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RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/16/2020 11:40:16 PM   
Cap Mandrake


Posts: 23184
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Lowpe


quote:

ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake


quote:

ORIGINAL: mind_messing

quote:

ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake

The market solution is for maltreated workers to quit and for the employer to be forced to raise wages until they can find a workforce willing to do the job.


In theory. In practice, quite different as there's someone desperate enough to work under poor conditions. As others have stated, it's not as if corporate interests were strongly interested in working conditions prior to all this...




No, in this case there IS a shortage of workers willing to take the job for the pay offered, given the risk. That is exactly why they are "euthanizing" millions of chickens. To fill those jobs you would have to take an idle Disney cruise ship down to Honduras or Guatemala, promise tall blonde dancer girls and salsa picante on the cruise AND a green card and you could fill the thing up...and then after 3 or 4 weeks, they would all have $15 an hour jobs at Pollo Loco



The United Food and Commercial Workers union reports that more than 70% of all beef and 60% of all pork consumed in the US is processed by UFCW workers. They have 1.3 million workers. To date they have had 73 deaths.





60% Unionized? ICU nurses are working WAAAY harder than UFCW pork processors. Still, I can see how the deaths would seriously hurt morale

(in reply to Lowpe)
Post #: 7861
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/16/2020 11:52:59 PM   
Lowpe


Posts: 22133
Joined: 2/25/2013
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Push For Supply Chain Resilience, Reshoring Likely To Boost Industrial CRE

https://www.bisnow.com/national/news/industrial/manufacturers-looking-to-the-us-could-further-boost-industrial-cre-104369

Nearly two-thirds of North American manufacturers say they are likely to bring production and sourcing back to the continent, a new survey by industrial data and tech company Thomas shows.

(in reply to Cap Mandrake)
Post #: 7862
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/16/2020 11:58:17 PM   
RangerJoe


Posts: 13450
Joined: 11/16/2015
From: My Mother, although my Father had some small part.
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quote:

ORIGINAL: obvert

quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe

Well, I just went to a store and I did not wear a mask. I saw no one wearing a mask either. As far as wearing a tight fitting mask, I have a furry face.


As posted above;

One recent research paper found that if 80% of Americans wore masks, Covid-19 infections rates would drop to approximately one twelfth the number of infections.


I have posted before that the closest known case is at least 20 driving miles away. I walked a block and a half. There weren't too many people in the store. Slow but steady business as they have a very good deli. I was too late for their BBQ ribs. I think things will pick up as more summer people arrive. I took some sausages that they make there, brought them someplace a three and a half hour away. They really enjoyed them as they can't get such good stuff in the major metropolitan area.

Edited for: the 2 in the 20 did not show up. One reason for getting a new computer.

< Message edited by RangerJoe -- 5/17/2020 12:26:00 AM >


_____________________________

Seek peace but keep your gun handy.

I'm not a complete idiot, some parts are missing!

“Illegitemus non carborundum est (“Don’t let the bastards grind you down”).”
― Julia Child


(in reply to obvert)
Post #: 7863
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 12:10:29 AM   
jdsrae


Posts: 2716
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Restrictions are being lifted down here and lots of people are getting back to their old behaviours.
I for one am not rushing to roll the dice on bringing germs back into my house, but am comfortable going out for essentials.
A good saying I just heard that sums up the state of play down here: the virus hasn’t been eradicated, there’s just a bit of spare capacity in an Intensive Care Unit if you need it.

_____________________________

Currently playing my first PBEM, no house rules Scenario 1 as IJ.
AAR link (no SolInvictus): https://www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=4684655

(in reply to Lowpe)
Post #: 7864
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 12:28:13 AM   
RangerJoe


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A report from Florida. Apparently what may be called elective surgeries are being performed again. Check out the thread and wish him well:

MrsWargamer and a loose kidney
https://www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=4814481&mpage=1�

_____________________________

Seek peace but keep your gun handy.

I'm not a complete idiot, some parts are missing!

“Illegitemus non carborundum est (“Don’t let the bastards grind you down”).”
― Julia Child


(in reply to jdsrae)
Post #: 7865
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 1:38:40 AM   
witpqs


Posts: 26087
Joined: 10/4/2004
From: Argleton
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cap Mandrake

There is a price for which I would work at Chicken plant. The thigh would have exactly one half of the joint capsule and the rest the other half. I would demand a fresh #15 blade for every beast and air conditioning and the Mozart Oboe Concerto in C Major on the headphones....and I would would have authority to pause the line on the most sublime parts (of the Concerto, not the chicken)

Alas, nobody could afford the chicken but there would NEVER be a femur chopped off 1.5 cm from the joint.

Aye, headphones for chickens are expensive.

_____________________________


(in reply to Cap Mandrake)
Post #: 7866
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 3:20:36 AM   
fcooke

 

Posts: 1156
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From: Boston, London, Hoboken, now Warwick, NY
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Plenty of upward mobility in the US. I'm first generation, my Dad had an 8th grade education and my Mom left school at 16. They both worked hard and didn't spend money on things they couldn't afford. I started working when I was 8. A paper route and working with my Dad's roofing company when I wasn't in school. Actually shingled my first roof (a garage) when I was 8. Child labor laws would not let that happen today. I took school seriously, while my brother did not. I went to college and he struggled to get his GED. I am now retired but never saw the need to replace/upgrade my car every 4 years. I still have my first new car bought over 30 years ago. Or my phone every 2 years. Seems many people choose to live close to their total means or think it is a good idea to spend 50 bucks a week on Lotto tickets. When I was working I would see many CVs where candidates had never earned a dime as they went through school. There are people who are dealt tough hands. But a tough hand in the US is far easier to overcome than many other places in the world. A little travel to places like India, China, Egypt, etc would be an eye opener for many US citizens.

(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 7867
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 3:34:18 AM   
RangerJoe


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I know someone who had a 4th grade education. One of his sons did not graduate high school but his graduating class kept asking him to return for the class reunion because he was the richest one of the bunch. One of his sons graduated college, worked for others for awhile, then started his own business. Later on, he would have his jet fly him to see his father every month. All of his siblings have done well, some have their own businesses as well.

Me, I just had to buy a new phone because it was not working properly. It would help if a phone rings. Now this computer . . .

The next project is a vehicle.

< Message edited by RangerJoe -- 5/17/2020 3:35:15 AM >


_____________________________

Seek peace but keep your gun handy.

I'm not a complete idiot, some parts are missing!

“Illegitemus non carborundum est (“Don’t let the bastards grind you down”).”
― Julia Child


(in reply to fcooke)
Post #: 7868
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 4:41:36 AM   
Lokasenna


Posts: 9297
Joined: 3/3/2012
From: Iowan in MD/DC
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quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe


quote:

ORIGINAL: Lokasenna

quote:

ORIGINAL: durnedwolf

I'm just trying to say that pursuit is important - it's what America was built on. A belief that I can be or do anything with the gifts of mind and body that my Higher Power granted to me. I'm white. Are there additional hurdles for the non-white in America? My experience and observation say "Yes" to that question. Is it better to be a male than a female when it comes to most careers in America? Again I would say yes. But I've met a lot of men and women of all shapes, sizes, and colors. Those that climbed up to a status of middle-class and higher here in America, for the most part, have had a dream that they pursued.



Working for something is important, but socioeconomic mobility in the US is much lower than is commonly mythologized - especially in modern times.

The wiki page on this actually has quite a bit of information with several citations. Synopsis: there is some bad news and some neutral news, with basically only 1 piece of news that could be called vaguely good (the part I underlined in the quote below).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socioeconomic_mobility_in_the_United_States
quote:


In recent years, several studies have found that vertical intergenerational mobility is lower in the US than in some European countries.[3] US social mobility has either remained unchanged or decreased since the 1970s.[4][5][6][7] A study conducted by the Pew Charitable Trusts found that the bottom quintile is 57% likely to experience upward mobility and only 7% to experience downward mobility.[8]

A study published in 2008 showed that economic mobility in the U.S. increased from 1950 to 1980, but has declined sharply since 1980.[9]

A 2013 Brookings Institution study found income inequality was increasing and becoming more permanent, sharply reducing social mobility.[10]

A large academic study released in 2014 found US mobility overall has not changed appreciably in the last 25 years (for children born between 1971 and 1996), but a variety of up and down mobility changes were found in several different parts of the country. On average, American children entering the labor market today have the same chances of moving up in the income distribution (relative to their parents) as children born in the 1970s.[11][12]

However, because US income inequalities have increased substantially, the consequences of the "birth lottery"—the parents to whom a child is born—are larger today than in the past. US wealth is increasingly concentrated in the top 10% of American families, so children of the remaining 90% are more likely to be born at lower starting incomes today than the same children in the past. Even if they are equally mobile and climb the same distance up the US socioeconomic ladder as children born 25 years earlier, the bottom 90% of the ladder is worth less now, so they gain less income value from their climb, especially when compared to the top 10%.[11][12]


And that's just from the header... there's more, and I've could find plenty of other citations as well.

Again, that's not to say that it's impossible - just that it's harder than in the past, and also to point out that the mythologizing of "you can do anything if you only just work hard enough" as the common narrative sold to the American worker/workplace is nowhere close to the actual truth.


I could state some reasons why this is but that would get into murky areas for this thread.


It's a topic that is widely studied. Apolitical sources abound. Alas, the implications of the conclusions are always political - and how could they not be? Politics is the system for resolving conflict over scarce resources, after all.

(in reply to RangerJoe)
Post #: 7869
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 4:51:34 AM   
Lokasenna


Posts: 9297
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From: Iowan in MD/DC
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quote:

ORIGINAL: durnedwolf

Like I said - it's OK to agree to disagree. I'm not saying it's easy. It wasn't easy for me. I still think a person can get ahead.

Edit - and I noted gifts I was born with as a factor. We each have a set of attributes that we need to play too. Maybe you are a "brainy" kind of guy. Maybe you are really good at drawing. Or playing music. Or learning languages comes easy for you. Or taking things apart and putting them back together. I had to keep things real. It's ok to want and dream but at the end of the day I went down a road that catered to my strengths and I didn't spend too much time wringing my hands over could-have-bens. I believe that if you can find a job that you like, where you don't watch the clock 5 minutes before quitting time and you take the time to become really-really good at, I think a person will do just fine.



Your position (that a person can still get ahead) is not mutually exclusive from mine (that empirical reality shows that it is unlikelier now (especially post-Reagan) than it has been previously (New Deal/Great Society era).

In a perfectly meritocratic society (also assuming all humans have the same chance for the same talents from conception/birth), there would be a 20% chance for an individual to end up in a given economic quintile.

For the 5th (bottom) quintile, being born there results in a 42% chance that you will remain there. Compare to 20% if it were truly random. Likewise, 39% of those born in the top quintile remain in the top. Numbers from that same 2011 Brookings report.

I was able to find a 2019 update from Brookings, complete with mouseover infographic: https://www.brookings.edu/blog/up-front/2019/02/14/no-room-at-the-top-the-stark-divide-in-black-and-white-economic-mobility/. It hasn't changed much since 2011. The only quintile where the "you can be anything" mantra is actually true is the middle quintile; that's only 20% of the population, by definition. Those born in the 4th quintile have a 50% chance of remaining there or ending up in the bottom quintile. Those born in the top quintile have over a 60% chance of remaining in the top 2 quintiles. Clearly, economic status is much more static than the myth would have us believe.

(in reply to durnedwolf)
Post #: 7870
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 4:55:31 AM   
Lokasenna


Posts: 9297
Joined: 3/3/2012
From: Iowan in MD/DC
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quote:

ORIGINAL: fcooke

Plenty of upward mobility in the US. I'm first generation, my Dad had an 8th grade education and my Mom left school at 16. They both worked hard and didn't spend money on things they couldn't afford. I started working when I was 8. A paper route and working with my Dad's roofing company when I wasn't in school. Actually shingled my first roof (a garage) when I was 8. Child labor laws would not let that happen today. I took school seriously, while my brother did not. I went to college and he struggled to get his GED. I am now retired but never saw the need to replace/upgrade my car every 4 years. I still have my first new car bought over 30 years ago. Or my phone every 2 years. Seems many people choose to live close to their total means or think it is a good idea to spend 50 bucks a week on Lotto tickets. When I was working I would see many CVs where candidates had never earned a dime as they went through school. There are people who are dealt tough hands.


Can you please explain how "living close to total means" is related to lack of socioeconomic mobility?

Luck, not scrimping and saving, is far more important.

quote:


But a tough hand in the US is far easier to overcome than many other places in the world. A little travel to places like India, China, Egypt, etc would be an eye opener for many US citizens.


There's no denying this is true (and it's part of why we measure standards of living, per capita GDP, etc.), as it would be for any highly developed country when compared to a country that is not as far along in raising its citizens out of poverty and squalor, but it's not really relevant to whether it's possible for someone to improve their station within a particular country. It's more often used as a talking point to tell those who are being held down to stop being so uppity.

(in reply to fcooke)
Post #: 7871
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 6:51:30 AM   
obvert


Posts: 14050
Joined: 1/17/2011
From: PDX (and now) London, UK
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quote:

ORIGINAL: fcooke

Plenty of upward mobility in the US. I'm first generation, my Dad had an 8th grade education and my Mom left school at 16. They both worked hard and didn't spend money on things they couldn't afford. I started working when I was 8. A paper route and working with my Dad's roofing company when I wasn't in school. Actually shingled my first roof (a garage) when I was 8. Child labor laws would not let that happen today. I took school seriously, while my brother did not. I went to college and he struggled to get his GED. I am now retired but never saw the need to replace/upgrade my car every 4 years. I still have my first new car bought over 30 years ago. Or my phone every 2 years. Seems many people choose to live close to their total means or think it is a good idea to spend 50 bucks a week on Lotto tickets. When I was working I would see many CVs where candidates had never earned a dime as they went through school. There are people who are dealt tough hands. But a tough hand in the US is far easier to overcome than many other places in the world. A little travel to places like India, China, Egypt, etc would be an eye opener for many US citizens.


This line of the thread is completely OT but related to the affects of Covid on workplaces and disadvantaged communities, so I guess I'll chip in.

We can all trade personal anecdotes and come up with the idea that there a lot of opportunities for up mobility. Being in a position to spend upwards of several hours a day playing a computer war-game probably puts us in a category where we've all achieved some measure of success in our life.

I am a teacher. If students do well they all get an A. There is no curve, there are no restrictions on success. By ensuring that results are based on standards and performance we hope to instill that everyone can be successful, that skills are learned, not genetic.

When it comes to the working world this isn't true. Careers have limits. If everyone wanted to go out and become a coder, or a structural engineer, or a nurse practitioner, or a certified accountant, or any number of other professional positions, at some point those jobs would no longer be available and only the top of the range of trained people would get them.

What do the others do?

Statistics help more than anecdotes here, because we know statistically there are limits. There are a lot more McDonalds in the world than there are accounting offices, engineering firms, or hospitals. We assume that those who end up at the end of the grill line are there because they aren't trained to do anything else, don't have the mental capacity to do anything else, or don't have the motivation/dreams to do anything else. That isn't true.

Not everyone can succeed in a free market system. It's built in. When you have success or comfort you're happy to say it's possible for everyone. It actually isn't.

< Message edited by obvert -- 5/17/2020 6:53:06 AM >


_____________________________

"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Winston Churchill

(in reply to fcooke)
Post #: 7872
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 10:10:19 AM   
Lowpe


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African countries need to challenge the idea of a homogenous approach to Covid-19

https://qz.com/africa/1858008/africa-needs-to-challenge-the-homogenous-approach-to-covid-19/

(in reply to Cap Mandrake)
Post #: 7873
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 10:18:47 AM   
Lowpe


Posts: 22133
Joined: 2/25/2013
Status: offline
SCIENCE & TECH SPOTLIGHT:
Social Distancing During Pandemics


https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-20-545SP

Where does the six-foot guideline for social distancing come from?

https://qz.com/1831100/where-does-the-six-feet-social-distancing-guideline-come-from/


(in reply to Lowpe)
Post #: 7874
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 10:21:01 AM   
Lowpe


Posts: 22133
Joined: 2/25/2013
Status: offline
Stores Stress Over How to Handle Mask-Less Customers

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/stores-stress-over-how-to-handle-mask-less-customers/ar-BB14alO7?ocid=msedgdhp

Wisconsin Business Bans Wearing Masks After Stay-At-Home Order Overturned


https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/wisconsin-business-bans-wearing-masks-after-stay-at-home-order-overturned/ar-BB14blJR?ocid=msedgdhp

< Message edited by Lowpe -- 5/17/2020 10:22:18 AM >

(in reply to Cap Mandrake)
Post #: 7875
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 10:43:47 AM   
fcooke

 

Posts: 1156
Joined: 6/18/2002
From: Boston, London, Hoboken, now Warwick, NY
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Lokasenna


quote:

ORIGINAL: durnedwolf

Like I said - it's OK to agree to disagree. I'm not saying it's easy. It wasn't easy for me. I still think a person can get ahead.

Edit - and I noted gifts I was born with as a factor. We each have a set of attributes that we need to play too. Maybe you are a "brainy" kind of guy. Maybe you are really good at drawing. Or playing music. Or learning languages comes easy for you. Or taking things apart and putting them back together. I had to keep things real. It's ok to want and dream but at the end of the day I went down a road that catered to my strengths and I didn't spend too much time wringing my hands over could-have-bens. I believe that if you can find a job that you like, where you don't watch the clock 5 minutes before quitting time and you take the time to become really-really good at, I think a person will do just fine.



Your position (that a person can still get ahead) is not mutually exclusive from mine (that empirical reality shows that it is unlikelier now (especially post-Reagan) than it has been previously (New Deal/Great Society era).

In a perfectly meritocratic society (also assuming all humans have the same chance for the same talents from conception/birth), there would be a 20% chance for an individual to end up in a given economic quintile.

For the 5th (bottom) quintile, being born there results in a 42% chance that you will remain there. Compare to 20% if it were truly random. Likewise, 39% of those born in the top quintile remain in the top. Numbers from that same 2011 Brookings report.

I was able to find a 2019 update from Brookings, complete with mouseover infographic: https://www.brookings.edu/blog/up-front/2019/02/14/no-room-at-the-top-the-stark-divide-in-black-and-white-economic-mobility/. It hasn't changed much since 2011. The only quintile where the "you can be anything" mantra is actually true is the middle quintile; that's only 20% of the population, by definition. Those born in the 4th quintile have a 50% chance of remaining there or ending up in the bottom quintile. Those born in the top quintile have over a 60% chance of remaining in the top 2 quintiles. Clearly, economic status is much more static than the myth would have us believe.

Hi Lok,

There seems to be a fair bit of movement in those numbers to me. 40% of the top quintile falling out of the top to one of the bottom 3 shows a whole lot of economic 'mobility'. And 50% of those starting in the 4th quintile and moving up is fairly significant too. While not everyone is going to 'move up', clearly with that data a lot of people are moving up and down the economic spectrum.

(in reply to Lokasenna)
Post #: 7876
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 10:51:32 AM   
Orm


Posts: 22154
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From: Sweden
Status: offline
Can we please focus on the main topic only?

_____________________________

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(in reply to fcooke)
Post #: 7877
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 11:01:43 AM   
fcooke

 

Posts: 1156
Joined: 6/18/2002
From: Boston, London, Hoboken, now Warwick, NY
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Lokasenna


quote:

ORIGINAL: fcooke

Plenty of upward mobility in the US. I'm first generation, my Dad had an 8th grade education and my Mom left school at 16. They both worked hard and didn't spend money on things they couldn't afford. I started working when I was 8. A paper route and working with my Dad's roofing company when I wasn't in school. Actually shingled my first roof (a garage) when I was 8. Child labor laws would not let that happen today. I took school seriously, while my brother did not. I went to college and he struggled to get his GED. I am now retired but never saw the need to replace/upgrade my car every 4 years. I still have my first new car bought over 30 years ago. Or my phone every 2 years. Seems many people choose to live close to their total means or think it is a good idea to spend 50 bucks a week on Lotto tickets. When I was working I would see many CVs where candidates had never earned a dime as they went through school. There are people who are dealt tough hands.


Can you please explain how "living close to total means" is related to lack of socioeconomic mobility?
Sure - some folks just are not good at NOT spending money. If they have any it gets spent, not saved for a rainy day or to save up to buy a house. Whether it is a poorer person who wants jewelry but doesn't even have a savings acct, or the managing director in London who just needs to have the new car every year (status thing in the UK, you can tell the year of the car by first digit or two on the registration plate) and then have to ask his employer for an advance on his year end bonus. I actually saw that when I worked in London.

Luck, not scrimping and saving, is far more important.

I think we will disagree on this one. Luck is important. I think scrimping and saving is more important.

quote:


But a tough hand in the US is far easier to overcome than many other places in the world. A little travel to places like India, China, Egypt, etc would be an eye opener for many US citizens.


There's no denying this is true (and it's part of why we measure standards of living, per capita GDP, etc.), as it would be for any highly developed country when compared to a country that is not as far along in raising its citizens out of poverty and squalor, but it's not really relevant to whether it's possible for someone to improve their station within a particular country. It's more often used as a talking point to tell those who are being held down to stop being so uppity.

Held down and uppity is probably a place we don't want to get into. Lots of immigrants come to the US with pretty much nothing. They work their tails off, scrimp and save, use common sense and move up the ladder. A lot has to do with work ethic and being structured.

(in reply to Lokasenna)
Post #: 7878
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 11:09:55 AM   
fcooke

 

Posts: 1156
Joined: 6/18/2002
From: Boston, London, Hoboken, now Warwick, NY
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: obvert

quote:

ORIGINAL: fcooke

Plenty of upward mobility in the US. I'm first generation, my Dad had an 8th grade education and my Mom left school at 16. They both worked hard and didn't spend money on things they couldn't afford. I started working when I was 8. A paper route and working with my Dad's roofing company when I wasn't in school. Actually shingled my first roof (a garage) when I was 8. Child labor laws would not let that happen today. I took school seriously, while my brother did not. I went to college and he struggled to get his GED. I am now retired but never saw the need to replace/upgrade my car every 4 years. I still have my first new car bought over 30 years ago. Or my phone every 2 years. Seems many people choose to live close to their total means or think it is a good idea to spend 50 bucks a week on Lotto tickets. When I was working I would see many CVs where candidates had never earned a dime as they went through school. There are people who are dealt tough hands. But a tough hand in the US is far easier to overcome than many other places in the world. A little travel to places like India, China, Egypt, etc would be an eye opener for many US citizens.


This line of the thread is completely OT but related to the affects of Covid on workplaces and disadvantaged communities, so I guess I'll chip in.

We can all trade personal anecdotes and come up with the idea that there a lot of opportunities for up mobility. Being in a position to spend upwards of several hours a day playing a computer war-game probably puts us in a category where we've all achieved some measure of success in our life.

I am a teacher. If students do well they all get an A. There is no curve, there are no restrictions on success. By ensuring that results are based on standards and performance we hope to instill that everyone can be successful, that skills are learned, not genetic.

When it comes to the working world this isn't true. Careers have limits. If everyone wanted to go out and become a coder, or a structural engineer, or a nurse practitioner, or a certified accountant, or any number of other professional positions, at some point those jobs would no longer be available and only the top of the range of trained people would get them.

What do the others do?

Statistics help more than anecdotes here, because we know statistically there are limits. There are a lot more McDonalds in the world than there are accounting offices, engineering firms, or hospitals. We assume that those who end up at the end of the grill line are there because they aren't trained to do anything else, don't have the mental capacity to do anything else, or don't have the motivation/dreams to do anything else. That isn't true.

IMO there are too many McDonalds in the world, getting rid of some would be a good start

Not everyone can succeed in a free market system. It's built in. When you have success or comfort you're happy to say it's possible for everyone. It actually isn't.

I think a lot more people can succeed than currently are. I think a big part of that comes down to a quality education, which not enough people are getting for various reasons which I will leave alone to avoid going completely OT on the OT. Until recently in the US there was always a shortage of coders, nurses, etc.

(in reply to obvert)
Post #: 7879
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 11:13:06 AM   
fcooke

 

Posts: 1156
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm

Can we please focus on the main topic only?

It's related but I take your point.

(in reply to Orm)
Post #: 7880
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 11:46:46 AM   
Lowpe


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COVID-19 Forecasts

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/covid-data/forecasting-us.html








Attachment (1)

< Message edited by Lowpe -- 5/17/2020 11:48:32 AM >

(in reply to Cap Mandrake)
Post #: 7881
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 12:14:43 PM   
Lowpe


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Neil Ferguson's Imperial model could be the most devastating software mistake of all time

https://outline.com/cnvAS8 The Telegraph

Fortran. I programmed in that in the early 80s around the time of the commodore 64.

< Message edited by Lowpe -- 5/17/2020 12:16:34 PM >

(in reply to Cap Mandrake)
Post #: 7882
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 12:23:46 PM   
witpqs


Posts: 26087
Joined: 10/4/2004
From: Argleton
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Lowpe

Neil Ferguson's Imperial model could be the most devastating software mistake of all time

https://outline.com/cnvAS8 The Telegraph

Fortran. I programmed in that in the early 80s around the time of the commodore 64.

The new and improved...




Attachment (1)

< Message edited by witpqs -- 5/17/2020 12:26:31 PM >


_____________________________


(in reply to Lowpe)
Post #: 7883
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 12:47:27 PM   
fcooke

 

Posts: 1156
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quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs

quote:

ORIGINAL: Lowpe

Neil Ferguson's Imperial model could be the most devastating software mistake of all time

https://outline.com/cnvAS8 The Telegraph

Fortran. I programmed in that in the early 80s around the time of the commodore 64.

The new and improved...




Ah Fortran, I learned that one too....and don't forget good old Basic. I liked Pascal better. When I got in the workforce I was trained in JCL (mainframe - Job Control Language) and a thing called Natural (used mostly in the Insurance sector, though I was Finance). Natural drove me nuts because you could define a variable anywhere in the code vs Pascal, which was very structured. Never learned any of the newer languages. Couldn't code a lick today.

(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 7884
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 12:50:36 PM   
Admiral DadMan


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This thread is beginning to wobble off course from the Subject "Corona virus".

Please institute a course correction and resume normal navigation.

Thank you.

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CVB Langley:

(in reply to fcooke)
Post #: 7885
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 1:00:14 PM   
obvert


Posts: 14050
Joined: 1/17/2011
From: PDX (and now) London, UK
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quote:

ORIGINAL: fcooke


I think a lot more people can succeed than currently are. I think a big part of that comes down to a quality education, which not enough people are getting for various reasons which I will leave alone to avoid going completely OT on the OT. Until recently in the US there was always a shortage of coders, nurses, etc.


I completely agree!

This is in fact veering more toward on this particular topic. I posted recently about one of the most successful efforts to fight Covid worldwide which is in a state in India, Kerala. The health minister, a former teacher, has instilled that education is a component of the health program. Literacy especially is at a high rate in the state due to her efforts, and she has completely squashed Covid transmission there by educating, testing, isolating and tracing.

_____________________________

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(in reply to fcooke)
Post #: 7886
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 2:11:46 PM   
obvert


Posts: 14050
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quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs

quote:

ORIGINAL: Lowpe

Neil Ferguson's Imperial model could be the most devastating software mistake of all time

https://outline.com/cnvAS8 The Telegraph

Fortran. I programmed in that in the early 80s around the time of the commodore 64.

The new and improved...



Firstly this headline is misleading and false. It implies that lockdown is a mistake, that this model is the reason for lockdown, and that this model is flawed.

Are you concerned with coding, or lockdown, Lowpe? Didn't you already post on this, and we had a long back and forth about it? I read on this extensively at the time and posted virtually the same I'm posting here.

The reviews I read were all over the map, from very critical of the code to some that said just that it was a mess for anyone outside of its development group to understand but that it seemed to function just fine. I also read it was written in C, not Fortran.

Either way the critique of this particular study by Imperial is not really relevant now, as it was only a part of a group of studies and projections by experts that warned of dire consequences of not using some kind of social distancing and mitigation to control the spread of Covid.

As we've learned, if the US had listened to experts a week or two earlier many thousands of lives could have been spared in this first wave of the virus, so it's actually quite good, regardless, that something worried the top dog enough that he decided to listen to his own experts and set out social distancing guidelines.

Here is more on this topic for those who continue to point to the Imperial results as somehow the reason lockdowns occurred.

A spokesperson for the Imperial College COVID19 Response Team said: “The UK Government has never relied on a single disease model to inform decision-making. As has been repeatedly stated, decision-making around lockdown was based on a consensus view of the scientific evidence, including several modelling studies by different academic groups.

“Multiple groups using different models concluded that the pandemic would overwhelm the NHS and cause unacceptably high mortality in the absence of extreme social distancing measures. Within the Imperial research team we use several models of differing levels of complexity, all of which produce consistent results. We are working with a number of legitimate academic groups and technology companies to develop, test and further document the simulation code referred to. However, we reject the partisan reviews of a few clearly ideologically motivated commentators.

“Epidemiology is not a branch of computer science and the conclusions around lockdown rely not on any mathematical model but on the scientific consensus that COVID-19 is a highly transmissible virus with an infection fatality ratio exceeding 0.5pc in the UK.”


< Message edited by obvert -- 5/17/2020 2:15:20 PM >


_____________________________

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(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 7887
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 2:13:32 PM   
JohnDillworth


Posts: 3100
Joined: 3/19/2009
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Lowpe

Neil Ferguson's Imperial model could be the most devastating software mistake of all time

https://outline.com/cnvAS8 The Telegraph

Fortran. I programmed in that in the early 80s around the time of the commodore 64.

Many of State run unemployment computer systems are programed in Cobol and they just are not built for he kind of volume being asked. Which means, its old, it works, but don't touch it. Anyway, Cobol was good for it's time but it doesn't scale well or easily. Some of those old Cobol Cowboys, if they are still around, are coming out of retirement to try and scale these systems. Not a quick process. I'm an old C and Assembler programmer. C can still be useful, but if you need an Assembler programmer something has gone horribly wrong

_____________________________

Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly

(in reply to Lowpe)
Post #: 7888
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 2:43:10 PM   
fcooke

 

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From: Boston, London, Hoboken, now Warwick, NY
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There is still a lot of old code out there, not always, or usually, well documented. And the talent pool to support or figure it out is getting smaller all the time. My wife knows Assembler, but she is pushing 60 and I am pretty sure she never wants to code again. The Hadoop/Big data angle is difficult. Many SW companies out there have platforms, but in my experience, you need a data engineer to work on the pool of data. An end user just cannot navigate it well.

(in reply to JohnDillworth)
Post #: 7889
RE: OT: Corona virus - 5/17/2020 2:47:50 PM   
Cap Mandrake


Posts: 23184
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From: Southern California
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"post Reagan"

Oh, FFS, don't start in on Ronaldus Magnus.

(in reply to JohnDillworth)
Post #: 7890
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