The Cheerleading Coach in Question, pictured:
The Cheerleading Coach in Question, pictured:
OH MY GOD YES! 41 means you graduated high school c.1995, and would have graduated college c.1999. You entered the workforce in an era of unprecedented growth, manpower shortages, benefits handed to you, and then some.
You cannot possibly be this blind, so I’m guessing you’re either still in college or waaaaaaayyyy too old to be arguing with people in their mid-30s about what it was like to go to high school in the ‘90s.
Monday morning quaterbacking?? No dummy, it’s simple common sense that ANY guidance counselor could’ve given you over the past twenty years!
Hey dummy, unemployment is at historical lows and millenials are job-hopping at record paces which was a no-no “in the late 90s”
I found out well into my bachelor’s program that my University gave special scholarships to transferees from Community College who had stellar grades. Two years too late.
A good friend of mine went into HVAC, and it took him nearly 15 years before he had some form of stability. Unions are great if you’re already in one.
I’m going to guess you weren’t in high school in the late ‘90s. In an era of unprecedented economic growth, they couldn’t fill jobs fast enough. And with no signs of trouble whatsoever, it was predicted that by the mid 2000s, there would be far more openings for jobs then applicants due to the boomers beginning to…
Personally, I’m just waiting for the Federal Government to overhaul the student loan program, and once again allow federal loans to be dischargable in bankruptcy.
“Hey teachers, you know how you are already criminally underpaid and overworked? Yeah, how about 8 more weeks of class time and no extra pay!”
Chris Illich could open up the checkbook, and play a lineup featuring Miguel Cabrera, Manny Machado, Jose Iglesias, Bryce Harper, and Jose Bautista; and throw out James Shields, Edwin Jackson, Doug Fister, and Clay Buckholz to start games.
Not anything built by an American company, most assuredly.
As a Michigan congressman, Dingell was a champion of both the auto industry and the working class. During debate in 1977 to amend the Clear Air Act, Dingell worked for a favorable outcome for the car industry, instead of the air.
But it’s historically inaccurate! The Continental Army wore Blue. The British wore Red!
It’s .99 centuries!
I don’t know about worst, but I’m adding this submission for the best. Doctor Silver Fox destroys all.
DUMMY. THIS IS WHAT I’M TALKING ABOUT.
redlining, housing discrimination, and economic oppression is the reason for Detroit’s high demographic of black folks.
“Call me David one more time!”
If you’re unfamiliar with how willful segregation works, and/or don’t know or understand the history of the demographics of this region, maybe you shouldn’t be so quick to judge.