's Skilling out way early, half his time. Bet there's been donation promises made on that one.
I've just got to find a way to track interest rate swaps.
Regular hack attacks and denial of service attacks in the virtual currency [bitcoin, etc] realm.
Here is your whole "nanny state meme" problem B...the largest "nanny states" out there? (Germany and Sweden), are both doing quite well.It's the rest of the world, doing poorly.
Since January 2012, China has imported an absolutely stunning 1,206 tons of gold. Putting this number in context, this is 20% more than the entire reporter official gold holdings of 1054 tons, and represents roughly half of the total 2500 tons of gold mined every year.
There is an interesting stealth war going on between countries with everyone inflating their money supplies like crazy. Which instantly devalues a country's holdings in the trade and currency of the other countries they deal with.
There is also a race to nail down real wealth as opposed to paper wealth. I think Germany's attempt to repatriate their gold from vaults in America and being rebuffed in that was a real jaw dropper. The gap between physical gold and paper gold assets is one to watch closely as a telling indicator.