Port Strike

Hydra6

FNG
Joined
May 1, 2023
Messages
28
Optics were horrible - strike Eastern ports when several Eastern states reeling from a natural disaster. Add that on top of the disaster of a union president. ILA bailed out until January. Meanwhile, ports will be automating the crap out of their operations. Technology is there just needing the incentives - union cut the throats of their members.
 
Joined
Sep 24, 2019
Messages
1,033
Evidently meme posts can be deleted. Admins, please tell me if I was over the line or if I offended someone…
 

Marbles

WK Donkey
Classified Approved
Joined
May 16, 2020
Messages
4,253
Location
AK
Eh I agree and disagree with you. I chose the army route, and stayed a public servant. My brother built a smallish company 50 employees , my wife runs a small business and employs 15 people. The balls and iron will it takes to do that is more than I could/ would want to stomach. Jumping out of airplanes, long field problems, deployment and combat were tough, but signing up to pay 50k or 150k in expenses every month before you even think about taking profit is another level of risk that personally I can’t handle. Obviously soldiers and folks willing to sacrifice for the greater good are amazing, but I wouldn’t discount the grind, the will, and the balls it takes to start a company from scratch and just make it work and grow it. They are always working, non stop, no leave, no holidays, stuff goes sideways and it’s only ever on them, oh and they employee people and pay the bulk of the taxes that allow for us to have a powerful military or other public services, just something to think about.
I will not argue on that note, but I have seen enough people draw the short straw trying to make it work that I cannot attribute success to the individual alone.

We are all different, at anything in life there is a mix of skill, grit, and luck that makes it work. Most of us prefer to ignore our own good luck and focus on the skill and grit.

Is there really a value difference between a CEO who works 90 hours a week and takes on personal financial risk and the farmer who makes less, but also puts in 90 hours a week and is in debt for farm equipment and land?

I respect people who work hard and have a solid work ethic, that includes many CEOs. I do not believe the size of a paycheck determines the difficulty of the work.

As long as there is consistentency, I don't have a problem with upper management dealing themselves a nice hand, it comes with the territory. I do have a problem with the claim that they are somehow more worthy than others who work hard.
 
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