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Anti-Worker Venom also Fueled the Government Shutdown
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Feb 11, 2019 07:13:54   #
Bad Bob Loc: Virginia
 
https://www.politicususa.com/2019/02/10/anti-worker-venom-also-fueled-the-government-shutdown.html

Though the U.S. government has opened for business again, it is worthwhile to understand the anti-worker venom that perhaps motivated and certainly prolonged Trump’s Republican-backed government shutdown, which has the notoriety of being longest shutdown of the federal government in American history.

Justifiably, the lion’s share of the media coverage and political debate around the shutdown has focused on Trump’s anti-immigrant r****m embodied in his obsessive insistence on, desire for, funding to build that infamous wall, whether literal or metaphorical. This insistence he rationalizes and roots in a mythical border crisis he has rhetorically manufactured, which, saner minds show us, bears no relation to reality, as even some Republicans admit.

An undercurrent to the shutdown that has received little to no attention, however, is the anti-worker venom that fueled and even possibly played some role in motivating the shutdown. Indeed, while Trump often frames his anti-immigrant r****m as support for the American working class, recycling the hackneyed argument that “illegal” immigrants drive down wages and steal jobs from “real Americans,” we actually need to understand Trump’s anti-immigrant r****m as working hand in hand with his assault on the U.S. working class as a whole.


The shutdown, if we listen closely to the loudmouth Trump whisperers, reveals these links.
Certainly, there has been coverage of the way the shutdown constituted an effective assault on workers as well as workers’, and particularly unions’, responses to the injustices the shutdown perpetrated on workers, such as forcing certain groups of federal employees to work without pay. Articles have covered in detail Trump’s complete lack of concern for workers, revealed in his repeated lies that he would somehow prevent plant closings.

And certainly the callous responses from voices in the Trump administration made clear both their thorough ignorance of how the average worker lives in America, such that they couldn’t comprehend the devastating impact of the shutdown on people’s lives, as well as their complete lack of clear. This combination of ignorance and carelessness was clear in Wilbur Ross’s dismissal of people’s hardships in suggesting workers just take out loans to survive the shutdown;

in Lara Trump’s assertion that the “little bit of pain” workers were enduring was worth the sacrifice for the bigger r****t ideal; in the glib characterization of the shutdown by one of Trump’s economic advisor as a lovely “vacation” for workers; and in Trump’s blithe assurance that
The shutdown, if we listen closely to the loudmouth Trump whisperers, reveals these links.
Certainly, there has been coverage of the way the shutdown constituted an effective assault on workers as well as workers’, and particularly unions’, responses to the injustices the shutdown perpetrated on workers, such as forcing certain groups of federal employees to work without pay. Articles have covered in detail Trump’s complete lack of concern for workers, revealed in his repeated lies that he would somehow prevent plant closings.

And certainly the callous responses from voices in the Trump administration made clear both their thorough ignorance of how the average worker lives in America, such that they couldn’t comprehend the devastating impact of the shutdown on people’s lives, as well as their complete lack of clear. This combination of ignorance and carelessness was clear in Wilbur Ross’s dismissal of people’s hardships in suggesting workers just take out loans to survive the shutdown;

in Lara Trump’s assertion that the “little bit of pain” workers were enduring was worth the sacrifice for the bigger r****t ideal; in the glib characterization of the shutdown by one of Trump’s economic advisor as a lovely “vacation” for workers; and in Trump’s blithe assurance that he, of course, could relate to the struggles of those going out with pay during the shutdown and that he was confident that, as always, workers would “make adjustments.”

I’m talking, though, about more than this lack of care and this severe ignorance of how the other 99% of people in America live. I’m talking about an anti-worker venom that enabled and perpetuated the shutdown and the suffering.

This anti-worker fuel and possible motivation for the shutdown became clear when self-proclaimed Trump whisperer Ann Coulter revealed in a recent interview the content of some of her conversations with Trump and her attitudes about federal workers. In this interview with Michael Moynihan of Vice News, Coulter insisted, “I’ve been advising the President on twitter, in columns, in conversations you don’t get to know about since his e******n.”

More interesting than her revelations about her advisory role to the presidency were her comments about shutdown. She declared it ridiculous that Democrats would hold up funding the government “while they’re weeping for the federal employees with much better benefits, retirement plans, and vacation and sick leave than anyone watching this program.”

Hmmm. The seeping out and stoking of this type of resentment toward well-remunerated workers suggests another layer and another method behind the madness of the government shutdown besides the substantial anti-immigrant r****m of the insistence on a wall.


Sure, it’s plausible that Coulter just doesn’t want to miss the opportunity a good crisis presents to resurrect the stale rhetoric of demonizing public sector workers as a way of speciously dividing workers as a whole, making it seem like fat-cat government workers are responsible for other workers’ substandard wages and benefits and not an exploitive ruling class. (Of course, just to be clear, we all know from the many testimonials from federal employees waiting in breadlines, facing evictions, and otherwise living paycheck to paycheck, that Coulter is peddling the well-worn myth of the fat-cat public sector employee, not a reality.)

But consider that last December, shortly after the shutdown commenced, Trump issued an executive order freezing pay increases for federal workers, claiming the government could not afford it, despite the fact the government could afford a 1.5 trillion dollar tax cut for the wealthiest of Americans, not to mention the $11 billion the shutdown cost, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

This executive order seemed like salt on the wound, like an oddly-timed piling on. And while reported in the media, the story was quickly swallowed up by coverage of the stand-off over funding the wall. We should keep this in mind when considering Coulter’s January 16 interview and her advice to Trump to stay the course and focus onimmigration. “As long as people are talking about immigration, you’re winning,” she addressed Trump in the interview.
Analyzing the shutdown and Trump’s freezing of federal employee wages through the lens of Coulter’s interview, we have reason to believe the shutdown wasn’t just about the wall and anti-immigrant r****m;

it was also likely about Trump’s larger agenda of assaulting workers by attempting to destroy gains made in the passage of the Affordable Care Act to ensure working Americans could access health care, by undermining unions by appointing Supreme Court Justices who would eliminate declare fair-share dues unconstitutional, by opposing federal minimum wage standards, and more.----MORE----
The shutdown, if we listen closely to the loudmouth Trump whisperers, reveals these links.
Certainly, there has been coverage of the way the shutdown constituted an effective assault on workers as well as workers’, and particularly unions’, responses to the injustices the shutdown perpetrated on workers, such as forcing certain groups of federal employees to work without pay. Articles have covered in detail Trump’s complete lack of concern for workers, revealed in his repeated lies that he would somehow prevent plant closings.
And certainly the callous responses from voices in the Trump administration made clear both their thorough ignorance of how the average worker lives in America, such that they couldn’t comprehend the devastating impact of the shutdown on people’s lives, as well as their complete lack of clear. This combination of ignorance and carelessness was clear in Wilbur Ross’s dismissal of people’s hardships in suggesting workers just take out loans to survive the shutdown; in Lara Trump’s assertion that the “little bit of pain” workers were enduring was worth the sacrifice for the bigger r****t ideal; in the glib characterization of the shutdown by one of Trump’s economic advisor as a lovely “vacation” for workers; and in Trump’s blithe assurance that

Reply
Feb 11, 2019 07:28:23   #
ACP45 Loc: Rhode Island
 
Bad Bob wrote:
https://www.politicususa.com/2019/02/10/anti-worker-venom-also-fueled-the-government-shutdown.html

Though the U.S. government has opened for business again, it is worthwhile to understand the anti-worker venom that perhaps motivated and certainly prolonged Trump’s Republican-backed government shutdown, which has the notoriety of being longest shutdown of the federal government in American history.

Justifiably, the lion’s share of the media coverage and political debate around the shutdown has focused on Trump’s anti-immigrant r****m embodied in his obsessive insistence on, desire for, funding to build that infamous wall, whether literal or metaphorical. This insistence he rationalizes and roots in a mythical border crisis he has rhetorically manufactured, which, saner minds show us, bears no relation to reality, as even some Republicans admit.

An undercurrent to the shutdown that has received little to no attention, however, is the anti-worker venom that fueled and even possibly played some role in motivating the shutdown. Indeed, while Trump often frames his anti-immigrant r****m as support for the American working class, recycling the hackneyed argument that “illegal” immigrants drive down wages and steal jobs from “real Americans,” we actually need to understand Trump’s anti-immigrant r****m as working hand in hand with his assault on the U.S. working class as a whole.


The shutdown, if we listen closely to the loudmouth Trump whisperers, reveals these links.
Certainly, there has been coverage of the way the shutdown constituted an effective assault on workers as well as workers’, and particularly unions’, responses to the injustices the shutdown perpetrated on workers, such as forcing certain groups of federal employees to work without pay. Articles have covered in detail Trump’s complete lack of concern for workers, revealed in his repeated lies that he would somehow prevent plant closings.

And certainly the callous responses from voices in the Trump administration made clear both their thorough ignorance of how the average worker lives in America, such that they couldn’t comprehend the devastating impact of the shutdown on people’s lives, as well as their complete lack of clear. This combination of ignorance and carelessness was clear in Wilbur Ross’s dismissal of people’s hardships in suggesting workers just take out loans to survive the shutdown;

in Lara Trump’s assertion that the “little bit of pain” workers were enduring was worth the sacrifice for the bigger r****t ideal; in the glib characterization of the shutdown by one of Trump’s economic advisor as a lovely “vacation” for workers; and in Trump’s blithe assurance that
The shutdown, if we listen closely to the loudmouth Trump whisperers, reveals these links.
Certainly, there has been coverage of the way the shutdown constituted an effective assault on workers as well as workers’, and particularly unions’, responses to the injustices the shutdown perpetrated on workers, such as forcing certain groups of federal employees to work without pay. Articles have covered in detail Trump’s complete lack of concern for workers, revealed in his repeated lies that he would somehow prevent plant closings.

And certainly the callous responses from voices in the Trump administration made clear both their thorough ignorance of how the average worker lives in America, such that they couldn’t comprehend the devastating impact of the shutdown on people’s lives, as well as their complete lack of clear. This combination of ignorance and carelessness was clear in Wilbur Ross’s dismissal of people’s hardships in suggesting workers just take out loans to survive the shutdown;

in Lara Trump’s assertion that the “little bit of pain” workers were enduring was worth the sacrifice for the bigger r****t ideal; in the glib characterization of the shutdown by one of Trump’s economic advisor as a lovely “vacation” for workers; and in Trump’s blithe assurance that he, of course, could relate to the struggles of those going out with pay during the shutdown and that he was confident that, as always, workers would “make adjustments.”

I’m talking, though, about more than this lack of care and this severe ignorance of how the other 99% of people in America live. I’m talking about an anti-worker venom that enabled and perpetuated the shutdown and the suffering.

This anti-worker fuel and possible motivation for the shutdown became clear when self-proclaimed Trump whisperer Ann Coulter revealed in a recent interview the content of some of her conversations with Trump and her attitudes about federal workers. In this interview with Michael Moynihan of Vice News, Coulter insisted, “I’ve been advising the President on twitter, in columns, in conversations you don’t get to know about since his e******n.”

More interesting than her revelations about her advisory role to the presidency were her comments about shutdown. She declared it ridiculous that Democrats would hold up funding the government “while they’re weeping for the federal employees with much better benefits, retirement plans, and vacation and sick leave than anyone watching this program.”

Hmmm. The seeping out and stoking of this type of resentment toward well-remunerated workers suggests another layer and another method behind the madness of the government shutdown besides the substantial anti-immigrant r****m of the insistence on a wall.


Sure, it’s plausible that Coulter just doesn’t want to miss the opportunity a good crisis presents to resurrect the stale rhetoric of demonizing public sector workers as a way of speciously dividing workers as a whole, making it seem like fat-cat government workers are responsible for other workers’ substandard wages and benefits and not an exploitive ruling class. (Of course, just to be clear, we all know from the many testimonials from federal employees waiting in breadlines, facing evictions, and otherwise living paycheck to paycheck, that Coulter is peddling the well-worn myth of the fat-cat public sector employee, not a reality.)

But consider that last December, shortly after the shutdown commenced, Trump issued an executive order freezing pay increases for federal workers, claiming the government could not afford it, despite the fact the government could afford a 1.5 trillion dollar tax cut for the wealthiest of Americans, not to mention the $11 billion the shutdown cost, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

This executive order seemed like salt on the wound, like an oddly-timed piling on. And while reported in the media, the story was quickly swallowed up by coverage of the stand-off over funding the wall. We should keep this in mind when considering Coulter’s January 16 interview and her advice to Trump to stay the course and focus onimmigration. “As long as people are talking about immigration, you’re winning,” she addressed Trump in the interview.
Analyzing the shutdown and Trump’s freezing of federal employee wages through the lens of Coulter’s interview, we have reason to believe the shutdown wasn’t just about the wall and anti-immigrant r****m;

it was also likely about Trump’s larger agenda of assaulting workers by attempting to destroy gains made in the passage of the Affordable Care Act to ensure working Americans could access health care, by undermining unions by appointing Supreme Court Justices who would eliminate declare fair-share dues unconstitutional, by opposing federal minimum wage standards, and more.----MORE----
The shutdown, if we listen closely to the loudmouth Trump whisperers, reveals these links.
Certainly, there has been coverage of the way the shutdown constituted an effective assault on workers as well as workers’, and particularly unions’, responses to the injustices the shutdown perpetrated on workers, such as forcing certain groups of federal employees to work without pay. Articles have covered in detail Trump’s complete lack of concern for workers, revealed in his repeated lies that he would somehow prevent plant closings.
And certainly the callous responses from voices in the Trump administration made clear both their thorough ignorance of how the average worker lives in America, such that they couldn’t comprehend the devastating impact of the shutdown on people’s lives, as well as their complete lack of clear. This combination of ignorance and carelessness was clear in Wilbur Ross’s dismissal of people’s hardships in suggesting workers just take out loans to survive the shutdown; in Lara Trump’s assertion that the “little bit of pain” workers were enduring was worth the sacrifice for the bigger r****t ideal; in the glib characterization of the shutdown by one of Trump’s economic advisor as a lovely “vacation” for workers; and in Trump’s blithe assurance that
https://www.politicususa.com/2019/02/10/anti-worke... (show quote)


I think the title of the article should read "Anti-GOVERNMENT worker" venom also Fueled the Government Shutdown. From what I have read and understand, Government workers get paid more, do less, and have virtual job protection even if they are unproductive, lazy, or inefficient in performing their assigned responsibilities. Don't get me wrong, I am sure there are many good government workers, but when work rules prevent the discharge of employees or can't or will not do what is required for the position, it is a recipe for disaster. I am quite sure that there is a lot of dead wood in the federal work force.

Reply
Feb 11, 2019 07:39:20   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
ACP45 wrote:
I think the title of the article should read "Anti-GOVERNMENT worker" venom also Fueled the Government Shutdown. From what I have read and understand, Government workers get paid more, do less, and have virtual job protection even if they are unproductive, lazy, or inefficient in performing their assigned responsibilities. Don't get me wrong, I am sure there are many good government workers, but when work rules prevent the discharge of employees or can't or will not do what is required for the position, it is a recipe for disaster. I am quite sure that there is a lot of dead wood in the federal work force.
I think the title of the article should read "... (show quote)


When China allowed for private enterprise almost every government run factory went out of business...
Government workers just don't have the same motivation to 'excel' that workers in the private sector do...

Reply
 
 
Feb 11, 2019 07:47:37   #
Idaho
 
Rubbish - but thanks for alerting us to the Deep State’s talking points.

There are 2 million civil servants (Federal employees not counting postal workers and almost all of the military). There are 153 million workers in the US.

Trump’s line drawn, along with a big % of US citizens, is to build the wall. Most government workers know their jobs are subject to being furloughed from time to time and that results in paid holiday. Trump’s administration - unlike Obama’s - pulled all sort of strings to pay many people in advance and some were given short term interest free loans.

It was the Dems that refused the bill that would pay the Coast Guard along with the rest of the military.

Ãs has been demonstrated - 80% of the work is done by 20% of the workers and a large number of government workers do nothing in the service of the nation and cannot be fired under normal circumstances. Here’s hoping the Trump Administration takes advantage of Government RIF rules and gets rid of as many of them as possible. A 15% cut in the cost of civil service salaries would be a great start toward reducing the government deficit.

Reply
Feb 11, 2019 10:11:40   #
Coos Bay Tom Loc: coos bay oregon
 
Bad Bob wrote:
https://www.politicususa.com/2019/02/10/anti-worker-venom-also-fueled-the-government-shutdown.html

Though the U.S. government has opened for business again, it is worthwhile to understand the anti-worker venom that perhaps motivated and certainly prolonged Trump’s Republican-backed government shutdown, which has the notoriety of being longest shutdown of the federal government in American history.

Justifiably, the lion’s share of the media coverage and political debate around the shutdown has focused on Trump’s anti-immigrant r****m embodied in his obsessive insistence on, desire for, funding to build that infamous wall, whether literal or metaphorical. This insistence he rationalizes and roots in a mythical border crisis he has rhetorically manufactured, which, saner minds show us, bears no relation to reality, as even some Republicans admit.

An undercurrent to the shutdown that has received little to no attention, however, is the anti-worker venom that fueled and even possibly played some role in motivating the shutdown. Indeed, while Trump often frames his anti-immigrant r****m as support for the American working class, recycling the hackneyed argument that “illegal” immigrants drive down wages and steal jobs from “real Americans,” we actually need to understand Trump’s anti-immigrant r****m as working hand in hand with his assault on the U.S. working class as a whole.


The shutdown, if we listen closely to the loudmouth Trump whisperers, reveals these links.
Certainly, there has been coverage of the way the shutdown constituted an effective assault on workers as well as workers’, and particularly unions’, responses to the injustices the shutdown perpetrated on workers, such as forcing certain groups of federal employees to work without pay. Articles have covered in detail Trump’s complete lack of concern for workers, revealed in his repeated lies that he would somehow prevent plant closings.

And certainly the callous responses from voices in the Trump administration made clear both their thorough ignorance of how the average worker lives in America, such that they couldn’t comprehend the devastating impact of the shutdown on people’s lives, as well as their complete lack of clear. This combination of ignorance and carelessness was clear in Wilbur Ross’s dismissal of people’s hardships in suggesting workers just take out loans to survive the shutdown;

in Lara Trump’s assertion that the “little bit of pain” workers were enduring was worth the sacrifice for the bigger r****t ideal; in the glib characterization of the shutdown by one of Trump’s economic advisor as a lovely “vacation” for workers; and in Trump’s blithe assurance that
The shutdown, if we listen closely to the loudmouth Trump whisperers, reveals these links.
Certainly, there has been coverage of the way the shutdown constituted an effective assault on workers as well as workers’, and particularly unions’, responses to the injustices the shutdown perpetrated on workers, such as forcing certain groups of federal employees to work without pay. Articles have covered in detail Trump’s complete lack of concern for workers, revealed in his repeated lies that he would somehow prevent plant closings.

And certainly the callous responses from voices in the Trump administration made clear both their thorough ignorance of how the average worker lives in America, such that they couldn’t comprehend the devastating impact of the shutdown on people’s lives, as well as their complete lack of clear. This combination of ignorance and carelessness was clear in Wilbur Ross’s dismissal of people’s hardships in suggesting workers just take out loans to survive the shutdown;

in Lara Trump’s assertion that the “little bit of pain” workers were enduring was worth the sacrifice for the bigger r****t ideal; in the glib characterization of the shutdown by one of Trump’s economic advisor as a lovely “vacation” for workers; and in Trump’s blithe assurance that he, of course, could relate to the struggles of those going out with pay during the shutdown and that he was confident that, as always, workers would “make adjustments.”

I’m talking, though, about more than this lack of care and this severe ignorance of how the other 99% of people in America live. I’m talking about an anti-worker venom that enabled and perpetuated the shutdown and the suffering.

This anti-worker fuel and possible motivation for the shutdown became clear when self-proclaimed Trump whisperer Ann Coulter revealed in a recent interview the content of some of her conversations with Trump and her attitudes about federal workers. In this interview with Michael Moynihan of Vice News, Coulter insisted, “I’ve been advising the President on twitter, in columns, in conversations you don’t get to know about since his e******n.”

More interesting than her revelations about her advisory role to the presidency were her comments about shutdown. She declared it ridiculous that Democrats would hold up funding the government “while they’re weeping for the federal employees with much better benefits, retirement plans, and vacation and sick leave than anyone watching this program.”

Hmmm. The seeping out and stoking of this type of resentment toward well-remunerated workers suggests another layer and another method behind the madness of the government shutdown besides the substantial anti-immigrant r****m of the insistence on a wall.


Sure, it’s plausible that Coulter just doesn’t want to miss the opportunity a good crisis presents to resurrect the stale rhetoric of demonizing public sector workers as a way of speciously dividing workers as a whole, making it seem like fat-cat government workers are responsible for other workers’ substandard wages and benefits and not an exploitive ruling class. (Of course, just to be clear, we all know from the many testimonials from federal employees waiting in breadlines, facing evictions, and otherwise living paycheck to paycheck, that Coulter is peddling the well-worn myth of the fat-cat public sector employee, not a reality.)

But consider that last December, shortly after the shutdown commenced, Trump issued an executive order freezing pay increases for federal workers, claiming the government could not afford it, despite the fact the government could afford a 1.5 trillion dollar tax cut for the wealthiest of Americans, not to mention the $11 billion the shutdown cost, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

This executive order seemed like salt on the wound, like an oddly-timed piling on. And while reported in the media, the story was quickly swallowed up by coverage of the stand-off over funding the wall. We should keep this in mind when considering Coulter’s January 16 interview and her advice to Trump to stay the course and focus onimmigration. “As long as people are talking about immigration, you’re winning,” she addressed Trump in the interview.
Analyzing the shutdown and Trump’s freezing of federal employee wages through the lens of Coulter’s interview, we have reason to believe the shutdown wasn’t just about the wall and anti-immigrant r****m;

it was also likely about Trump’s larger agenda of assaulting workers by attempting to destroy gains made in the passage of the Affordable Care Act to ensure working Americans could access health care, by undermining unions by appointing Supreme Court Justices who would eliminate declare fair-share dues unconstitutional, by opposing federal minimum wage standards, and more.----MORE----
The shutdown, if we listen closely to the loudmouth Trump whisperers, reveals these links.
Certainly, there has been coverage of the way the shutdown constituted an effective assault on workers as well as workers’, and particularly unions’, responses to the injustices the shutdown perpetrated on workers, such as forcing certain groups of federal employees to work without pay. Articles have covered in detail Trump’s complete lack of concern for workers, revealed in his repeated lies that he would somehow prevent plant closings.
And certainly the callous responses from voices in the Trump administration made clear both their thorough ignorance of how the average worker lives in America, such that they couldn’t comprehend the devastating impact of the shutdown on people’s lives, as well as their complete lack of clear. This combination of ignorance and carelessness was clear in Wilbur Ross’s dismissal of people’s hardships in suggesting workers just take out loans to survive the shutdown; in Lara Trump’s assertion that the “little bit of pain” workers were enduring was worth the sacrifice for the bigger r****t ideal; in the glib characterization of the shutdown by one of Trump’s economic advisor as a lovely “vacation” for workers; and in Trump’s blithe assurance that
https://www.politicususa.com/2019/02/10/anti-worke... (show quote)
I once worked for the US Forest Service and I knew several National park service employees. We were very underpaid and those with familys had to rely on food stamps. The federal government has its own unemployment and it can take months to get a check during times of layoffs. Any body who says government workers are overpaid is lying to you.

Reply
Feb 11, 2019 10:36:01   #
Jakebrake Loc: Broomfield, CO
 
ACP45 wrote:
I think the title of the article should read "Anti-GOVERNMENT worker" venom also Fueled the Government Shutdown. From what I have read and understand, Government workers get paid more, do less, and have virtual job protection even if they are unproductive, lazy, or inefficient in performing their assigned responsibilities. Don't get me wrong, I am sure there are many good government workers, but when work rules prevent the discharge of employees or can't or will not do what is required for the position, it is a recipe for disaster. I am quite sure that there is a lot of dead wood in the federal work force.
I think the title of the article should read "... (show quote)


Exactly, and I think during the last shut down of 800,000 NON-ESSENTIAL government workers who were not missed, they should have been RIF'd permanently.

Reply
Feb 11, 2019 10:52:54   #
Bad Bob Loc: Virginia
 
Jakebrake wrote:
Exactly, and I think during the last shut down of 800,000 NON-ESSENTIAL government workers who were not missed, they should have been RIF'd permanently.


How many "NON-ESSENTIAL" had to continue working?

Reply
 
 
Feb 11, 2019 11:05:45   #
Jakebrake Loc: Broomfield, CO
 
Bad Bob wrote:
How many "NON-ESSENTIAL" had to continue working?


Probably a couple hundred thousand boob, and they should have been RIF'd too. The federal bureaucracy
is bloated, ineffective and in many cases unnecessary. But you libs love big government giving away free s**t!

Reply
Feb 11, 2019 11:14:47   #
Bad Bob Loc: Virginia
 
Jakebrake wrote:
Probably a couple hundred thousand boob, and they should have been RIF'd too. The federal bureaucracy
is bloated, ineffective and in many cases unnecessary. But you libs love big government giving away free s**t!


Yeah like free money to the top 1%.

Reply
Feb 11, 2019 11:36:02   #
Jakebrake Loc: Broomfield, CO
 
Bad Bob wrote:
Yeah like free money to the top 1%.


Yea right boob, they on welfare, food stamps & ADC. Brilliant lil feller, brilliant~

Reply
Feb 11, 2019 11:47:44   #
Bad Bob Loc: Virginia
 
Jakebrake wrote:
Yea right boob, they on welfare, food stamps & ADC. Brilliant lil feller, brilliant~


Yep, welfare for the rich.

Reply
 
 
Feb 11, 2019 12:50:30   #
Sew_What
 
...I recall, way back in 2008, that the Government recommended having 6 months of salary saved up, since lay-offs are a way of life for some people in the economy.

Too bad those same people can't follow their own advice.

Shut it down again, and maybe they will understand it isn't as easy as it looks.

Reply
Feb 12, 2019 04:55:07   #
Coos Bay Tom Loc: coos bay oregon
 
Sew_What wrote:
...I recall, way back in 2008, that the Government recommended having 6 months of salary saved up, since lay-offs are a way of life for some people in the economy.

Too bad those same people can't follow their own advice.

Shut it down again, and maybe they will understand it isn't as easy as it looks.
Shut the government down again at the peril of th Republican party.

Reply
Feb 12, 2019 10:32:30   #
Jakebrake Loc: Broomfield, CO
 
Sew_What wrote:
...I recall, way back in 2008, that the Government recommended having 6 months of salary saved up, since lay-offs are a way of life for some people in the economy.

Too bad those same people can't follow their own advice.

Shut it down again, and maybe they will understand it isn't as easy as it looks.


I have absolutely no sympathy for some i***t who doesn't have enough saved to get over the rough patches in life. I saw all over the news these Fed furloughed workers sniveling and crying about how they were going to buy groceries, pay the mortgage or payments on their BMW's. I guess living paycheck to paycheck is a Fed workers thing, thus no sympathy!

Reply
Feb 12, 2019 12:14:44   #
Idaho
 
Besides - they were allowed to draw unemployment, and then get their full paychecks as back pay.

Reply
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