- Joined
- Mar 17, 2022
These people are fucking insane. But no matter how much time they waste searching for someone who might exist somewhere is not available, they will not see the errors in their ways. They will not invest in and develop talent.
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I don't think so. You can't just say "I'll pay my employees better" because in addition to new issues in getting jobs, there's new issues in creating new jobs. Even something as buying a new restaurant is hideously expensive. I've said before that in the 1960s that the equivalent of $10k or so (in today's money) could buy a fully functioning restaurant and that was ownership-ownership, not being heavily leveraged by a bank.I think that, honestly- its part of capitalism.
its funny how capitalism was brought up because what happened to the Soviet aerospace industry is proof that it doesn’t matter if it was an capitalist state or an communist state.I don't think so. You can't just say "I'll pay my employees better" because in addition to new issues in getting jobs, there's new issues in creating new jobs. Even something as buying a new restaurant is hideously expensive. I've said before that in the 1960s that the equivalent of $10k or so (in today's money) could buy a fully functioning restaurant and that was ownership-ownership, not being heavily leveraged by a bank.
I know in some industries (particularly retail) there was a "race to the bottom" when it came to replacing salespeople with hourly wagies, but I can't believe that there was some sort of conspiracy with (((businessmen))) to slash wages like that.
I didn't just say "I'll pay my employees better". I happen to like capitalism, but squeezes in labor markets are a natural part of things here- thats the point.I don't think so. You can't just say "I'll pay my employees better" because in addition to new issues in getting jobs, there's new issues in creating new jobs. Even something as buying a new restaurant is hideously expensive. I've said before that in the 1960s that the equivalent of $10k or so (in today's money) could buy a fully functioning restaurant and that was ownership-ownership, not being heavily leveraged by a bank.
I know in some industries (particularly retail) there was a "race to the bottom" when it came to replacing salespeople with hourly wagies, but I can't believe that there was some sort of conspiracy with (((businessmen))) to slash wages like that.
There was literally a Jewish conspiracy to pay employees less than shareholders. It's called Ford Motor Company vs Dodge Brothers.I didn't just say "I'll pay my employees better". I happen to like capitalism, but squeezes in labor markets are a natural part of things here- thats the point.
Jews this, jews that stuff is also /pol/ cringe
and there doesn't need to be a conspiracy for things to fall into place the way they do. Much of the world happens not because people are planning things, but precisely for the opposite reasons.
When it comes to businesses not being able to afford to train people because overall profits have gone down, that is going to happen and people need to have the wisdom to realize that the ball can only be kicked so far down the road without significant problems happening in society.
The competency crisis has nothing to do with HR. Sure HR is useless and does nothing to make it better, but they aren't the cause. You know what is the cause?When it comes to businesses not being able to afford to train people because overall profits have gone down, that is going to happen and people need to have the wisdom to realize that the ball can only be kicked so far down the road without significant problems happening in society.
Such as?low barriers to entry and a lot of competitors t
Law, public accounting, skilled trades and landscaping/construction are big ones off the top of my head. Anybody who completes their education/training and gets the required licenses can hang their own shingle with a low capital cost to start their business, compared to something like a bank, tech company, or or airline.Such as?
People are just getting dumber. The way they interact with the world has radically changed. Generational Rot is occurring on steroids. Gen X and Boomer parents have done a giant disservice to their children by passing on NONE of their skills. This generation was notorious for showing their children something and then going "No you're doing it wrong, go away, I'll do it myself". Then the kids go back inside and play video games or dick around online and suddenly parents are shocked 10 years later when their children can't change a car tire. Gen X and Boomer parents have flat out RUINED their children. It's gotten so prolific that now you have young adults who don't know you can eat fruit off fucking trees.
Nobody teaches children anything anymore. They don't know how to act or behave or be a professional anymore. As a result, children have overwhelmingly chosen para social relationships instead because they're easier. For boys, having your bros over to play co-op games on Friday nights have turned into "let's play 1 or 2 rounds online from our own rooms and maybe go to bed at 9pm". For girls, Friday nights at the mall, well malls don't exist anymore. When they do, sometimes teens have been outright banned. There's nowhere for kids to hang out anymore. I have parents telling me all the time "So many kids don't know how to drive, it's crazy!", well where are they going to go? They're socially awkward from years of avoiding people and para social relationships are just easier.
So let me ask you, what do you think happens when kids with no skills, no clue how the world works, no clue how to interact with people, and can't even drive, suddenly turn 18-21 and enter the work force? It's a fucking disaster. Competency crisis is happening not because of HR, but rather because people are fucking stupid and have raised stupid children. Boomers fucked Gen X'ers by not seeing the signs on the wall of what the 70s and 80s did to their kids . Gen X'ers fucked their kids over by not having patience to teach them anything about the world and thinking their only duty as parents was being providers. Millennials fucked over the few kids they had because their examples for parents are piss fucking poor. Now, the hen has finally come home to roost. You have multiple generations of people who can't handle the stresses of day to day life in the modern world and are happy to sell their responsibilities to their nearest company who will fuck them over. They can't fix anything, maintain their home, or interact with each other. This hole we're digging doesn't end either. It won't be before long until we have kids who can't change light bulbs, or need 20 YouTube videos to teach them how to charge their damn phones. Fuck it, the WEF doesn't need to convince us to eat the bugs or live in our pods, a few more generations of this and we'll do it happily ourselves because we literally don't know what else to do.
I didn't just say "I'll pay my employees better". I happen to like capitalism, but squeezes in labor markets are a natural part of things here- thats the point.
Jews this, jews that stuff is also /pol/ cringe
Law, public accounting, skilled trades and landscaping/construction are big ones off the top of my head. Anybody who completes their education/training and gets the required licenses can hang their own shingle with a low capital cost to start their business, compared to something like a bank, tech company, or or airline.
Tech used to be like that too but the government-corporate oligopoly has made it way more difficult than it was in the past. We'll probably never see another HP started in somebody's garage with the way things are now.
the problem is boomers had it so fucking good that their skills don't translate. Bob Chandler passed down every single one of his skills about how to get a girlfriend to his son Chris. Would you say that worked well?y passing on NONE of their skills
you make more money working at a grocery store than being a AAA employee, and a big reason people can't change spark plugs or do their own oil change is that they don't have to do it every other month like back in the 90s.and suddenly parents are shocked 10 years later when their children can't change a car tire
Nvidia, along with most companies that involve smartphones. i was listening to an old gamer tech webshow from 2006 and they couldn't even wrap their minds around a "hardware accelerator" for gaming. half of the magnificent 7.Can you think of ANY companies that were unknowns twenty years ago and sprang up into being extremely powerful today?
Good thing I didn't.When you blame capitalism like every talentless shitlib
Nobody teaches anymore, period.Nobody teaches children anything anymore.
Well, 3Dfx was launched in the 1990s with the Voodoo graphics card and in 2000, facing insolvency, 3Dfx sold its assets to Nvidia as it faced bankruptcy. By 2006 the PC market was already well underway in transitioning into a "build-your-own" market even though the PC games market was still recovering from largely being in remission during the 6th generation era.Nvidia, along with most companies that involve smartphones. i was listening to an old gamer tech webshow from 2006 and they couldn't even wrap their minds around a "hardware accelerator" for gaming. half of the magnificent 7.
It's kind of hard to determine what a "big company" was in the before times. I've been playing around with CNN's Fortune 500 Archive. It seems a little off (as they seem to go with the names that companies have NOW and not THEN, so "Exxon Mobil", not Exxon appears on the 1975 list) but even so, the Fortune 500 list doesn't really paint a picture of the corporate zeitgeist at the time. For instance, in 1970s and 1980s, the top 10-15 are mostly oil companies, then followed by legacy companies that had been around for years (GE, AT&T, Coca-Cola). According to CNN's archives, Sears Roebuck & Co. doesn't appear in the list until 1995, at which point they were already in decline, having discontinued their famous catalog and spun off divisions like their financial services group (Discover card) and Allstate Corporation.Of course i know you're more talking about companies that literally went from two guy in a garage to being big enough to have millions of people with jobs under them, but in general 20 years ago you could still get away with not having a cell phone or computer in your life or at least your personal life. now its impossible.
I've been burned where the training gets rushed in the first two months then they suddenly decide six months in that you're not good enough (and your apartment lease doesn't run out for six more months).Back then, the first 6 months were actually about training, and not 6 months trial period with less pay. Internships were actually paid.