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Discussion and Debate
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New NDP Leader/Leader of the Opposition
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<blockquote data-quote="FtcdatSAPoD" data-source="post: 61146566" data-attributes="member: 311828"><p>At work, when I am in a situation where I have to work with another person, I will often suggest a plan of action. If the other person doesn't want to listen to me, I'll ask him what he wants to do and then follow his lead. Why? Someone has to be in charge. We need bosses and supervisors and CEOs. It's a part of life everywhere except for those in the welfare system.</p><p> </p><p>It is good for me to be interacting like this because it has been years since I was exposed to such things. In private enterprise which I have been immersed in quite a number of years, I have never heard of anyone being jealous of their bosses' salaries (unless one is in a union or leftist atmosphere which few business' tolerate). For most people, when opportunities arise for an advancement of even one level, few take it because everyone knows it's very hard work with alot of responsibility and managers come and go much more than those at the lower levels. It's only people in the social assistance system that seem to be angry about these big salaries of these CEO's. No one that I know of would ever, ever blame a CEO's salary for a company bankruptcy. They might blame the CEO for how he ran the company but not for his salary. But, that being said, there is ten times more anger toward the welfare system than toward anything business wise. Those of us who work know how much taxes go up and are fully aware of the taxes taken off our paycheques and added to purchases. And we know how many of these taxes go to people who don't work and live off of welfare. That's what makes the average person angry. The salaries of our bosses have nothing to do with it.</p><p> </p><p>It must be the difference in Biblical interpretation that translates to other differences because this is all very strange to me to hear these things I am reading. People in private enterprise just don't talk this way.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FtcdatSAPoD, post: 61146566, member: 311828"] At work, when I am in a situation where I have to work with another person, I will often suggest a plan of action. If the other person doesn't want to listen to me, I'll ask him what he wants to do and then follow his lead. Why? Someone has to be in charge. We need bosses and supervisors and CEOs. It's a part of life everywhere except for those in the welfare system. It is good for me to be interacting like this because it has been years since I was exposed to such things. In private enterprise which I have been immersed in quite a number of years, I have never heard of anyone being jealous of their bosses' salaries (unless one is in a union or leftist atmosphere which few business' tolerate). For most people, when opportunities arise for an advancement of even one level, few take it because everyone knows it's very hard work with alot of responsibility and managers come and go much more than those at the lower levels. It's only people in the social assistance system that seem to be angry about these big salaries of these CEO's. No one that I know of would ever, ever blame a CEO's salary for a company bankruptcy. They might blame the CEO for how he ran the company but not for his salary. But, that being said, there is ten times more anger toward the welfare system than toward anything business wise. Those of us who work know how much taxes go up and are fully aware of the taxes taken off our paycheques and added to purchases. And we know how many of these taxes go to people who don't work and live off of welfare. That's what makes the average person angry. The salaries of our bosses have nothing to do with it. It must be the difference in Biblical interpretation that translates to other differences because this is all very strange to me to hear these things I am reading. People in private enterprise just don't talk this way. [/QUOTE]
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