- Fri Nov 01, 2013 7:53 am
#31797
No matter which way you lean politically, I think that you will agree that Congress has done a terrible job creating and maintaining American Jobs. While some will say that it is not government's job to create jobs, I maintain that it is. Since the government has taken managing the economy as one of it's functions, it owes citizens a chance to find work that pays enough to maintain a reasonable lifestyle. I feel that the current political climate ignores some basic facts about workers, the economy and gGeorge Santayanovernment.
1. A vibrant economy with very low unemployment is necessary to maintain said economy and to provide the revenue the government needs to function.
2. A low unemployment rate that includes all members of society means less crime, more opportunities, more small business and growth for existing businesses.
3. One key to a very low unemployment is having workers that can provide the skills required by today's economy.
4. Taking Item 3 into consideration, education plays a vital rope in maintaining a robust economy.
5. Education to maintain a robust economy must include education for all; the slow learner, those who do not accept the traditional education model, and the super-brillient. All reports on education workd-wide put us very low on several critical subjects such as math and science.
6. Today, we have a huge amount of jobs in this country that cannot be filled because we do not have the qualified workers to fill them. I have a relative (recently retired) that worked most of his life recruiting foreign professionals to work in the USA.
7. Tuition is going up faster than inflation; putting higher education out of the reach of many and putting others into debt that will take many years to work off.
8. While many aspire to a college education, many would prefer to work in the skilled trades. Our country has left this training to private schools complete with the ripoffs, lack of true education in these skills, excessive financeing rates, and lack of job placement after completing the poor education provided by the poor schools. Unions provide decent education in the skilled trades but the number of positions is limited.
9. Local and national businesses would be wise to get more involved in education as the major benefits would be to their bottom line. Local businesses would particularly benefit from intensive involvement in local schools. They could pick the brightest of the current enrollment for their business to replace the retiring workers and to grow their business. They could train the students in what it takes to be a sucessful employee and to help your company to grow.
The GI Bill of WW II crated a whole new economy and America actually made a profit off of the money spent. The following are exerpts from http://www.marketplace.org/topics/econo ... ed-economy" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
A. The GI Bill provided the education for 14 Nobel Prize winners, three Supreme Court justices, three presidents, a dozen senators, two dozen Pulitzer Prize winners.
B. Historians say the GI Bill fueled a major expansion of the nation's higher education system and made college a cornerstone of middle-class American life. Marine Captain George Schultz did pretty well with his GI Bill education. He taught at MIT and Chicago, he ran a big construction company. And George Schultz served as U.S. Secretary of State.
C. Before World War II, most Americans didn't have a high school diploma, much less a college degree. After the war, college enrollment exploded.
D. The scientists and engineers and teachers and thinkers who brought in the information age, who took us to the moon, who waged the cold war, you name it - all those men and women were educated through the GI Bill.
E. The government was surprised by how many GIs took advantage of the education benefit, nearly eight million veterans in all. Management guru Peter Drucker said that providing free higher education to so many Americans changed the world by creating the modern knowledge economy.
F. The Greatest invasion in all history, a million veterans pouring on to the college campuses of America, from Harvard to Stanford, from State to Old Siwash.
G. A recent study has concluded that many, if not most, of the jobs that have gone are gone forever. The age of computers is here and many, again if not most, can be done more efficiently, cheaper and better by computers. If you work in a semi-skilled job, you will likely be replaced by a computer. Many educators forsee the day, in the not to distant future, when a college degree will be the minimum not the exception and education will determine if you are employed or not.
H. Historian Ed Humes says the free education that so many veterans got under the GI Bill helped make the "greatest generation" so great.
Those who ignore history are bound to repeat it.-George Santayana. Many attribute this to Winston Churchill but it was actually the poet and philosopher George Santayana. I think that our political leaders should re-examine history and decide to put our nation back to work and begin to build the next "Greatest Generation."
1. A vibrant economy with very low unemployment is necessary to maintain said economy and to provide the revenue the government needs to function.
2. A low unemployment rate that includes all members of society means less crime, more opportunities, more small business and growth for existing businesses.
3. One key to a very low unemployment is having workers that can provide the skills required by today's economy.
4. Taking Item 3 into consideration, education plays a vital rope in maintaining a robust economy.
5. Education to maintain a robust economy must include education for all; the slow learner, those who do not accept the traditional education model, and the super-brillient. All reports on education workd-wide put us very low on several critical subjects such as math and science.
6. Today, we have a huge amount of jobs in this country that cannot be filled because we do not have the qualified workers to fill them. I have a relative (recently retired) that worked most of his life recruiting foreign professionals to work in the USA.
7. Tuition is going up faster than inflation; putting higher education out of the reach of many and putting others into debt that will take many years to work off.
8. While many aspire to a college education, many would prefer to work in the skilled trades. Our country has left this training to private schools complete with the ripoffs, lack of true education in these skills, excessive financeing rates, and lack of job placement after completing the poor education provided by the poor schools. Unions provide decent education in the skilled trades but the number of positions is limited.
9. Local and national businesses would be wise to get more involved in education as the major benefits would be to their bottom line. Local businesses would particularly benefit from intensive involvement in local schools. They could pick the brightest of the current enrollment for their business to replace the retiring workers and to grow their business. They could train the students in what it takes to be a sucessful employee and to help your company to grow.
The GI Bill of WW II crated a whole new economy and America actually made a profit off of the money spent. The following are exerpts from http://www.marketplace.org/topics/econo ... ed-economy" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
A. The GI Bill provided the education for 14 Nobel Prize winners, three Supreme Court justices, three presidents, a dozen senators, two dozen Pulitzer Prize winners.
B. Historians say the GI Bill fueled a major expansion of the nation's higher education system and made college a cornerstone of middle-class American life. Marine Captain George Schultz did pretty well with his GI Bill education. He taught at MIT and Chicago, he ran a big construction company. And George Schultz served as U.S. Secretary of State.
C. Before World War II, most Americans didn't have a high school diploma, much less a college degree. After the war, college enrollment exploded.
D. The scientists and engineers and teachers and thinkers who brought in the information age, who took us to the moon, who waged the cold war, you name it - all those men and women were educated through the GI Bill.
E. The government was surprised by how many GIs took advantage of the education benefit, nearly eight million veterans in all. Management guru Peter Drucker said that providing free higher education to so many Americans changed the world by creating the modern knowledge economy.
F. The Greatest invasion in all history, a million veterans pouring on to the college campuses of America, from Harvard to Stanford, from State to Old Siwash.
G. A recent study has concluded that many, if not most, of the jobs that have gone are gone forever. The age of computers is here and many, again if not most, can be done more efficiently, cheaper and better by computers. If you work in a semi-skilled job, you will likely be replaced by a computer. Many educators forsee the day, in the not to distant future, when a college degree will be the minimum not the exception and education will determine if you are employed or not.
H. Historian Ed Humes says the free education that so many veterans got under the GI Bill helped make the "greatest generation" so great.
Those who ignore history are bound to repeat it.-George Santayana. Many attribute this to Winston Churchill but it was actually the poet and philosopher George Santayana. I think that our political leaders should re-examine history and decide to put our nation back to work and begin to build the next "Greatest Generation."
