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ADetailedFinish said:From speaking of the unemployment perspective.. In my area and with a background like mine (mostly hands on and no extra shcooling) if i didn't have detailing as my main income than I wouldn't be able to survive. now that I've been laid off for 6 months from my job I have gona back into school (to become an architect) and I think it would be a good thing. As long as they are keeping up and actually trying to progress
ADetailedFinish said:From speaking of the unemployment perspective.. In my area and with a background like mine (mostly hands on and no extra shcooling) if i didn't have detailing as my main income than I wouldn't be able to survive. now that I've been laid off for 6 months from my job I have gona back into school (to become an architect) and I think it would be a good thing. As long as they are keeping up and actually trying to progress
I'd love a job. Been nearly three years out of work, with only two temp positions in between. "Get a frickin job" is really trite. Hope you never get told "As soon as a job in your old field opens up, you'd leave, so no, I won't even interview you" by a manager of a K-Mart store, after spending twenty-five years in outside sales, and being laid off by the new owner of your old employer.CCSS2005 said:Stop taking my money nooooooooooo! Get a frickin job
Have fun trying to "(make) it happen" in Michigan, with double digit unemployment, and a large number of 99 weekers who are majority unemployed professional (well educated & experienced) people. You do NOT want to hear about the outcomes of what few interviews I have had, and the kind of things I've been told to my face.M Gray said:I vote NO. There is a place for some unemployment, but extending it is only enabling people to do nothing. There is a time and place for everything and maybe a small extension for someone in a depressed economy like detroit there may be a place for something. People need to get away from the victim mentality and having a sense of entitlement. That is not what made this country great. It was made by hardworking people who made it happen.
Whew....I feel better...............You guys have a great weekend.
Yea, we're seriously looking at it. One problem is the freaking house - bought it new, in 1998, for $213K. Conventional 20% down/30 year mortgage. Nothing fancy, just a regular mortgage. We owe a hair over $148K. House might now sell for $160K, tops. Back out the 6% real estate commission, and we might walk away with two grand.David Fermani said:I also agree that an extension should be allowed.
Len_A - that sucks that you're still unemployed and I feel for you totally. Have you ever thought about getting the hell out of Michigan? It seems that the bleeding there has leveled off mostly and it's going to be survival of the fittest until a couple hundred thousand jobs are created. People need to realize that it's going to take a long time to get MI back to normal and might either need to start a business or move where it's less doom and gloom. I really don't know.
M Gray said:I vote NO. There is a place for some unemployment, but extending it is only enabling people to do nothing. There is a time and place for everything and maybe a small extension for someone in a depressed economy like detroit there may be a place for something. People need to get away from the victim mentality and having a sense of entitlement. That is not what made this country great. It was made by hardworking people who made it happen.
Whew....I feel better...............You guys have a great weekend.
Damn, I couldn't have said that any better. Thanks, WAS.WAS said:Enabling people to do nothing ? True in some cases, but there are LOTS of other cases where good, hard working people can't find work. This is not their fault, the American economy is in the dumps (or was in the dumps). These people aren't some bums trying to live off the system. They were employed, making money, paying taxes, paying for their homes, when something happened and their job was gone. A social security net like unemployment insurance is good, it helps out people during unfortunate times, so they don't have to foreclose their home, so they don't lose their vehicle, and so they don't have to cry themselves to sleep wondering how they're going to put food on the table the next night for their families.
As for people getting away from their sense of entitlement..... How do you think the unemployement insurance program works ? It's paid for by taxpayers. Which means that you and everyone else who works is paying money into the system. So techincally, yeah, people who get unemployment ARE entitled to it, because they PAID into that system.
Sorry, but I find this blantant mentality very irritating. Maybe you don't know what it's like to get pushed into a financial corner that wasn't your fault, but you should really think before making such a blanket statement.
Len_A said:Damn, I couldn't have said that any better. Thanks, WAS.
RaskyR1 said:The problem is that a lot of people abuse the system....not sure how I'd vote really. I've had family members unemployed but they also worked their tail of to find a new job....even if it was making less money. I just don't like people sitting on their a$$ collecting free money.
M Gray said:I vote NO. There is a place for some unemployment, but extending it is only enabling people to do nothing. There is a time and place for everything and maybe a small extension for someone in a depressed economy like detroit there may be a place for something. People need to get away from the victim mentality and having a sense of entitlement. That is not what made this country great. It was made by hardworking people who made it happen.
Whew....I feel better...............You guys have a great weekend.