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United States Digital Government

Biden Launches US Digital Corps To Bring Young Tech Talent To Government (fastcompany.com) 124

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Fast Company, written by Mark Sullivan: On Monday the Biden administration announced a new program, called the U.S. Digital Corps, designed to attract young tech talent to roles in the government. The Corps offers early-career technologies a chance to get engaged in government via a two-year fellowship focused on major Biden administration priorities, including coronavirus response, economic recovery, cybersecurity, and streamlining government services. The program will begin by recruiting 30 people with skill sets in software engineering, data science, design, cybersecurity, and other critical technology fields this fall. It'll place them in one of five agencies -- the General Services Administration (GSA), Veterans Affairs, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau -- where they'll start work in 2022.

Only 3% of the government's workforce is under 30 years old, says the GSA, which will handle the recruiting. And only a quarter of the current workforce are women. The GSA says it'll hire a diversity of people for the Corps to help even out those ratios. The program will recruit from "leading undergraduate programs," as well as from "alternative training pathways" such as apprenticeships, bootcamps, and certificate programs. [...] The U.S. Digital Corps is a collaboration between GSA, the White House Office of Management and Budget, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, the Office of Personnel Management, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. It's the "first and only government-wide, technology-specific recruitment program for early-career Americans," says the GSA in a press release.

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Biden Launches US Digital Corps To Bring Young Tech Talent To Government

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  • by oldgraybeard ( 2939809 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @10:35PM (#61747457)
    the US government will allocate to themselves?
    • None. On paper.

      In practice it will be necessary to outsource the actual work to whichever h1b house has the slickest bid to answer the rfp.

      • Age discrimination lawsuits will slow them down.
        • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 31, 2021 @02:56AM (#61747811)

          Only 3% of the government's workforce is under 30 years old, says the GSA, which will handle the recruiting. And only a quarter of the current workforce are women. The GSA says it'll hire a diversity of people for the Corps to help even out those ratios.

          Leave it to the Biden admin to institute hiring requirements of: must be bright, under 30 years old, preferrably female, with nice smelling hair.

          • by anoncoward69 ( 6496862 ) on Tuesday August 31, 2021 @03:22AM (#61747831)
            If it's full of diversity hires, it will be next to useless. Any of the good talent that does come in will quickly leave after being saddled with all the work that the diversity hires won't do. We have this problem at my workplace. A couple of diversity hires on the team. And you know how you know they are diversity hires? We've been though about 3 of them in as many years as i've worked here. Every time they finally can one of them, they get replaced by another POC. They bring them in find out theyr'e worthless and HR and legal makes us document the fuck out of what they fuck up or just wont do for about a year before finally firing them and replacing them with another "diversity hire" Dear god if one of them found out instead of replacing them with another diversity hire we finally just hired a white person that will do their damn job.
            • If it's full of diversity hires, it will be next to useless.

              It's a government gig.

              Works as designed.

              • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

                by gtall ( 79522 )

                BS, most government workers are competent. Although some do have a major problem, they have to deal with the public. The public are the ones taking ivermectin, believe hydroxychloroquine is a cure for Covid because they saw some shyster on TV promote it, agree that Jewish laser beams from space are changing votes, etc.

                • I did a facepalm yesterday over the story of a man winning a judgment to force the hospital to administer ivermectin. Does that mean I can force a hospital to prescribe me laudanum?

                  • by Anonymous Coward

                    I did a facepalm yesterday over the story of a man winning a judgment to force the hospital to administer ivermectin.

                    I did a facepalm yesterday over the story of a woman losing custody of her child because the judge didn't like the fact that she was unvaccinated due to having experienced adverse reactions to prior jabs.

                    And for the record, Ivermectin has been proven to work, just take a look at the impressive results India had with it. It is pretty safe too, having been around for a long time, it's been very well tested. We would be a lot better off if the biotech companies would stop putting profits before people's lives

                    • Ivermectin has a pretty good record of eliminating horse worms. I'm not dumb enough to take anything out of India as proof of anything. The Pfizer shot works better anyway, and it was actually *designed* to deal with corona viruses in humans. Ivermectin was not.

                    • Let me ask you a simple yes or no question: Is Ivermectin Approved by the FDA for any human use?

                      IF yes, then your post is simply making mockery for mockery's sake, and isn't serious rebuke

                      IF no, then your post is a lie or you're stupid.

                      Pfizer shot doesn't work at all like people think it does. It offers NO immunity, and only offers the ability to hide an infection behind false sense of security "I've been immunized" (no you haven't that's not how mRNA works).

                      There is gaining evidence that the shot itself is

                • Bullshit right back at ya. I've contracted with government at all levels; city, county, state and fed. Each and every one is stuffed with useless people.
            • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

              by gtall ( 79522 )

              There's that race card at the end of your post.

              • This is what all the forced diversity and multiculturalism has brought: people becoming much more racist, and more openly so, than ever before. It's sad and unnecessary but likely to become even more prevalent as the forces to be doubles down and try to hamfist it in everywhere even more. Oh well, should be a good show. I'll enjoy the chaos from the sidelines with a bowl of popcorn
            • It's a two year fellowship, so as soon as they've gained enough experience to do the job, they'll be leveraging it to get a better job in the private sector.
            • by hondo77 ( 324058 )

              If it's full of diversity hires, it will be next to useless.

              Then your company is doing it wrong. Can't blame the government for your company being stupid. They did hire a troll like you, after all.

            • Doesn't have to be a white person [gotfuturama.com].
          • Please mod parent up. =))) ROTFL
          • It's 30 jobs - what the hell are we talking about this for?

            That's 1/10,000,000 of the US population.

      • That is precisely what will happen. Wipro, Cognizant, Tata, etc. will do all that dirty work under the covers and you'll see a bunch of "managed services" contracts pop up that these firms will use to bundle those folks for consumption by the feds.

        It will be extremely difficult for the government to organically source young tech talent because the pay sucks and the bureaucracy is suffocating.

    • by lsllll ( 830002 )
      Why would they allocate H1B visas? Most miners [newsweek.com] are already U.S. citizens.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by lsllll ( 830002 )
          There are so many things wrong with the concept of "if you can do x (presumably because it's hard work), then you can do y (which is assumed to be easy work)". Like someone else said in another thread on Slashdot, "Brain surgery isn't hard, you just need a really big hammer and perhaps a chisel. However, successful brain surgery is a lot harder."
        • Biden is funding 30 jobs - are you serious? Do you think those thirty jobs make a difference at all?

  • Redundant? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Amadablam ( 516748 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @10:40PM (#61747475)
    The U.S. federal government already has the U.S. Digital Service (https://www.usds.gov/), which was started in 2014 to help fix problems associated with the launch of healthcare.gov, and they've been re-engineering federal websites and services ever since. This new U.S. Digital Corps (https://digitalcorps.gsa.gov/about/) sure sounds and looks like a duplicate agency. Does anyone know how they'll be different?
    • Maybe people graduate from the corps and go into the service?

    • The U.S. federal government already has the U.S. Digital Service (https://www.usds.gov/), which was started in 2014 to help fix problems associated with the launch of healthcare.gov, and they've been re-engineering federal websites and services ever since. This new U.S. Digital Corps (https://digitalcorps.gsa.gov/about/) sure sounds and looks like a duplicate agency. Does anyone know how they'll be different?

      This will be based out of the Department of Redundancies Department. /s

      • The U.S. federal government already has the U.S. Digital Service (https://www.usds.gov/), which was started in 2014 ...

        Biden forgot he already created such a service.

    • Not Redundant (Score:5, Informative)

      by CaptQuark ( 2706165 ) on Tuesday August 31, 2021 @01:01AM (#61747689)

      From the link in the summary:

      The program may be the Biden version of the U.S. Digital Service (USDS), which President Obama started during his second term. The USDS invited tech workers from companies like Google and Facebook to come to Washington and spend some time helping the government apply new technology to its processes.

      The [US Digital Corps] program will begin by recruiting 30 people with skill sets in software engineering, data science, design, cybersecurity, and other critical technology fields this fall. The program will recruit from “leading undergraduate programs,” as well as from “alternative training pathways” such as apprenticeships, bootcamps, and certificate programs.

      The USDS is made up of established tech workers acting as consultants to help the government get an idea of best practices from the tech industry. The US Digital Corps is a recruitment program for a small number of entry-level tech workers, probably to get a sense of what would help interest more tech workers to consider a civil service career.

      There are pros and cons to working for the federal government. (job stability vs higher pay in the private sector, decent retirement programs, health benefits, paid federal holidays, Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), etc). The private sector has less red tape and regulations, flexible pay, stock options, job mobility, etc.

      Not everybody wants to work for the federal government and these 30 US Digital Corps employees might be able to give some incite to what would make recruitment better.

      --

      • Best practices? What are those? Are these the ones that enable vast amounts of customer data and or money to be grabbed?
      • by MTEK ( 2826397 )

        Not everybody wants to work for the federal government and these 30 US Digital Corps employees might be able to give some incite to what would make recruitment better.

        Yeah, they'll have insight alright. They'll learn what it means to be naive. They'll learn that nobody can change gov't culture-- it's too big and changes course very, very slowly. Either conform or become extremely jaded. And that's it. It's not a place for young, mentally flexible folks who value productivity and can think outside the box. It's a place where lazy people go to die.

      • So, the Obama plan was to have experienced professionals consult on process, and the Biden plan is to use a bunch of inexperienced kids to advance his priorities? Another well thought out scheme from the geniuses who thought the Afghan president and army would stick around to get killed after we announced they couldn't last more than a few months without our help.
      • Thanks for the excellent reply!
    • Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)

      It's just redundancy to make Biden look hip and in with tech, when he can probably barely function a candy bar or flip phone style phone from 15 years ago. The digital service wasn't created by his administration, so have to make a new legacy that will stick around after his time in office.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • This is 30 people spread across 5 agencies - wow, this will turn Washington on its ear!

  • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @10:47PM (#61747485)

    in a matter of months.

    I read in WSJ this morning that private actors operating out of rented cinfetence rooms in DC were arranging flights out of Kabul and escorts to the airport. The US military, which had men and equipment on site, was not.

    Government has gotten bogged down. The private sector hasn't. Any attempt to get dynamic and motivated people into government without fixing the structural impediments to that dynamism the are so enmeshed in government as to be indistinguishable from it (excessive process, mandatory "competitive" bidding among pre-screened connected businesses, rigid heirarchy in the civil service) will frustrate and chase away the talent back to the private sector.

    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @11:32PM (#61747561) Journal

      I read in WSJ this morning that private actors operating out of rented cinfetence rooms in DC were arranging flights out of Kabul and escorts to the airport. The US military, which had men and equipment on site, was not.

      It's not that the government can't escort people to the airport. The military is really good at that kind of thing. It's that Biden told them not to escort people to the airport.

      • by djinn6 ( 1868030 ) on Tuesday August 31, 2021 @05:15AM (#61747949)

        In a sense both of you are correct. The private entities can do more not because the government is physically unable to, but rather because it doesn't have its hands tied like the government. Whether it's renting conference rooms in DC, hiring temporary workers as actors, or respecting unofficial agreements with the Taliban to not send soldiers outside the airport, the government must work within stricter boundaries. That does make the government less effective at certain things, but we have decided as a nation that those boundaries are very important in preventing the government from having too much power.

    • Government has gotten bogged down. The private sector hasn't.

      The US government evacuated 123,000 people in about a week. How many people did the "private sector" evacuate in that same period?

      • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Tuesday August 31, 2021 @08:55AM (#61748309)

        Of those 120k people, something like 80k were Afghan nationals who had been waiting on their visa applications for nearly a decade.

        And guess what...legally they're still waiting, except they're waiting on a military base in middle of nowhere Montana.

        There's no way to spin this except as yet another example of government choking on its own process.

        Now...I'm a fan of rigor and process and government limited to a circumscribed set of responsibilities past which it dare not set foot. But I'm not at all a fan of rigor as an excuse for inaction in an emergency*, process as a substitute for competence**, and a wholesale dereliction of those circumscribed responsibilities.

        *Like the fda and cms telling labs to stop testing for covid in Feb 2020 and as recently as last spring telling New Trier high school that their covid testing protocols didn't dot the appropriate i's and cross the appropriate t's, so cease and desist!

        **"We're not sure the f-35 needed a second engine, but we are damn sure that we followed all the relevant procedures and made all the necessary paper trails according to the FAR in sourcing one, so our asses are covered!"

        • by bored ( 40072 )

          80k were Afghan nationals who had been waiting on their visa applications for nearly a decade.

          There are parts of the Gov that are just broken, and immigration is one of them. Despite all the homeland security funding it still took ~6months for my daughter's (A US citizen) passport renwal. No matter how much I think about it I can't see how it is anything beyond an automated database check to see if they are going to deny it, and then a printer/programmer should be dumping the thing out and putting it in th

      • They shoved 500 people in cargo planes, 100,000 are random Afghans, 5,000 are Americans, and about 20,000 are SIV holders.

        They simply shoved bodies in planes in an effort to hide the fact that they screwed the pooch. This deal was in effect since Feb 2020, almost a year before Biden took office, why did they only start moving people out of Afghanistan AFTER the Taliban took over the country?

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • ⦠more government.

    More featherbedding. This will end well.

  • 30 People? (Score:1, Insightful)

    Oh My God! 30 people! That will will require a special budget bill and a new Cabinet position. Go Big or Go Home, take that Elon!
    • It probably will need a special budget bill, because they'll give it a budget so large, but siphon off 90% of it into some other wellfare program.
    • Re:30 People? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gtall ( 79522 ) on Tuesday August 31, 2021 @03:49AM (#61747869)

      Well, would you rather they try a pilot program with 10,000 people or start small and see how it goes?

    • Don't worry, they are spreading the 30 people across five agencies. This will ensure that they can't get anything done against the bureaucracy. Who things six people are doing to make any difference in the GSA? The GSA has 11,000 employees.
      • IT is a force multiplier. Potentially, a cost reducer.

        6 IT people unleashed can automate and replace 1000s of normal workers; not full replacements simply boosting productivity would result in more redundant employees. Naturally, getting rid of employees is going to take an extreme effort but that ball is not in the court of the IT people.

        The impact upon other employees is probably no greater other than for upper management.

        • 6 IT people unleashed can automate and replace 1000s of normal workers;

          Thousands of normal workers can sabotage the automation created by six IT people faster than they can build it. And oh boy are US government workers good at sabotaging automation.

          • | Thousands of normal workers can sabotage the automation created by six IT people faster than they can build it. And oh boy are US government workers good at sabotaging automation. First, you have to convince your manager to even fund your project. If Biden doesn't send money along with these positions, there's not going to be any work to do.
  • by mendax ( 114116 )

    I wonder what the pay scale will be for these government jobs? Government jobs tend to pay terrible wages to tech workers, well under what can be found in private industry. I don't think Biden's scheme is going to work unless they're paid a decent wage commensurate with the skills they bring to the job.

    • Perhaps the US tipping system could be applied to minimum wage tech workers as well.

    • The reality is that the gold standard pensions and benefits that government service often offers, based on salary and years of service and inflation protected, means that the 'real' salary is far higher than the stated one. It's also less likely be precarious - government staff are seldom laid off - and you probably won't be pressured to work over your contracted hours. As long as you trust your government to keep paying your pension etc, it's not necessarily a bad choice.

      • I agree 100%. For your average worker the benefits beat anything the private sector offers, as long as you're coming in near the top -- GS-12 or higher. However, for the top talent it is a different story.

        The big problem is working for the government, especially in IT, can be soul crushing. Endless meetings and bureaucracy means it takes forever to get anything done, and it never stays done. I spent 10 years doing this, mostly as a manager in IT Security (2210), and the biggest reason I left was a combinati

        • Working for a significant public sector organisation, I was blessed with attitudes that enabled us to get the job done reasonably well. The senior management was poor, but my immediate supervisors were fine and I had a generally good time. I'm sad your experience was so dire. But yes, I definitely traded lower pay for less stress and better pension and conditions; being now in receipt of the defined benefit inflation proofed pension, I am certain I made the right choice!

    • What technical staff really needs is the freedom to express their talents and skill. Governments everywhere only seem to master the "Design by Committee" antipattern, reducing any programmer to a typing slave. What government really needs is to be ready for IT and not to kill it from the top down.
    • Well, the entry level of the Federal pay scale isn't that high. Here's the pay for the DC area - https://www.opm.gov/policy-dat... [opm.gov]

      Average annual income in DC is $69k, so you can see how high you have to get before you are making the local average.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • I would modify what you said to add: Government jobs pay a lot less than the private sector in *all* areas, not just in IT. This is balanced out by the often really, really good health and retirement benefits.

  • by couchslug ( 175151 ) on Tuesday August 31, 2021 @12:47AM (#61747673)

    That's why they're prized and the Federal workforce clings on until vesting retirement and often beyond. They're often a well-kept secret since the public have NFI how government really works. As the workforce ages out it opens potentially desirable careers.
    Because the public only notice failures (that's how the 100 IQ crowd are wired and will never change) they're incapable of understanding the value of government and reflexively hate what they can never care enough to learn about. This can be useful from a career POV because fewer potential competitors will consider working for Uncle Sugar.

    • by gtall ( 79522 ) on Tuesday August 31, 2021 @04:01AM (#61747879)

      And when the current Fed. workforce retires, the American people will wonder what happened to their SS and Medicare. For a taste of how that works, look at the IRS. Attempting to get any information from them is like pulling teeth. It isn't because they don't want to give it, it is that they are understaffed and Congress has been stiffing them on their budget for years, so their equipment is old. Now extend that to SS and Medicare.

      Your food supply is tainted? Gee, if only we could hire enough FDA inspectors to replace the ones who retired. The stream running by your house got polluted. If only we could hire enough EPA personnel to crack down on that nice company a few miles away that did the deed. Your car's autopilot decided you would like to launched at eye-watering speeds at that tree? Where's the NTSB to test those devices? That drug you took because some nutjob on talk radio said it was good for you, and the FCC and the FDA didn't have the personnel to put a stop to it and its revenue streams.

  • I'll bet if you go back for them, there are a few hundred Americans [thehill.com] that might be interested in joining the U.S. government instead of hanging from a Huey [twitter.com]!

    All you gotta do is go back for them and this time let them in the airport [twitter.com].

    • But I want to know is who the hell these people are and why were they there to begin with? This is an embassy staff. Who are they?

      It isn't like this snuck up on them. We've had a deadline of pulling out of Afghanistan for months. Hell the deal was announced by the Trump administration, last year. Who are these American citizens that were there to the very last day and what were they doing?

  • Will they ask for silly pretend-soldier uniforms, billions of dollars and a permanent base in Colorado?

  • Admit it, he wants to smell their hair.
  • How does forced diversification work?
    • Well, you look very hard for someone who fits the requirements of the diversity quota, which takes a while because if you were getting lots of qualified applicants from whichever group you think is underrepresented the issue wouldn't come up. It can even take so long that you have to start lowering standards and reject better qualified applicants.

      In other words, it doesn't.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    "Only 3% of the government's workforce is under 30 years old, says the GSA, which will handle the recruiting. And only a quarter of the current workforce are women..."

    So, the hiring priority will be women of color lacking any real experience? Why, because that worked out so well for the American Vice Presidency?

    I swear, it's like we can't stop flying the Fuck It flag, and every ship is called the Titanic.

    • Well, in this specific case experience isn't likely to be a significant factor since they're looking for people entering the workforce. Recent colleges grads have no professional experience to speak of. On the other hand, that means the plan itself is rather deeply flawed. Kids just out of college aren't going to be able to do much for Biden's priorities, it'll take two years before they're able to do much, and at least half of them will immediately go into the private sector.

      But be fair. Harris' prob

  • And only a quarter of the current workforce are women. The GSA says it'll hire a diversity of people for the Corps to help even out those ratios.

    "This will be a bit tricky, of course, given that there is actually no such fixed thing as a man or a woman. But we will create a task force to sort out such trivial issues. "

    • It would be hilarious if they weren't serious. For example, this was a hilarious argument until people began to make it seriously - https://youtu.be/sFBOQzSk14c [youtu.be]
  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Tuesday August 31, 2021 @07:07AM (#61748049) Homepage

    Anyone who has worked for the government can tell tales of bureaucracy and office politics. Maybe there are a few exceptions, somewhere, due to exceptional managers, but in general: being a civil servant is unlikely to be attractive to the kind of talent they claim to be looking for. Pournelle's Iron Law has long since taken over essentially all government offices. To fix this, take the fourth priority "streamlining government services" and actually implement it: fire 90% of the current bureaucrats and start over.

    Housecleaning personnel is something that happens regularly in private industry, for one reason or another. The cases where is does not happen, you get a moribund company that loses market share to the competition. The problem with government bureaucracy is that housecleaning never happens. Useless personnel are retained and given make-work - after all, retaining them still raises the headcount for their managers, and inability to get the work done is just a reason to ask for a budget increase.

  • That is how this makes America sound again. ^^

    Especially "wonderful" if it is to turn humans into good little worker robots again.
    (At least until they are replaced by their creations, and go on to do even more bullshit jobs [wikipedia.org] aka the capitalist edition of job creation schemes in an economy where most wealth is already free and created by machines, yet people who don't work "hard" are still shamed like it's the freaking 1800s, by those who already work smart by using robots, fleshy and metallic. ;)

    • Despite the idea sounding a bit stupid, you're reaching if you think it "militarizes" anything. May as well complain about the Peace Corps while you're at it.

  • Why works for someone you don't believe it and will require a negative drug test for pot.
    I am pretty the later is screwing it up a lot for them.
  • Better hiring young people you can institutionalize into thinking their activity is 'good' than an older, wiser person who can understand that what they are doing is bad.

    • by endus ( 698588 )

      This...so much this. Hire people who don't know what they're doing so you can teach them the wrong way and ensure that, in the unlikely event you get someone who does know what they're doing, they're so junior that they have absolutely no authority to promote change whatsoever.

  • by endus ( 698588 ) on Tuesday August 31, 2021 @11:34AM (#61748831)

    So they're recruiting paper security professionals with no actual experience.

    The one thing they actually need - accountability - is the one thing government agencies will never adopt. I'm not talking about this, "OMG WE HAD A BREACH FIRE IT LOLZ" attitude that has been cropping up, I'm talking about developing and capturing metrics, requiring people to perform, not allowing people to develop personal fiefdoms that work against the objective, hiring people with experience running a good IT shop rather than just a shop with a good bottom line, etc.

    Reasonable levels of cybersecurity are not some mysterious fantasy land that no one actually knows the location of. I've been at security conferences where security people talk about how compliance is just the minimum and we need to go beyond compliance. OK...but you need to achieve compliance first before you go down that road. There are well documented standards and best practices to get you to a baseline, after which you can start looking at going further. Amazingly, the US government publishes an absolutely fantastic set of those standards...now if we could just get agencies to implement them...

  • Diversity...not (Score:2, Interesting)

    by tomhath ( 637240 )

    The GSA says it'll hire a diversity of people for the Corps to help even out those ratios.

    Specifically discriminating against white males is not diversity. It's sexist and racist.

  • It's too bad the private sector spend the last 3 decades offshoring as much as they could, as well as automating and hiring "consultants" and H1b's. I mean, why the hell would anyone go into IT for a living if that's what the scene is? And so where does management think that talent is going to come from?

  • Here's an idea. We, in the USA need to bring back conscription. We already have it for emergency purposes. Any youth of 18 or younger say 16, if a school drop out or emancipated, must choose from a three pronged path. 1. Military. 2. Peace Corps style International program. But not Peace Corps. USA Corps. This is can be dangerous work. 3. Internal specialized education for stuffing programs like this into. If a training 2 more years service is required to the USA. Not necessarily militarily. Maybe low lev
    • Judging by your writing (ability to articulate & support coherent, cohesive arguments), I'd add literacy programmes to that list.
  • ...stories are circulating of Chinese school children do mortar practice drills. Not sure if they're real or not.
  • What the hell, why are we talking about 30 jobs?

    I'm a little more curious about the 87,000 IRS auditors the Administration wants to hire...

    https://www.politico.com/news/... [politico.com]

  • Judging by the icon associated with this article, they are going to have a heck of a time hiring young talent if they are looking for expertise in equipment made by a company that went out of business in 1998.

  • "The best minds are not in government. If they were, business would hire them" --Ronald Reagan (b. 1911)

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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