In Some Bay Area Counties, College Grads Have Higher Unemployment (mercurynews.com) 272
Higher education is supposed to be the ticket to employment. But in some Bay Area counties, workers with a high school diploma have lower unemployment rates than those with bachelor's degrees or higher.
From a report: Experts suggested the Bay Area's backwards numbers, which run counter to the national trend, could be the result of too-few lower-wage workers, many of whom have been driven out by skyrocketing housing prices and the rising cost of living. "We have employers call us all the time (saying), 'I'm looking for low-wage, entry-level workers,'" said Kris Stadelman, director of NOVA Workforce Development in Sunnyvale. But there are few workers willing to take on those positions who don't already have jobs, she said.
In Santa Clara County, the heart of Silicon Valley, the unemployment rate for workers with a high school degree is 3.3 percent, compared to a 3.6 percent rate for workers with a bachelor's degree or higher, according to the U.S. Census Bureau's 2017 American Community Survey, which measures unemployment by educational attainment for workers between 25 and 64 years old. The same situation exists in two other Bay Area counties -- Marin and Sonoma -- where workers with at least a bachelor's degree don't have the lowest unemployment rate.
The trend is starkest in Sonoma County, where workers without a high school degree have a 0.2 percent unemployment rate compared to a 4.4 percent rate for workers with a bachelor's degree or higher. Workers with a high school diploma in that county have an unemployment rate of 2.8 percent. Statewide, workers with a high school diploma have an unemployment rate of 6.2 percent, nearly double the 3.5 percent rate of those with a bachelor's or higher.
In Santa Clara County, the heart of Silicon Valley, the unemployment rate for workers with a high school degree is 3.3 percent, compared to a 3.6 percent rate for workers with a bachelor's degree or higher, according to the U.S. Census Bureau's 2017 American Community Survey, which measures unemployment by educational attainment for workers between 25 and 64 years old. The same situation exists in two other Bay Area counties -- Marin and Sonoma -- where workers with at least a bachelor's degree don't have the lowest unemployment rate.
The trend is starkest in Sonoma County, where workers without a high school degree have a 0.2 percent unemployment rate compared to a 4.4 percent rate for workers with a bachelor's degree or higher. Workers with a high school diploma in that county have an unemployment rate of 2.8 percent. Statewide, workers with a high school diploma have an unemployment rate of 6.2 percent, nearly double the 3.5 percent rate of those with a bachelor's or higher.
Not news. (Score:3, Insightful)
Most college degrees have been worthless for 20 years, this is not news. Entering a trade right after high school and making money during your most productive years is MUCH better than spending that time going into six-figure debt for a worthless piece of paper. Higher education turned into a racket during the 1990's, probably before.
Re:Not news. (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, the hours sucked. It is brutal to work in Florida outside in the summer. Or where there is nothing to move air. Also, much higher chance of dying on the job.
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$10 an hour as an starting electrician.
or
$13 an hour for being a phone monkey.
No contest. I still rather work at a call center than ever do that again.
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On what planet is a starting electrician only making $10/hr?
"In 2016, the median wage for an electrician was $52,720. The highest-paid earned $90,420, while the lowest-paid electricians earned around $31,800 that year. An apprentice usually makes between 30 percent and 50 percent less than someone who is fully trained."
https://money.usnews.com/careers/best-jobs/electrician/salary
The scale varies in areas with higher cost-of-living too. Expect those wages to be much higher in Silicon Valley.
Re: Not news. (Score:2)
I can say that quite the same situation is in China
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On what planet is a starting electrician only making $10/hr?
Depends, before or after expenses? The only rich electricians I know are those lucky enough to get themselves a steady position at a specific industry or large building project with a fixed longer term income.
A household sparky is lucky to be able to pay off the cost of the truck and tools he needs for the job, let alone turn a profit after travelling too and from site for one hour and then enduring the complaints from the customer who can't fathom why it cost them $60+parts to install a new power outlet.
Re: Not news. (Score:5, Insightful)
Electrician since I was 16 full time minus few years in prison. Was between jobs once tried a call center.. after 3 days of being told I was weasrimg the wrong clothes and that I had to stay seated at my "desk" I told the manager to fuck off and where to put his job and walked out. He chased me down as I was one of the productive people begging me to stay. All I can say is FUCK THAT NOISE! Excuse me while into back to terminating this panel. And fuck a desk job.
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Re: Not news. (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, when was the last time you saw an electrician (or plumber, or carpenter, or other tradesman) get his job sent overseas?
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I'm not sure what it's like in the USA, but here in Australia, trades are well protected with a lot of certification requirements, tradesmen need qualifications and licenses to operate in their respective fields. Doesn't stop unqualified or licensed workers, but they're quite effectively shut out, and because a lot of the time, it's in the name of safety, a lot of companies don't want to risk it.
Your bottom end tradesmen like painters or labourers, well yea, anyone can do that, but they're relatively low pa
Re: Not news. (Score:2, Insightful)
And those that want the wall are fucking stupid. Audit the employers and fine them for 50k per illegal on the first two offenses, and then take their business license on the third offense.
Problem fucking solved; multi-billion dollar wall not needed.
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Most illegals use stolen identities, hence the trope that they pay taxes (actually their employers do, not them) but don't get anything out.
Trying to figure out who is illegal is a months long process per person and then there are leftists that will sue you for discrimination for even cooperating with the government and the illegal will disappear with another stolen identity.
Re: Not news. (Score:2, Insightful)
They're not designed to.
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If you knew me, let alone before prison.. You wouldn't be so judgmental..
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He's not joking. Especially in Las Vegas. The joke is "Come on Vacation, leave on prbation."
Re: Not news. (Score:2)
Re:Not news. (Score:5, Interesting)
"Most" is probably the "most" inaccurate statement in the world on this.
It is true you don't need a degree to be a fantastic Pythonista. Try getting a job as a discrete graphics engineer, nurse, teacher, or accountant without a degree. It is true that Trades are a great way to go as well but even most trades have a required educational component.
Re: Not news. (Score:2, Interesting)
I do not have a degree and I work as a graphics driver engineer at the top discreet graphics company.
An education is vital for my role, but a slip of paper from an accredited University is not strictly necessary. My experience is that being self taught was a lower cost but more work in order to rise to a similar level of experise. If you can afford University, then go. It's a less turmoilous path than that of maverick.
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I hate to break it to you but the vast majority of jobs get pretty boring after a few weeks to months, that' why its called "work". Know what makes that survivable? A very comfortable living that allows for a lifestyle you enjoy. Most of us aren't defined by our jobs or have our self-worth tied to them, they are simply a means to an end.
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If welders are getting paid $150k or whatever, all the power to them; they deserve it.
Re:Not news. (Score:4, Insightful)
I am an artist. I weld. Plumbing and electrical work are also art.
You aren't doing your children any favors.
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This doesn't mean that it cannot be bad for the kids, just that it's definitely not as bad as you imply. As long as the kids are actively working at being artists, and have the talent ascribed to them, then it may very well be in their best interest to support them.
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Not everybody has parents that can afford that. I had to start working to help with bills... Must be rough...
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Problem is that welding the same fucking thing day in, day out, or plumbing, or residential electric can get boring as shit for an intelligent person after a few weeks to months.
So can web development, writing yet another database abstraction layer, designing yet another power supply, or any of the other tedious work that those of us in the tech industry find ourselves doing for a paycheck.
Re:Not news. (Score:5, Interesting)
An yet here we have a great example of the problem. You think just because YOU find these jobs boring that other people do too. YOU think that everyone has the same values as you do. That is far from the truth.
Odds are you have never done any of these jobs so you really know only what you have been taught about them. I have cousin that is welder. He loves his job. One month he is working on a job in New Orleans, a few months later he is welding high steel in Chicago. His job takes him all around the country.
I have another cousin who is diesel mechanic. He drives a truck around repairing broken down 18 wheelers. He rarely travels 30 miles from his home. He loves his job. He says he wouldn't be doing anything else.
A job, ether blue collar or white is what you make out of it. Some people just like working with their hands and wouldn't have it any other way.
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I have cousin that is welder. He loves his job. One month he is working on a job in New Orleans, a few months later he is welding high steel in Chicago. His job takes him all around the country.
Oh man your cousin must be bored in his job. Last time I saw an American welder it was a group of 5 that we had flown in to Germany from Texas. We laughed at the number of flags on their fire retardant overalls. Apparently their next job was in France at a Total facility.
A job, ether blue collar or white is what you make out of it.
Aint that the truth! I look to my university colleagues. One is a family man, 3 kids, house, same job for 10 years in the same office doing back office design work. Another friend of mine is launching rockets into space for military researc
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Sending them all out and looking after the wages, tax, permits and brand.
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This isn't to say that a BA in something that's not terribly marketable is a better idea than relevant trade experience and qualification(it often isn't); but "looking for low-wage, entry-level workers
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Um... my kid's in college right now (Score:5, Interesting)
A trade pays $9/hr to start, $15/hr after a few years and then tops out at $25/hr. I did a stint as an electrician's apprentice so I'm pretty familiar (cut those numbers by about 30% for inflation and you know where I was at). You're gonna top out around $50k/yr, which is where my kid _starts_. Over 40-60 years of work that will add up fast. Not to mention she will have much, much better benefits.
Heck, if you're a teacher in it for the money you can start around $40k/yr as long as you're willing to move and/or commute to a wealthy district (the way districts are funded means if you want to teach in a poor neighborhood because you grew up there plan on getting shafted).
I see a lot of folks saying a degree ain't worth it, but it always seems to be the kind of folks who don't want to pay for kids to go to school. It's expensive as hell ($140k in my case and I'm cutting corners) so I get where they're coming from, but this is why our country gets flooded with H1-Bs. It lets the companies go to Congress and say "Well, we wanted to hire American, but we just can't find anyone with the _skills_ we need".
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Um... my kid's in college right now for Nursing. (...) You're gonna top out around $50k/yr, which is where my kid _starts_. Over 40-60 years of work that will add up fast.
Well, you also have to remember that those who go straight to work have already been paid for several years before she gets her first paycheck and if that had been a loan she'd also be paying interest eating away at the higher pay and making the same money in fewer years puts you in a higher tax bracket. Sure, higher education pays off eventually but the break-even period is often considerable and so many families can't really afford to look that far ahead. I'm closing in on 40 now and it's really the 20 ye
Good point (Score:5, Informative)
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You obviously didn't read the summary. In the Bay Area, there's not enough people to fill low wage entry level jobs, probably because you can't possibly hope to survive on that wage in that area. People with more education could take those jobs if they wanted, but they're choosing not to. If you look at the country wide stats you'll see that the trend reverses, and those with more education have drastically lower unemployment rates.
Also, if the first few years immediately after high school are your most pro
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Yeah, bias and stupid have definitely replaced reading the summary, let alone reading the article.
The shortage isn't about the trades, but rather low-skill, low-wage, entry level positions. (The trades are generally skilled, higher wage posi
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There is a reason for it (Score:2)
Low wage jobs are dead end jobs without future. No pay raises, no bonuses, most if the pay health care don't pay enough to cover the high deductibles and high copays of the coverage provided.
Low wage jobs are a dead end and everyone knows it. Who wants to be stuck in a dead end job never earning more money?
It is why the trades are suffering so. Everyone needs HVAC or plumber. However those jobs are basically mean food stamps for life unless you are the owner.
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> Low wage jobs are dead end jobs without future
When I was much younger, I certainly worked various low wage jobs. They kept food in the house and the utilities running while I studied or built up some resources to move. If I may, "the future" for such jobs is something to develop on your personal time, not in the workplace, though there are some useful skills to learn even in the lowest wage work.
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Owners of a company? Some overpriced part of the country?
My dad only makes 50k a year for having 30 years exp. It was the best paying he found and he got a company truck.
Brother only makes 23k a year as a tile layer.
Also, I have a bare minimum of electrical exp and would make at best 12 an hour.
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50K a year isn't a lot anyway but its not awful in large parts of the county either; especially if you get to use someone else's vehicle and presumably fuel to commute to work.
That should put roof over you head and food on the table anyway.
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Move south. They can't find enough workers. If you can pass a drug test even the most menial job at any of the plants pays $25/hr to start. My favorite example is "hole watch". Whenever they dig a hole for construction, etc, safety rules dictate they pay someone to stand by it to make sure nobody falls in it. I'm not making that up. Starting pay is $25/hr. You won't stay in that job for long before one of the other superintendents or foremen grab you up to train for a skilled trade, because #1 you pa
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Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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Does this really surprise anyone? You have a bunch of self entitled millennials that have lied sheltered life and been fed a bunch of bullshit by these professors about how life should be. The come out of this indoctrination not having a clue how the real world actually works and with some bullshit degree in liberal arts. Where they think they are entitled to a job in whatever bullshit degree they got.
Then when reality sets in and its ether get a job waiting tables or starve they start bitch'n about s
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Then when reality sets in and its ether get a job waiting tables or starve they start bitch'n about some mythical fantasy about being entitled to something called a "living wage."
This is an American problem. If you have a degree and are willing to travel you will be earning a living wage. Even if you are waiting tables you'll be earning a living wage.
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A lot of those "benefits" and "hard work" you think the older generations owe you came about because of war. To create the post war economy that you millennials think you are "entitled" to came about because millions of people died.
Millennials are living in a relative age of peace. You may not think you are, but you are. You know nothing of the hard times earlier generations had. None of you have faced conscription into the armed forces. None of you have faced war time shortages or rationing.
My g
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Not just the Bay Area. (Score:4, Interesting)
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I doubt this is caused by an excess of demand for unskilled workers (waiters, dish washers, burger flippers, etc). It's probably caused by a shortage of unskilled workers. If housing prices have risen so much that it's impossible for unskilled workers to afford to live in those areas, then there won't be enough of them to fill all the jobs requiring little or no skills. The solution is either to build more housing to lower h
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There's another option: Improve transport so that unskilled workers can commute in from further away. The unskilled workers won't like it, because no-one likes spending three hours a day commuting, but it'll keep wages low which is what a lot of people want.
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With improved transit you don't need to commute three hours.
Or we could *gasp* build more housing...
Sorry, but who the hell says that? (Score:2)
Maybe if you grew up in the 70s with a big, Unionized manufacturing plant down the street, but that was almost 50 years ago. Those days are gone. The only thing left to kids without degrees is Walmart, $18/hr jobs i
Re:Not just the Bay Area. (Score:4, Informative)
That's called observer bias. The idea that dropping out and learning a trade is a road to riches is just daft and ignores the realities of trade industries:
Those who make it big:
- Run their own business, and don't play with a welding machine or a socket outlet.
- Work for a major company as staff on a large plant often in the middle of bumshart nowhere, and are lucky to have gotten this competitive and sought after role.
Those who you *think* have made it big:
- The guy who charges you $80/h labour while you ignore the fact that he wastes half the day driving between jobs and will not be fully booked.
- The guy who is loaded in cash today but can't make ends meet tomorrow because the majority of trade based industries are peak and trough cycles.
And above all: You're looking in the bay area and extrapolating. Sorry to burst your bubble, but unless you have a useless degree in golf course management or art critiquing you'll pretty much find work anywhere in the world.
hmmm... (Score:2)
Stupid statistic... (Score:2)
The high-school grads that couldn't get a job without a college degree probably ended up going to college (which you can do relatively cheaply in CA thanks to socially liberal policies) and working work-study jobs (no longer unemployed).
It's not that "college education causes unemployment", it's that the high-school grads that aren't able to get a long-term job with only an HS education typically continue their education, thus removing themselves from the "HS grads only" group.
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"It's not that "college education causes unemployment", it's that the high-school grads that aren't able to get a long-term job with only an HS education typically continue their education, thus removing themselves from the "HS grads only" group."
The situation is not even remotely close to either of the two scenarios you describe. The only reason why you'd even mention these two is if you are either completely ignorant in regards to California's rental and housing markets or are just not thinking at all. Se
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Hold the phone (Score:5, Insightful)
Sonoma County is rural. Of course there are more jobs for people without degrees. You don't need that masters in CS degree to pick fucking grapes.
I'm not sure this phenomenon has anything to do with the value of a college education, or the number of H1B visas. It might just be a highly localized issue. Let's keep reading...
See what I mean?
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I live in Sonoma County, it's not that rural. This has nothing to do with what you're going on about and everything to do with sky high rents. It's $2k for a 2 bedroom place here. What service level worker can afford that even with a roommate?
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The primary industries of Sonoma County are agriculture and hospitality. You don't need a college degree to clean a room in a bed & breakfast or to bus tables. Emerging industries in Sonoma County are manufacturing craft beverages, specialty foods and outdoor recreation.
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I have no interest in even looking up data on what you're telling me because nothing you're saying refutes my high rent and property value rebuttal
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You think $2k a month is high for a 2 bedroom place? That's about what it would cost you in Houston, less than Chicago, much less than New York. Do you think those places only have college-educated people living there?
Rents are on the high end throughout California, and yet, if you read the last line of the summary:
No hopers (Score:2)
If you only have a high school education, you're almost bound to leave an area that's so expensive to live in, because you have ZERO chance of a high paying job. But if you have a degree, you've got some chance of being able to grab one, so you will not give up so quickly. Therefore unemployment among the educated will be higher.
Duh! (Score:2)
The most important question not asked... (Score:4, Interesting)
...what do these unemployable graduates have degrees in?
Something useful that is a marketable skill that would lead to a decent job or a graduate degree in interpretive dance theory?
3.3 to 3.6 percent unemployment is practically 0% (Score:2)
Aptitude and Geekieness (Score:2)
Well duh. (Score:2)
Who wants low wages. Pay people and they will come. Just like in public education.
Lies, damn lies and statistics (Score:2)
This statistic is seriously flawed. It only counts those who can afford to stay despite being unemployed, which is unlikely if you worked at very low-wage job and had little or no savings.
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Takes some money to move around.
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Moving is expensive when you're an adult with a 20 years worth of "things." If you just graduating high school and there are not jobs in your community town - moving is dirt cheap load your crap into the car and go some places where you can get hired.
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One of those sentimental things in my case is my grandmother's piano that I inherited at age 26. And yes, both I and one of my kids play it.
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Ship it, with the money from other items sold deemed less important than grandma's piano.
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There's a difference between sentimentality and practicality. Sure, I could sell/donate/trash my entire house worth of "stuff", move across the country, and re-buy everything that I need when I get there. But it's generally not practical, especially if there are more people involved, like a spouse and children.
Even getting rid of the non-necessities, which I'll admit I have a bunch of, still leaves a shit ton of "stuff". As I get older I have found that what I consider a non-necessity has changed as wel
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Moving is expensive even if you don't have 20 years' worth of stuff. For a lot of places, you'll need a security deposit, first month's rent, possibly last month's rent, and deposits for utilities and such in addition to the actual expenses related to the move itself (truck, packing materials, etc.). You might get your security deposit back if you took care of your current place, but I've fought with more than one landlord about deductions even though the place was exactly as I received it. You need to h
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whats not economical about having 1000 books on one small device you can take anywhere.
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Takes some money to move around.
Not if you're willing to make tough choices.
Sell all your shit other than what you can toss in a big-ass backpack and hit the road. Hitchhike. Bus ticket. Walk.
Get where you're going. Hostel and shelter as necessary until you get a job and a place to live and go from there.
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The housing prices are so high that you can't live there with a low-wage job.
There are ways to live cheaply in Silicon Valley. I live in San Jose, and the house next to mine has 3 bedrooms with 22 Filipinos living in it. They have bunks stacked three high, and an RV parked in the driveway.
If you are working 80 hours a week, you aren't home much anyway.
Nice, so live adjacent to slum housing. (Score:2)
Nice, so live adjacent to slum housing.
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Nice, so live adjacent to slum housing.
There is nothing in the Bay Area that is remotely close to being a "slum". The 3 bedroom house is worth at least $1.5M.
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"The 3 bedroom house is worth at least $1.5M."
And it's being run like slum housing. By your own account it has 3 bedrooms but yet 22 people sleep there.
Don't delude yourself. This is the very illustration of the American Dream unraveling and it's not even something that isn't easily preventable. It's ignorant and self centered city planning that is the core of the problem. No one who owns property want's a 20 story residential building in silicon valley because they want to hold on to their precious propert
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More specifically, John Kelly, Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security had that decision to make and refused to increase it under quite a bit of pressure from Congresscritters such as Senator Heidi Heitkamp (Democrat, North Dakota). As Heitkamp kept up the pressure, Kelly eventually capitulated ad raised the cap. Not doubled, but increased it.
Where away? (Score:2)
Fine off the starboard bow, Cap'n!
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Re:I believe it! (Score:4, Funny)
fuck you, you need to STFU before I do to you what I did to the guy that cut me off last week!
Re:I believe it! (Score:4, Funny)
It's your fault for getting cut off. If there's less than 1 car length between your car and the car in front of you, no one can cut you off (or at least in the case of accident, they'll be at fault).
It's called defensive driving.
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hahahaha. Way to turn "defensive driving" on its head. I'm using this line from now on. :)
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