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		peeonme
Guest
@peonme
But change is the only constant in... everything. I'd rather have change than stagnation. And we must change with the world.
Take coal country, for example. Everybody knows the energy sector hs been moving away from coal for decades. Instead of adapting to the change, coal miners insist on remaining coal miners. They'd rather sit their asses where they are and starve. They elected a man who promised to bring coal back. How is that working out for them?
When my oldest brother graduated highschool and went to college, the tech industry couldn't find enough computer programmers. He got his degree in programming and got half a dozen job offers even before he graduated college. By the time my second brother went to college, the tech industry had an overabundance of programmers. So he majored in engineering and got a job straight out of college. Then when it was my turn, I wanted to be a researcher. Unfortunately for me, the crash killed off a lot of findings for research right when I was about to graduate. So, I did an emergency gearswitch and was able to find a job in IT out of college.
We know plenty of people who did not change and adapt and ended up never being able to utilize their degrees. I even know one guy who graduated with me in comp science with a 3.9 GPA but ended up working stocking shelves at walmart. Why? He did not want to move out of his small town.
The world changes. That's a given. You either change with it and adapt or you vote for Donald Trump and his false promises.
The world has been changing, the interesting part is which way it is going. The trend has been a downward spiral for workers and an upward increase in income for the wealthy.
I might point out that this is not about the world. It is about the minimum wage in the USA. It is not about Trump or coal. It is about a manipulation in the labor market by the wealthy that keeps the working poor from being upwardly mobile.


 
						 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
