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Have and show Integrity. Never compromise it, ever. It's the most valuable thing you can have. Own up to your mistakes, and be your worst critic. Show and prove your reliable, Do what you say your going to do, and never ever say "not my job" and never leave something half assed. Do all that, and you should be fine. |
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People have been predicting the downfall of the United States for many years, each one condemning the next generation to utter despair. And somehow we always survive. We change and we adapt, but we survive. :yep: Your generation will experience things that my generation could only dream of. And at the same time, you will miss out on experiences my generation holds dearly. That's just life on this wacky rock. :know: |
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gimpy - be principled. Stand up for your beliefs. Act in such a way that no one can indict your character. Do the Marine thing -do the right thing even when no one's looking. Make yourself indisposable. Learn whatever job you get inside and out - be the expert at whatever. Make it so they have to think twice to get rid of you. Go the extra mile. Be a jack of all trades. They can replace one job position, they have trouble replacing two or three - know and do those two or three job descriptions. Just my $0.02 |
sounds advice guys :up:
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I can sum up why the bailouts (bush and obama's) went wrong in 2 words...
"They happened." Nuff said. |
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What the tea-party movement represents, maligned as it is by the left, is a shift in Republican politics and eventually (I hope) party platform. The Repubs are infamous for spending just as much (and in some cases, more) than the Dems. I think the success of the tea-party movement may be indicative of Americans actually sending a message to Washington more or less successfully, which is better than nothing at all. More importantly, in a two-party system, if one party definitively adopts a stance, the other party is all but required to adopt the opposite stance to garner the largest possible number of votes. In the event of another tea-party success, that could put the legislature in the hands of the tea-party Republicans and independents. My main worry about them is that they will lose momentum and stop complaining, or conclude that the effort is hopeless or too much work. If they do that before 2012, we just continue with the same system, so we're screwed. If they do it after 2012, or even 2016, we may well end up with another single-party legislative dynasty, which would eventually be even worse. Aside from that, there's always the option of supporting a third party with a fiscal-responsibility agenda, like the Libertarians. I'm not saying you need to throw away a vote in a presidential election or a presidential primary. Just get the word out in a local election. Or just cast a vote in one. Nobody votes in those things anyway, so your vote carries more weight, but what really matters is that every Libertarian elected at a local level carries the weight of thousands of district votes (y'know, unless your district has less than thousands of people). Apply pressure from the ground up, rather than the top down. Or don't. Whatever you do, don't just give up. Every vote of no-confidence in the current government is ammunition to bring about the reform of government, even if all you do is convince one person on one forum. Y'know, as long as you don't convince them to vote for more government to fix the current government. |
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If government spending and powers of taxation and borrowing and money-printing are reined-in (as per the tea-party and libertarian agendas), it can't do anything. It won't have the money. You could be EvilCorp Inc. and spend ten-billion to buy a politician, but if that politician can't pass or argue for any legislation because the government has no money to effect it it's a moot point. And like you, nobody is going to buy stuff that doesn't work. You wouldn't buy a TV if you didn't have an electrical outlet to plug it into, no matter how badly you wanted it. Same concept here. Just take away the government electrical outlet. And every step in that direction is a valuable one. Some are more valuable than others, but all are valuable. Even if you can convince just one person to fight against government spending, that's a small step forward. On the internet, it may end up being many small steps forward. People talk to people. Everyone who says anything to anyone else has some kind of effect. Even if you don't push the "tea-party/libertarian" agenda that I'm constantly on about, your dissatisfaction with the government is something that needs to be known. It's not just venting. Others will pick up on it and ask themselves questions about it, maybe even share your dissatisfaction. You may have more influence than you know. But if you just give up or say nothing, you're not helping anything. Quote:
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Making yourself indisposable is easier said then done. Though i suppose it depends on who's in charge. A couple years ago we had a change in management, and they've been going at things. To the powers that be, you as an employee represent one or two things. Functionality or Productivity. Someone who provides functionality is indisposeable. Someone who provides productivity is replaceable. Needless to say, the management has been doing their utmost so they don't have to rely on any one person for anything. Including me. I WAS indisposeable, but my primary duty has been automated. Now my existance is being carried through on my secondary duty, and i now represent productivity , and am a replaceable widget. Anyway, i cleaned out my desk 3 months ago. In my mind, it isn't a question of IF, but WHEN. As long as i get a severance, i don't give a ****. |
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