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    1. Topics
    2. handsofqwerty
    3. Controversial
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    Posts

    Recent Best Controversial
    • The Lack of Work Ethic and the Need for Laborers

      I saw this on Facebook and felt it really cut to the heart of an issue that is so prevalent in the world today.

      @scottalanmiller posted an interesting anecdote here... http://mangolassi.it/topic/5063/the-hospitality-management-anecdote ...talking about how relevant work experience will often outshine fancy, schmancy degrees without any real-world experience.

      Well, I thought the below, while a little political to start, hits the nail on the head with an issue in today's world. There are so many ways people can advance in the world, but many get fixated on only taking a certain path. Sometimes this is what is considered the mainstream path, other times not. Either way, many viable opportunities are passed up in the name of being "beneath" them.

      Bill Gates gave a great speech one time and I love number 3 but especially number 5. So many people pass up not only viable work experience, but critical work experience because it's not glamorous enough for them. I will admit I've dealt with this issue with myself in the past, although my perspective was different at the time. I've since corrected that thinking.

      Many want to jump right to Boardwalk without going around the entire board first. Just felt like sharing.

      ===============================================================
      Hey Mike

      Your constant harping on “work ethic” is growing tiresome. Just because someone’s poor doesn’t mean they’re lazy. The unemployed want to work! And many of those who can’t find work today, didn’t have the benefit of growing up with parents like yours. How can you expect someone with no role model to qualify for one of your scholarships or sign your silly “Sweat Pledge?” Rather than accusing people of not having a work-ethic, why not drop the right-wing propaganda and help them develop one?

      Craig P.

      ===============================================================

      Hi Craig, and Happy Sunday!

      I’m afraid you’ve overestimated the reach of my foundation, as well as my ability to motivate people I’ve never met. For the record, I don’t believe all poor people are lazy, any more than I believe all rich people are greedy. But I can understand why so many do.

      Everyday on the news, liberal pundits and politicians portray the wealthy as greedy, while conservative pundits and politicians portray the poor as lazy. Democrats have become so good at denouncing greed, Republicans now defend it. And Republicans are so good at condemning laziness, Democrats are now denying it even exists. It's a never ending dance that gets more contorted by the day.

      A few weeks ago in Georgetown, President Obama accused Fox News of “perpetuating a false narrative” by consistently calling poor people “lazy.” Fox News denied the President’s accusation, claiming to have only criticized policies, not people. Unfortunately for Fox, The Daily Show has apparently gained access to the Internet, and after a ten-second google-search and a few minutes in the edit bay, John Stewart was on the air with a devastating montage of Fox personnel referring to the unemployed as “sponges,” “leeches,” “freeloaders,” and “mooches.” http://www.washingtonpost.com/…/daily-shows-jon-stewart-bu…/

      Over the next few days, the echo chamber got very noisy. The Left howled about the bias at Fox and condemned the one-percent, while the Right shrieked about the bias at MSNBC and bemoaned the growing entitlement state. But through all the howling and shrieking, no one said a word about the millions of jobs that American companies are struggling to fill right now. No one talked the fact that most of those jobs don’t require an expensive four-year degree. And no one mentioned the 1.2 trillion dollars of outstanding student loans, or the madness of lending money we don’t have to kids who can’t pay it back, educating them for jobs that no longer exist.

      I started mikeroweWORKS to talk about these issues, and shine a light on a few million good jobs that no one seems excited about. But mostly, I wanted to remind people that real opportunity still exists for those individuals who are willing to work hard, learn a skill, and make a persuasive case for themselves. Sadly, you see my efforts as “right wing propaganda.” But why? Are our differences really political? Or is it something deeper? Something philosophical?

      You wrote that, “people want to work.” In my travels, I’ve met a lot of hard-working individuals, and I’ve been singing their praises for the last 12 years. But I’ve seen nothing that would lead me to agree with your generalization. From what I’ve seen of the species, and what I know of myself, most people - given the choice - would prefer NOT to work. In fact, on Dirty Jobs, I saw Help Wanted signs in every state, even at the height of the recession. Is it possible you see the existence of so many unfilled jobs as a challenge to your basic understanding of what makes people tick?

      Last week at a policy conference in Mackinac, I talked to several hiring managers from a few of the largest companies in Michigan. They all told me the same thing - the biggest under reported challenge in finding good help, (aside from the inability to “piss clean,”) is an overwhelming lack of “soft skills.” That’s a polite way of saying that many applicants don’t tuck their shirts in, or pull their pants up, or look you in the eye, or say things like “please” and “thank you.” This is not a Michigan problem - this is a national crisis. We’re churning out a generation of poorly educated people with no skill, no ambition, no guidance, and no realistic expectations of what it means to go to work.

      These are the people you’re talking about Craig, and their number grows everyday. I understand you would like me to help them, but how? I’m not a mentor, and my foundation doesn’t do interventions. Do you really want me to stop rewarding individual work ethic, just because I don’t have the resources to assist those who don’t have any? If I’m unable to help everyone, do you really want me to help no one?

      My goals are modest, and they’ll remain that way. I don’t focus on groups. I focus on individuals who are eager to do whatever it takes to get started. People willing to retool, retrain, and relocate. That doesn’t mean I have no empathy for those less motivated. It just means I’m more inclined to subsidize the cost of training for those who are. That shouldn’t be a partisan position, but if it is, I guess I’ll just have to live with it.

      Mike

      PS. The Sweat Pledge wasn’t supposed to be partisan either, but it’s probably annoyed as many people as its inspired. I still sell them for $12, and the money still goes to mikeroweWORKS. You can get one here, even if you’re not applying for a scholarship. http://profoundlydisconnected.com/foundation/poster/

      PPS. If you’d like Craig, I’ll autograph one for you!

      ===============================================================

      posted in Water Closet
      handsofqwertyH
      handsofqwerty
    • RE: The Hospitality Management Anecdote

      @scottalanmiller said:

      @Minion-Queen said:

      The thing that people always seem to forget. Colleges are a business they are not there to be helpful to you. They are filling their pockets with the crazy fees that people pay to take classes. They are car salesmen.

      A major university in the Washington, D.C. area, when questioned as to why they were not providing a value to their students, stated that students are not the customers of a university but are simply their to provide funding for the professors to do other things. Educating the students was not their job nor did they care. The students were simply a revenue source for research.

      Read: they felt, quite rightly, that any student at their university was a sucker and deserved to be taken advantage of.

      *there

      posted in IT Careers
      handsofqwertyH
      handsofqwerty
    • RE: Secure CentOS 7 Server

      @Aaron-Studer said:

      @handsofqwerty You my friend have no room to talk about pointless posts.........

      Please stop turning this into an argument. I'm leaving this thread because nothing good will happen if I stay.

      posted in IT Discussion
      handsofqwertyH
      handsofqwerty
    • RE: The Lack of Work Ethic and the Need for Laborers

      @JaredBusch said:

      @art_of_shred said:

      I don't care who said/wrote any bit of that article. I agree with 95% of it whole-heartedly. That is all. And, to be clear, I am speaking of the heart of what's said, not the silly details like the exact "$60,000" value, or the "car phone" remark. Those are only making a point, not the crux of the matter.

      I very much dislike people that copy/paste crap on FB. Most of the time these people have no idea what they are even reposting. Seeing something blatantly wrong on ML is just insulting to the intelligent people that I thought were participating in this community.

      The OP's posted information was two different things that were wrote by two different people and neither of the original authors were credited.

      I am aware it was two separate things. The Mike Rowe thing was from Facebook. The other was something I heard years ago.

      posted in Water Closet
      handsofqwertyH
      handsofqwerty
    • RE: Secure CentOS 7 Server

      @Aaron-Studer said:

      AJ - I thought by changing your username that you were turning over a new leaf. Guess not.

      I have. I just don't see the whole purpose of the post. If it's for fun, why are you hosting it? Do something like this on your own hardware.

      posted in IT Discussion
      handsofqwertyH
      handsofqwerty
    • RE: Secure CentOS 7 Server

      @Breffni-Potter said:

      @handsofqwerty - We all know that even visiting a website about the topic of Encryption will add you to a watch list. 🙂 I'm sure @Aaron-Studer knows this.

      The day we stop asking questions for fear of the man, is the day Big Brother has taken complete power.

      No I know. I'm not saying we should fear it or not question it. I'm just saying that thinking we can beat them at this point seems kind of silly.

      posted in IT Discussion
      handsofqwertyH
      handsofqwerty
    • RE: Secure CentOS 7 Server

      Besides, I know you said you were doing it just for fun, but did you never consider that a post like this will red flag some places? If you're trying to figure out how to beat the NSA, ummm, you're going to lose that fight my friend.

      posted in IT Discussion
      handsofqwertyH
      handsofqwerty
    • RE: Secure CentOS 7 Server

      @Aaron-Studer said:

      @handsofqwerty said:

      The OP made me chuckle...

      And you still wonder why people don't like your comments.....?

      If you think you can hide stuff from the NSA, as @Breffni-Potter said, good freaking luck. They were spying on every American and we had no idea until a consultant leaked the info. You think they can't get at your data if you encrypt your HDD, change the root password, and setup keys? Seriously?

      posted in IT Discussion
      handsofqwertyH
      handsofqwerty
    • RE: Secure CentOS 7 Server

      The OP made me chuckle...

      posted in IT Discussion
      handsofqwertyH
      handsofqwerty
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