She does kinda have a point. We have a gaping hole in our economy where manufacturing jobs used to be. Jobs that used to provide a middle class existence for families. Now they’re gone, and a large portion of our workforce has to settle for lesser paying jobs where they’re competing with illegals and other non-skilled workers.
Lots of these people’s expectations are also way too high, because what they don’t tell you in college is that the American Dream takes time, and you have to work hard for it. Even after going to college.
If you’re lucky or extremely talented you might find early success, but that’s not most people. Most people don’t get to the big bucks until later in their careers, once they have the experience to justify it.
Maybe this is more personal to me because I’ve been in a position where I had to declare bankruptcy because of medical bills. In my case we had no medical insurance because the economy sucked, I was working temp jobs, and my wife needed an emergency appendectomy. 18 hours later they discharged her from the hospital. When we got the bill a week later, for $24K, we about shit ourselves.
The worst part is we were so broke we couldn’t even afford the lawyer to go bankrupt. It took us a year to pay him his retainer to file the paperwork.
People have to start getting into them chips. Intel is dumping another $20 billion into Arizona. TSMC is going to build a factory too. They’re going to be fighting over electricians, carpenters, tool installers and construction coordinators soon.
I'm honestly okay with a "socialized" healthcare system in the form of a national insurance that throttles what they'll pay hospitals, that covers shit that isn't your fault.
If you're a stupid cunt and you fell off a roof filming a Youtube parkour video, you're a faggot who deserves to be dead or broke.
A better approach would be to outlaw for-profit corporations in the field of healthcare. The world's wealthiest stockholders should not have a vested interest in people getting sick, staying sick, or buying health care products they don't need. But they do.
She does kinda have a point. We have a gaping hole in our economy where manufacturing jobs used to be. Jobs that used to provide a middle class existence for families. Now they’re gone, and a large portion of our workforce has to settle for lesser paying jobs where they’re competing with illegals and other non-skilled workers.
Lots of these people’s expectations are also way too high, because what they don’t tell you in college is that the American Dream takes time, and you have to work hard for it. Even after going to college.
If you’re lucky or extremely talented you might find early success, but that’s not most people. Most people don’t get to the big bucks until later in their careers, once they have the experience to justify it.
Maybe this is more personal to me because I’ve been in a position where I had to declare bankruptcy because of medical bills. In my case we had no medical insurance because the economy sucked, I was working temp jobs, and my wife needed an emergency appendectomy. 18 hours later they discharged her from the hospital. When we got the bill a week later, for $24K, we about shit ourselves.
The worst part is we were so broke we couldn’t even afford the lawyer to go bankrupt. It took us a year to pay him his retainer to file the paperwork.
The few middle class manufacturing jobs left are all in the military, and the left wants to destroy those too.
People have to start getting into them chips. Intel is dumping another $20 billion into Arizona. TSMC is going to build a factory too. They’re going to be fighting over electricians, carpenters, tool installers and construction coordinators soon.
I'm honestly okay with a "socialized" healthcare system in the form of a national insurance that throttles what they'll pay hospitals, that covers shit that isn't your fault.
If you're a stupid cunt and you fell off a roof filming a Youtube parkour video, you're a faggot who deserves to be dead or broke.
It'll just drive prices up.
A better approach would be to outlaw for-profit corporations in the field of healthcare. The world's wealthiest stockholders should not have a vested interest in people getting sick, staying sick, or buying health care products they don't need. But they do.