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She is the manger of the Tim's.............6 weeks vacation.
Bruce Monkhouse said:A "supervisor" at McD??.....would that be the tomato or the lettuce supervisor since I believe everyone there holds a 'supervisor' title.
E.R. Campbell said:....They ... you, actually ... the boomers, were/are indeed "crude, loud, vulgar and generally obnoxious," ....
Sythen said:If you have 30 paid vacation days a year, then you're a government employee and I fully support cutting that back as its excessive in my eyes.
recceguy said:I work for the Provincial gov't and get 15 vacation days a year.
Once more you're spouting generalized bullshit.
As is want of the type trying to make arguments from something they know nothing about.
Sythen said:No where did I say every government employee gets 30 days. Thanks for trying to put words in my mouth though. If I actually cared more, I am betting it wouldn't be hard to find a sunshine list equivalent for vacation days. And should I post a link to the article about government employees averaging 18 sicks days a year? I don't know you at all, so don't know your personal situation.. But do you really want to try to try to compare private sector and public sector perks? Government employees have it VERY good compared to equally educated public sector.
recceguy said:CAW get better than me. Teachers get better than me. A whole host of NGO workers do better than me.
I also don't get anywhere near half of those 18 sick days a year.
More generalised bullshit from you trying to paint all with the same brush and not really having any real world experience of what the frig you're talking about.
BTW, go for it with your 'Sunshine List' cause it doesn't include me.
A Government worker.
No where did I say every government employee gets 30 days.
I don't know you at all, so don't know your personal situation
Sythen said:So again, stop putting words into my mouth, stop being so defensive and calm down. You're obviously mad.
recceguy said:I'm not mad, just flabergassted and trying to devolve the misinformation that uneducated people are trying to perpetuate upon other hard working people, simply because they happen to hold a goverments job.
A federal government job that, btw, they are also likey to be holding.
Brad Sallows said:Life stuck them with weak faculties and/or motivation, and there is nothing they can do to overcome that. And what are we to do about that? We can leave them to their own limited prospects - in which case we had damn well better look our indifference in the eye for what it is - or accept the burden of funding/subsidizing their existence.
However, that dependent population should be only a small fraction of the total population. Where I see the problem is that there are too many university-capable people who have become protected species in public service, or are all but guaranteed some sort of sweet spot in private enterprise because we have over-regulated life. And there are too many who think the safety net has to be wide enough to be a hammock, in the spirit of "equal benefit".
bridges said:I just want to make sure I understand ... are you saying that all (or even most) people who need the safety net, need it because they have weak faculties and/or motivation?
E.R. Campbell said:Further: the government or society or whatever has no money of its own - it uses yours and mine.
bridges said:Obviously. I'm sure you didn't mean that in a patronizing or insulting way.
I'd far rather see my tax money used for the public good, speaking in general terms, than for certain "perks" and wastage that it's been used for over the years. I feel an ethical sense of responsibility toward our shared fate, and have no problem contributing to that, financially. This is not the same as encouraging it to be taken advantage of. There's always a danger, though, of setting a lot of truly needy people adrift, in the effort to catch a few idlers. Striking a balance is probably the best we can aim for.