Comment Re:New glasses (Score 1) 157
You think Israel is actually going to get this fiber system built on-time, in-budget, and to-capacity?
You don't know shit about this country if you actually believe that, but we'll get it eventually.
You think Israel is actually going to get this fiber system built on-time, in-budget, and to-capacity?
You don't know shit about this country if you actually believe that, but we'll get it eventually.
In all truth, we had rockets landing in Tel-Aviv and Jerusalem in November without withdrawing from anything.
Is "the world" going to give me a post-doc?
Subtle? It's not all that subtle, dude. Boston has some evil opposite of New York's ethnic neighborhoods. New York is proud of Little Italy, of Harlem, of the Lower East Side, of Queens! Boston... is proud of Southie, Beacon Hill, and the suburbs, where the white working class and white professional elite live. Boston blatantly disdains, Jamaica Plains, Mattapan, Dorchester, and East Boston where most of the city's residents actually live, and GOD HELP YOU if you live in a student area like Allston, Brighton, or Fenway. Cambridge disdains Boston in the same way that monied/industrial classes and academic/technological classes hate each other worldwide. Brookline is too good for Boston and Boston is too good for Brookline at the same time, in a way that I'm officially told has absolutely nothing to do with Brookline being heavily Jewish. Only the people of Somerville seem to care about Somerville, which is ironically, in my opinion, the nicest actual town in the whole damn area.
Food is expensive, it's impossible to find a doctor when you need one (I literally had a nervous breakdown and could not get a damn doctor's appointment despite having work-supplied insurance), rent is expensive, the weather is crap (particularly because you can't really enjoy the winter weather without going to the countryside). For all they did to encourage biking, I still got flat tires from broken glass when I actually attempted to ride my bike the 3 miles to work straight down Massachusetts Ave instead of taking the bus. The primary social activity of the metro area was going to your favorite pub and getting smashed, which I wouldn't even object to except that the pub "system" of Boston relies on intricate local knowledge of the precise social scene you want to attend and crowd you want to attract. Actually, I do object because I like to go clubbing rather than just get drunk. Even the "geek" activities for non-students largely consisted of "go watch a guy talk about technology while you eat bar appetizers and drink beer". The T also shuts down its various lines at times ranging from 11:30PM to 1AM, making you either go home early every time you go out, find some place to stay, or only go out near where you live anyway.
And Anime Boston got wrecked last year by someone drunk and someone stoned fighting during the rave while hundreds of overcrowded fellow nerds waited to even get in. The cops got called and the party broke up. GOOD JOB BOSTON!
Wow, now was that ever a rant to get off my chest. AND DESPITE ALL THIS, native Bostonians will continually insist that they live in "the Hub of the Universe", which is obviously far superior to crappy cities like New York, especially New York, or San Francisco, or anyplace other than Boston or maybe Seattle.
Obviously these are all First World problems, but boy is Boston ever a depressing place to live outside its 3-4 months of summer.
Back in "the old days", wages rose throughout the entire economy in every growth period. It was normal.
Your problem is that you live in the Boston area, one of the sector-segregated, non-fluid labor markets in the country with a high cost of living to boot. Get the hell out of there.
Completely agreed on the Boston front. Probably the most miserable 5 months of my life, when I lived in Boston.
$1400 for a basement-floor one-bedroom apartment that hasn't been repaired since the Great Depression? Oh wow, sign me up for that again!
What on Earth are you trying to say? You mean to tell me that overproduction leads to a steady fall in the rate of profit until capitalism goes into crisis and the excess capacity is consumed or destroyed in a great crashing conflagration?
WHY, NOBODY HAS EVER FIGURED THAT OUT BEFORE! Surely and certainly not some messed-up 19th century German economist, journalist and activist named Karl Marx. Definitely probably not.
How did you afford $17,000/year in rent while living on a grad-student stipend?
Technically, government is capable of generating a profit. it just never captures the profit for itself. The profit instead becomes an externality, absorbed by society as a whole.
Why should it disturb you? With only $250,000 after 30 years of work, you'll never afford to retire.
Most actual poor, in fact 75% of the US population, are debtors. Inflation helps debtors.
Silicon Wadi is over here, and we're not an at-will area. We're an employment-by-contract country.
Odd, I have not seen a need to have my paycheck garnished in order to pay the wages of a bunch of executives who do nothing for me. You already get enough of that with company management as it is.
Oh, so you want to get rid of management? You're a socialist?
I've been there I would never say its better, in fact I feel sad for them, there is no exceptional-ism, most of time I've stayed always left with a feeling they are just existing, not for the worse but not fort he best either.
If everyone was exceptional, nobody would be. Warping an entire society around the desires and mores of the most exceptional is perverse.
This restaurant was advertising breakfast any time. So I ordered french toast in the renaissance. - Steven Wright, comedian