[Milsurplus] Blood n Guts

Virgil Bierschwale vbiersch at gmail.com
Wed Nov 13 20:39:40 EST 2013


Amen
There are a lot of us that are unemployed
I have 12 years hardware and 20 years software experience

I cant buy a interview at the va hospital in Kerrville working a entry level
job in the laundry or food service

As for software
Haven't had a interview in 3 years and there are many in my shoes that ive
heard from via my work at keep America at work

-----Original Message-----
From: milsurplus-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:milsurplus-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Peter Gottlieb
Sent: Wednesday, November 13, 2013 7:34 PM
To: Francesco Ledda
Cc: milsurplus at mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Milsurplus] Blood n Guts

Yeah like the "patriots" who buy cheap Chinese-made American flags to wave!

There is a growing interest in American made goods.  Keep buying them and it
will only make more available.  I CHALLENGE the notion that American goods
are more expensive!  Honda and Toyota build cars here!  I was at New Balance
and they are even making sneakers here again... guess which ones I bought?

I'm with Frank... Buy American!  Vote with your wallet!  And if you're in a
hiring position, STRONGLY consider veterans.  They understand command
structure, are dedicated, and are good workers.

Peter



On 11/13/2013 8:16 PM, Francesco Ledda wrote:
> Cheap labor is the reason for growth in China; as cost go up, China is
losing its edge.  Germany is very socialist, but they believe that
manufacturing in house is a key value; this is one of the reasons for their
success.
>
> There are people that claim to be patriots, and then they buy Chinese crap
at harbor freight! Personally, I don't get it. I buy American, even if it
costs more! Go USA!!!!!!
>
> Frank
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
>> On Nov 13, 2013, at 16:55, Peter Gottlieb <nerd at verizon.net> wrote:
>>
>> I believe a big problem is that jobs are moving overseas, partly due to
tax laws which favor such action by corporations.  I would think if it's
going to be anything, it would be the other way around.
>>
>> China is going gangbusters and they are the strongest current example of
centralized control.  I think the jury's still out on Russia.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>> On 11/13/2013 10:54 AM, J. Forster wrote:
>>> My objection is not to seat belts per se. It is to government mandating
them.
>>>
>>> Seat belts are a good idea. I had and used 3-point ones long before 
>>> they were mandated.
>>>
>>> However, I DO object to to the principle that the 'government knows 
>>> best'... the out-of-control nanny state. The government obviously 
>>> does not know what is best for everybody.
>>>
>>> Central planning has been a dismal failure whereever and whenever it 
>>> has been tried. And the planners' excuse is always 'we didn't have 
>>> enough control'.
>>>
>>> As the US becomes more socialist and is in decline, China and Russia 
>>> are abandoning a failed system, and are thriving.
>>>
>>> -John
>>>
>>> =====================
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> de WB2CPN
>>>> Just before I left the USAF in 1966 the rule was this:
>>>> If you use your personal vehicle at Government expense, it had to 
>>>> have seat belts installed.  TDY travel.
>>>> One one occasion I'm sure that seat belts saved my butt.
>>>> In a near collision it kept me in control of the vehicle.
>>>> Another time I helped remove a dead driver from a car

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