Only navy sailors would be upset about women in the workplace. Why would anyone want to spend 6 hours a day with just men?

i don’t really even know what jay’s remark was getting at. ‘a woman’s job’. what does it mean? white-collar office work? work where your nails don’t get grimy? work that doesn’t involve sweating? it’s like he never left his hick town on long island and imagines he’s still coming home on a trawler at the end of every working day.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Only navy sailors would be upset about women in the workplace. Why would anyone want to spend 6 hours a day with just men?
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-03 03:55:52)
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-03 15:59:15)
Last edited by Pochsy (2020-05-03 17:08:14)
People were upset that Mike Bloomberg told a white collar crowd once that "I can teach anyone here how to be a farmer. You dig a hole, put in a seed, and add some water".Pochsy wrote:
"Farmers feed cities" is my personal favorite. Any time they feel small they bust that one out like the white collar workers they're talking to can't contemplate the most basic functioning of the supply chain.
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-03 17:32:44)
Bloomberg's point was that teaching someone how to farm was easier than teaching them high tech jobs like programming and engineering. And before you say "there is engineering and programming in agriculture", no farmers are programming farming machine operating systems or designing combine engine in AutoCAD.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Expecting gratitude for work put into an essential service like farming probably shouldn't extend into expanding bible study into public schools, or allowing businesses to fire someone for being outed as a homosexual.
To be fair, there is more to farming than putting a seed in the ground and watering it. Having a tomato garden doesn't make you a horticulturist. Agriculture is a science, after all. But as with other fields, there are different degrees of qualification. I think some farmers tend to talk up what they know to a silly degree.
Maybe by, "teaching any of you how to farm," what he meant is that he could pay someone else to teach them how to farm.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Bloomberg's point was that teaching someone how to farm was easier than teaching them high tech jobs like programming and engineering. And before you say "there is engineering and programming in agriculture", no farmers are programming farming machine operating systems or designing combine engine in AutoCAD.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Expecting gratitude for work put into an essential service like farming probably shouldn't extend into expanding bible study into public schools, or allowing businesses to fire someone for being outed as a homosexual.
To be fair, there is more to farming than putting a seed in the ground and watering it. Having a tomato garden doesn't make you a horticulturist. Agriculture is a science, after all. But as with other fields, there are different degrees of qualification. I think some farmers tend to talk up what they know to a silly degree.
Last edited by Larssen (2020-05-04 00:39:24)
LOL you sound like a remainer commenting on britain's food supply/agricultural workers.Maybe people would like to go back to spending 40% of their income on food
Last edited by uziq (2020-05-04 02:44:27)