tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-615540480649619994.post1415284705638474805..comments2023-12-20T09:43:12.402-08:00Comments on Skoop's Blog: Dueling RalliesTim Skubickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11498943340853358620noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-615540480649619994.post-11121003201590846012011-02-27T05:07:48.381-08:002011-02-27T05:07:48.381-08:00In response to Anonymous:
Did you think whether pr...In response to Anonymous:<br />Did you think whether private sector although it is "working stiff" can replace the teachers? I think the salary of teachers is rather justified. Their job is hard, and I think your government is on the right way if it supports teachers. in my country (will not name it) the job of teachers is poorly-paid, and it causes devil-may-care attitude to the work they do. I think I mustn't say what we finally get of it.HYIP monitorhttp://www.hyipdata.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-615540480649619994.post-46701395722791511062011-02-26T15:01:52.620-08:002011-02-26T15:01:52.620-08:00Reply to Michael Paul Murphy. The $39K average pri...Reply to Michael Paul Murphy. The $39K average private sector compensation also includes the PhD's doing private sector research, the business owners who also have education and training and take the risk of their capital to create the real jobs (whom the public sector wants to tax into oblivion), The architects, engineers and contractors who build the public sector Taj Mahals, farmers that grow your food, truckers who get it to the stores staffed by more private sector workers that market it safely for your family, CEO's that take the initiative and make the decisions that makes our system work, as well as the ones that clean your house, wash your car, trim your lawn. So, you think a teacher who gets the same experience ten times, is better than the working stiff that gets ten years of experience? Like I said, we have raise up a class of (wanna be) princes. Come back to reality.I. Emma Ripoffnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-615540480649619994.post-54651395101290629322011-02-26T11:22:34.713-08:002011-02-26T11:22:34.713-08:00Comparing teachers, all of whom have college degre...Comparing teachers, all of whom have college degrees, with "private sector working stiffs" (which I assume would include 17-year-old burger flippers) isn't exactly apples to apples.Paul Michael Murphyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17318098111985714443noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-615540480649619994.post-39235522378037200252011-02-26T09:03:37.418-08:002011-02-26T09:03:37.418-08:00Most tea partiers were at their jobs or businesses...Most tea partiers were at their jobs or businesses that day. We didn't have government jobs with huge salaries, huge benefits, and time off at taxpayers' expense to greedily slop for more gruel - OINK!!! The average teacher gets compensation of more than $72K, (teaching 900 hours a year) the private sector woking stiff but $ 39k (working 2,000 hours a year). Twice the pay, half the work. Wonder why we demand some equity? We have raised up a class of princes. Let's bring the public sector back into something close to equity.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-615540480649619994.post-6223174563660045632011-02-26T04:57:17.643-08:002011-02-26T04:57:17.643-08:00Tea Partiers are NOT Anti-Government. We can all a...Tea Partiers are NOT Anti-Government. We can all agree that we need a prudent approach to providing a reasonable infrastructure of services.<br />Mr. Skubick shows an utter lack of understanding of what and who Tea Partiers are and what they stand for.<br />Here's a clue: We stand for limited government and unlimited potential. <br />How 'bout that, Tim ?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com