Stray Cat
My Mail is Forwarded Here
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I failed to mention: he's unemployed, naturally.Makes you wonder just what line of work is "Mr Intellect" in.
Te lives of he's grandparents pensions.
I failed to mention: he's unemployed, naturally.Makes you wonder just what line of work is "Mr Intellect" in.
Saddest thing: they do NOTHING. [huh]However, these kids not only don't have to work but can spend their time doing whatever their heart desires.
This is because you are a GOOD and HARDWORKING person - both very rare qualities nowadays.Well, it isn't all young people. I'm 22 years old, work a 40 hour a week job at a factory, help my father and brother at their shop after I leave there, and on the weekends, buy and restore classic cars, and am working my tuchus off to get my car dealership started, filling out paperwork, going to meetings for permits, etc, etc.
Well, it isn't all young people. I'm 22 years old, work a 40 hour a week job at a factory, help my father and brother at their shop after I leave there, and on the weekends, buy and restore classic cars, and am working my tuchus off to get my car dealership started, filling out paperwork, going to meetings for permits, etc, etc.
There are plenty of kids who work hard -- all of the girls working for me have two or three jobs. But I make a point of hiring kids who come from a background similar to my own, and therefore know what it means to work for a living.
But there are a lot of kids out there who don't have any idea *how* to work, even if you give them a chance. They don't understand what punctuality means, and they don't understand that a job means that your personal needs come second to the needs of the job: the world of work is no place for worshipers of the Holy Individual, and the sooner they realize that the better off they'll be.
And then there's the kids who only want a job because their parents are threatening to throw them out of the house if they don't get one: I had such a youth show up recently, red-eyed, babbling, and stinking of dope, and from what I was able to decipher he was *insisting* that I give him a job. I was pretty clear that this wasn't going to happen, so he held out a five dollar bill and asked me if I'd run over to the drug store and buy him a pack of cigarettes because he's, you know, only seventeen. That's a young man who is headed for a lifetime of disappointments, but he probably won't ever be sober enough to realize it.
Well I really hope that you get there my friend. At 22, what I would have given to run my own business. It would be another 30 years before I got there. But in distribution, you need a warehouse, racking, forklifts, a myriad of other equipment. A functional office, plus furniture, office gizmos. You need a fleet of vehicles and at least enough capital to pay the wages for six months.
What do you plan to sell in your dealership? Modern or classic?
This is because you are a GOOD and HARDWORKING person - both very rare qualities nowadays.
If, on your travels, you come across a 1938 or 39 Chevrolet, preferably the four door model, and you think it is restorable at a good price, (anything is restorable with an open cheque book) you be sure to pm me. Just to give you a heads up. There was a large production of R/H drive models made at the Canadian factory for export to Australia & South Africa. A fair number wound up in the UK. But R/H drive is not imperative.I plan on doing mostly classics, but 4x4 vehicles will probably be popular to keep the money flowing in the winter. I have a '51 Ford truck and a '47 Olds 4-door that are in the process of being restored to go on the lot.
The main problem with work these days is that practically every single employer wants experience. Well, how are you meant to get experience if every job demands experience...?
Hear! Hear! :thumb:But there are a lot of kids out there who don't have any idea *how* to work, even if you give them a chance. They don't understand what punctuality means, and they don't understand that a job means that your personal needs come second to the needs of the job: the world of work is no place for worshipers of the Holy Individual, and the sooner they realize that the better off they'll be.
It's the vicious circle. :rage:The main problem with work these days is that practically every single employer wants experience. Well, how are you meant to get experience if every job demands experience...?
:nod:Experience, a college degree, and they'll try you out with an unpaid internship. How is anyone supposed to support themselves with those requirements?!
Markham is only a couple of hours from here. I'd be happy to go look at it for you in person if that would be useful. The only real drawback for you is that I'm completely car illiterate, so my opinion would be worthless. :lol:Stanley, I am going to look into that, thank you very much. Seventeen and half thousand Can$ = roughly Ten and half grand £:sterling.
87000 kilometres = just under 55000 miles. I need to find out shipping costs, and perhaps, a return flight to Canada.
It's the vicious circle. :rage:
:nod:
I have been there.
My answer is: you do not support yourself; you suck it up, and pretend it's just one more year of college or university.
It's the vicious circle. :rage:
:nod:
I have been there.
My answer is: you do not support yourself; you suck it up, and pretend it's just one more year of college or university.
The main problem with work these days is that practically every single employer wants experience. Well, how are you meant to get experience if every job demands experience...?
If, on your travels, you come across a 1938 or 39 Chevrolet, preferably the four door model, and you think it is restorable at a good price, (anything is restorable with an open cheque book) you be sure to pm me. Just to give you a heads up. There was a large production of R/H drive models made at the Canadian factory for export to Australia & South Africa. A fair number wound up in the UK. But R/H drive is not imperative.
Very kind of you Virginia. It's one of those life moments where something one wants, at a price that is right, always comes along at a difficult time. My wife being laid up, following her knee replacement surgery last week, means that it's an inopportune time. But I still intend to make contact. If things do progress, as a member of the Automobile Association, I can approach them to contact their Canadian counterpart, who can not only run the slide rule over the car. They can check to make sure that the owner is whom he says he is, in other words it's not stolen, the subject of a finance agreement or ringed. Ringing a car takes some explaining, if you really want to know, put it into google. The AA can also arrange shipping. Tomorrow I shall make the phone call. And thank you once more kind lady.Markham is only a couple of hours from here. I'd be happy to go look at it for you in person if that would be useful. The only real drawback for you is that I'm completely car illiterate, so my opinion would be worthless. :lol:
You didn't tell me you lived in the ghetto. I call the police out here and they nail them---not in my neighborhood but if I see it, they get it. Then again, I eve avail myself of community standards and when the lawns get too high they get a visit from the city---cut it or we will and give you the bill. I hate when you have cancerous people like that in a neighborhood. You get one and they seem to metastasize. :eeek: They are hippies with a different taste of music is all. :doh:I am tired of parents who allow their kids to sit on their front porch all day smoking pot and rapping loud enough to be across the street in the back of one's house and their kids The kids have no jobs and are no longer in school, their mothers do not work, and their properties are the eyesores of the block. I need a moat and 400 acres of land between me and all others.
So you DO have hippies there too!:doh: All he left out was "you're a cog in the wheel for the man, man."So..
I'm about 10.000 kilometers (6.000 miles) away, and the situation is the SAME.
Isn't that a shame? out:
Not long ago, I had a conversation with a fella my age. He told me a shocking thing "I'd NEVER be able to pull out a 8 hrs a day at work. That's for the mindless people"
Pardon me? :tape2:
When did having a job made us "mindless"? [huh]
Is that a general opinion among the young & free folks?!
She looked at me! :rofl: In my family we call that The Look.I am guessing that you are about 3,000 miles from the Eastern Shore, then it's another 3,000 miles across an ocean. But those species are well and truly established on our Island. The ones that I detest are the youngsters that run amok in the supermarket, screaching at the top of their voice, arms outstretched, knocking stock from the shelves, mother is impervious. If I am with my wife when this happens, she gestures as though wringing out a dish cloth. One such delightful child had the misfortune to career into my wife, the withering stare of pure napalm that kid got had him wimpering back to his mother declaring: "She looked at me!" Man it was classic.
You ain't the only one brother. I often wonder that too. I call it Generational Theft that they are engaged in.I work pretty much 12 hour days. Because I work 12 hour days, I cannot do things I enjoy. However, these kids not only don't have to work but can spend their time doing whatever their heart desires. This upsets me. It also makes me ask the following: "Why do I work again?" and "Why do I act responsible?" Seeing people enjoy the fruits without the labor make me feel more and more like a sap.