[ale] OT: more info on where all the jobs are (going...)

Geoffrey esoteric at 3times25.net
Mon Mar 17 09:17:14 EST 2003


ChangingLINKS.com wrote:
> Go back through ALL of your posts in this thread. They ALL seem to contain the 
> word "ALL." An similarly, other programmers on the list are thinking this 
> way.
> 
> ALL of AT&T's customers are not IT.

A company does not need to lose all of it's customers in order to feel 
the effect of the outsourcing of jobs.

> ALL of the IT jobs in the US are not going 
> to be farmed out.  IT does not encompass ALL of the places exIT can
 > work.

It also does not require ALL the jobs to be farmed out to affect the 
economy in a negative way.  If 30% of the IT jobs are farmed out, then 
you've got a lot of folks out of work.

> ALL 
> businesses are not blind stupid and uncaring about the US ecomony. Businesses 
> do not control ALL of the economy.

Right, you are kidding yourself.  Large business drive this economy, 
primarily because this economy is driven by the stock market.

> If you don't work in IT (specifically), 
> you will not lose ALL of your money - (and thus not be able to afford AT&T's 
> services).

And where would you suggest all these displaced IT workers to work? 
Real estate?  Various jobs require different skills.  I'm not interested 
in being a plumber or an electrician.  I'll do what I need to do to 
maintain my income though.

My main point is that all these large companies that are outsourcing all 
the IT work do owe something to those people who have paid their dues 
here in this country and put these companies where they are now.  The 
companies don't care.  They are screwing employees left and right. 
Check out all the companies that are reducing pensions through claims of 
pension portability.  In my case, my pension from AT&T, which I've 
worked for, for 26 years, could be reduced by as much as 50%.

> 
> I remember one day when I called my exgirlfriend to borrow $5 to feed myself 
> and a completely broke friend. The point? The phone was still on. Maybe I was 
> a month late in payment - but nonetheless, I was able to afford the things 
> that I needed long enough to get back on my feet. I do remember one other 
> thing: ALL of my utilities stayed on during that financial uncertainty.

That's all fine and good, but no one wants or needs to be in such a 
situation.  The bottom line is, if enough of these jobs are farmed out, 
it's going to negatively inpact this country's economy.  No one can 
escape that.  Not even you.

> 
> Drew
> 
> 
> On Sunday 16 March 2003 17:39, Geoffrey wrote:
> 
>>ChangingLINKS.com wrote:
>>
>>>I think that you are missing most of the spectrum.
>>>
>>>Even if ALL of the IT jobs were to leave this country, I doubt "no one"
>>>would be able to afford software. Foriegn cars (in my experience) are
>>>usually better made - even to this day (ok limit this to Japan and
>>>Germany, and exclude many VWs and Audis).
>>>
>>>I believe history showed that industry can leave places like PA and
>>>Detroit, and we can still have an economic boom in the future (late 90s).
>>>America seemed to go from agriculture - to industry - to IT (not a
>>>history major over here) and I believe that we can go "to infinity and
>>>beyond."
>>>
>>>I don't believe that foreign policy (exporting labor, importing goods and
>>>HB1 issues) are the leading cause of our economic swings.
>>
>>You've noted that in each of the above industries, something else came a
>>long to replace the previous.  So what is going to employ all the IT
>>workers?  If I can't find work, then I start spending less money.  There
>>goes the dsl, long distance phone calls....  I chose those particular
>>'perks' because the relate more to the company I work for, AT&T.
>>
>>So,  AT&T sends work overseas, and ex-employees, now are out of work and
>>must cut back on certain services.  Who's going to continue purchasing
>>those services?
>>
>>
>>>Drew
>>>
>>>On Saturday 15 March 2003 21:12, Mike Panetta wrote:
>>>
>>>>On Sat, 2003-03-15 at 11:55, James P. Kinney III wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>On Sat, 2003-03-15 at 14:26, ChangingLINKS.com wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>>I value your opinion in this case. However, I don't think that
>>>>>>corporations are short-sighted, blind or stupid.
>>>>>
>>>>>Corporations are neither short-sighted, blind or stupid. They are
>>>>>single-minded. That single-minded purpose is bottom-line profit. That is
>>>>>the only reason corporations exist. They will do anything to boost that
>>>>>bottom line. As a rule, corporations have no morals. As morals have no
>>>>>weight on the balance sheet, there is no reason to have morals. So they
>>>>>don 't.
>>>>>
>>>>>If a corporation sees that they can produce their product for lees cost
>>>>>that they are right, they will change production methods. There is no
>>>>>thought to any factor other than the bottom line.
>>>>
>>>>Isn't the bottom line kinda pointless if there is no one left employed in
>>>>a capacity that would allow them to buy the product for the prices its
>>>>sold for?  I see (or rather hear of) all these companies outsourcing all
>>>>the IT work, and yet I do not hear of any of them reducing prices.  How
>>>>can anyone but other corporations afford to buy any of these software
>>>>products if the price is not reduced?  Even if all IT workers in the US
>>>>went out and found lower paying jobs tomorrow just to put food on the
>>>>table, how could they afford to purchase any of the products that are
>>>>being manufactured by these companies?
>>>>
>>>>How can corporations exist without employees?  Someone somewhere has to
>>>>produce what the company sells.  There also must exist a consumer to buy
>>>>the product. A consumer cannot consume without the resources to do so, so
>>>>they must seek employment at a corporation.  If all corporations
>>>>outsource all their employees, they will have lost their consumers as
>>>>well...  Or am I missing something?
>>>>
>>>>I do not for see this as being anything but a disaster for the economy of
>>>>the US. It seems that capitalism has failed...
>>>>
>>>>Mike
>>>>
>>>>_______________________________________________
>>>>Ale mailing list
>>>>Ale at ale.org
>>>>http://www.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
> 
> 

-- 
Until later: Geoffrey		esoteric at 3times25.net

The latest, most widespread virus?  Microsoft end user agreement.
Think about it...

_______________________________________________
Ale mailing list
Ale at ale.org
http://www.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale






More information about the Ale mailing list