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#521
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"G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message
... Newps wrote: Then why do you live there? Because my wife lives here. I wouldn't hold out so much hope for other places. The big telecomms firms are all down and none are recruiting on either side of the pond. My ex-boss was/is pretty much in charge of transferring all support out of Richardson (TX) to Montreal and to Mexico. He's a manager now in Mexico. Our stuff in Santa Barbera has also shut down. I know others are doing worse. At least we've pretty much stopped laying people off now. Paul |
#522
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Paul Sengupta wrote:
My cousin in India wanted to move to Canada and get a job in IT. His other choice was somewhere in Europe. I told him he's nuts as the only only place booming in IT at the moment is India. He's got a far greater chance of getting a job there. What is the salary/cost of living ratio (for comparable U.S. conditions) in India? Clearly there are a lot of software writers in India but I've heard they don't make a lot. Asked another way, what are his prospects for achieving a comparable standard of living in India to what he might be able to do in the U.S.? |
#523
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
news:Gmn8c.84408$Cb.1107621@attbi_s51... Guess if I ever do come to Iowa City (not honestly very likely), I'll be looking for another hotel. Sad, but we'll get by without you, John. If a conversation about world politics so upsets your delicate nature, I can only wonder how you survive in the real world. Well, I, for one, am looking forward to meeting Jay in April. Hopefully we can have some beers together and have a good discussion about all this sort of stuff. Oh, and maybe going to see some aviation museums... Paul |
#524
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I think that was Iraqis.
Paul "Newps" wrote in message news:Tfp8c.85877$_w.1145038@attbi_s53... Last week I heard that 70% of the Brits approved of the war. Was this in error? |
#525
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In article pDV8c.98339$Cb.1264816@attbi_s51, Jay Honeck wrote:
I doubt things have improved much -- although, if your reproduction rates keep dropping, your welfare states will soon evaporate. There are *far* too many people on this planet - a drop in reproduction rates is a *good* thing. The oil isn't going to last forever, and our highly productive intensive agricultural systems are absolutely dependent on oil. Humans need to downsize, or the Earth will downsize us. -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
#526
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In article KJV8c.97233$1p.1451082@attbi_s54, Jay Honeck wrote:
Or when I must pay $1800 for a stupid transponder. (Hell, I was looking at lawn tractors yesterday, and balked at spending $1000, cuz it was too expensive. Think about that a minute...) What is it with transponders? They have to be the least reliable part on any aircraft I've flown. They don't have lots of moving parts like a gyro, yet they fail for the fun of it. ATC should just reply by default, "N12345, not getting your transponder" whenever someone calls up. -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
#527
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"Dylan Smith" wrote in message ... In article pDV8c.98339$Cb.1264816@attbi_s51, Jay Honeck wrote: I doubt things have improved much -- although, if your reproduction rates keep dropping, your welfare states will soon evaporate. There are *far* too many people on this planet - a drop in reproduction rates is a *good* thing. The oil isn't going to last forever, Throughout history, such shortages were always a factor in humanit's existance. Going al the way back to the ancient empires, copper, wood, coal, whale oil, etc. always had a crisis. (Economics is the study creating plenty out of scarcity). and our highly productive intensive agricultural systems Highly _what_ intensive? are absolutely dependent on oil. A hundred years ago it was manual labor intensive, using animal power. Industry was coal fired/steam powered. Who'd thunk just a few generations later... Humans need to downsize, or the Earth will downsize us. Thomas Malthus said that over 200 years ago (IOW: I'm okay, you're okay, everyone else is excess) when the earth population was, what, a fifth what it is today? At the time, maybe 5% of people lived beyond a subsistence existence. Well, fast forward 200 years and TADA!! more people, more prosperity, higher living standards, longer life expectancy... Paul Erlich has been a media darling for over twenty-five years making predictions that not only didn't come true, but were 180 degrees wrong. Maybe what we're running out of is creative genius...that wonderfully human characteristic. Tom -- "The road to hell is paved with good intentions". |
#528
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Tom Sixkiller wrote:
"Frank" wrote in message ... snip And besides, by putting someone like this in charge of the commission could conceivably do more to foster human rights because of the extra scrutiny. You're not serious, are you? Sure, why not? You didn't miss the word 'conceivably' did you? I at least consider the possiblity that someone who comes from a place that has a history of human rights abuse might have the perspective and motivation to effectivly oppose such abuses. For all I know he may have a long history of opposing the Lybian government, which would probably make him a hero to folks like us. Diplomat, former journalist? I've never heard of him, does he have some record of human rights abuse? Or does he have a history of speaking out against oppression? From Libya? You're not serious, are you? Yeah I'm serious. I asked the question because I have never heard of this person. Apparently you have since you are so sure he is absolutely the wrong choice for such a position. I'm asking what he has done that should disqualify him. I mean, as an educated, free thinking person you wouldn't expect me to assume that a person is good or bad based solely on his passport? -- Frank....H |
#529
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Wdtabor wrote:
In article , Frank writes: Not all Arabs, specifically the ones that are interested in peace do not. Hamas' support dries up as soon as this new state is created and the people no longer have to pass thru Israeli checkpoints to get to work. Since all the econimic activity is in Israel, and that is where the work is, a Palestinian state will still mean passing through Israeli checkpoints to get to work. Don Thanks, I forgot to consider that after the creation of a new state there is no possibility of anything else changing in the peoples lives. And those principles of capitalism we usually apply everywhere else would never work in a place like that. -- Frank....H |
#530
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"Doug Carter" wrote in message
... Paul Sengupta wrote: My cousin in India wanted to move to Canada and get a job in IT. His other choice was somewhere in Europe. I told him he's nuts as the only only place booming in IT at the moment is India. He's got a far greater chance of getting a job there. What is the salary/cost of living ratio (for comparable U.S. conditions) in India? Clearly there are a lot of software writers in India but I've heard they don't make a lot. Asked another way, what are his prospects for achieving a comparable standard of living in India to what he might be able to do in the U.S.? Not really sure. It's difficult to equate standard of living in different places. Houses are different, roads are different, shops are different. In India, it's quite easy for a normal middle class family to employ: 1) A driver 2) Someone to look after the kids 3) A maid to cook and clean. This would be pretty unthinkable for someone in the US. Food and restaurants are much cheaper, but luxury goods are on a par. So it depends what you want. An Indian lady I spoke to who'd spent a few months in the UK complained she didn't like it here so much, as no one had the time to do dinner for big groups of friends every other night. People came home from work and just ate with their families... a dinner party was a big thing, as the host had to shop, cook, serve, do the washing up, etc, whereas in India you had your servants do all that for you. On the other hand, you are pretty much unable to afford a big car. The GA scene is pretty dire in India too. Of the flying clubs I've been to, they had between 1 and 3 working planes, and very few of the emerging wealthy had any interest in flying these old, slow Cessna things, let alone the old Pushpaks (like Aeronca Chiefs). (description he http://aero.iisc.ernet.in/~flight/flight.html#pus ) Paul |
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