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THE Bureaucrats Thread (merged)

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THE Bureaucrats Thread (merged)

Unread postby mattduke » Tue 08 Jul 2008, 19:10:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he Prime Minister was served 24 different dishes during his first day at the summit – just hours after urging the world to reduce the "unnecessary demand" for food and calling on British families to cut back on their wasteful use of food.


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telegraph
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Re: Bureaucrats Declare Citizens Wasteful of Food

Unread postby mattduke » Tue 08 Jul 2008, 22:48:02

better title bump
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Re: Bureaucrats Declare Citizens Wasteful of Food

Unread postby TommyJefferson » Tue 08 Jul 2008, 23:04:49

Many people like government control of how much resources citizens are allowed to consume.
Conform . Consume . Obey .
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Life is good for government bureaucrats

Unread postby mattduke » Sat 02 Jan 2010, 14:57:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')oday, 46% of government employees say the economy is getting better while just 31% say it’s getting worse. Among those who work in the private sector, the numbers are reversed: 32% say better and 49% worse.

Twenty-four percent (24%) of government employees rate the economy as good or excellent while just nine percent (9%) of those in the private sector are so upbeat.

Fifty-five percent (55%) in the private sector rate the economy as poor, a pessimism shared by 38% of those on the public payroll.

Forty-four percent (44%) of government employees rate their own personal finances as good or excellent while 33% of private sector workers do the same.

Among those on the government payroll, 31% say their finances are getting better, and 40% say they’re getting worse. The comparable private sector numbers are 23% better and 47% worse.


The tax feeders are fat and happy.

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_ ... sector_not
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Re: Life is good for government bureaucrats

Unread postby lonewolf » Sat 02 Jan 2010, 15:05:43

Ain't it the truth - I have a sister in the Senior Executive Service (State Dept.). Her hubby is unemployed but they just 'managed' to purchase a $2.5 million home (50_ miles from office each way) without even bothering to list the former one as being for sale or even trying to/planning to rent it. Go figure! Must be nice to pull down $200K/year plus extract every 'benefit package' under the sun and still find time to complain how unfair life is.
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Re: Life is good for government bureaucrats

Unread postby Ainan » Sat 02 Jan 2010, 15:20:44

This is why I don't want to start selling some software I made while I'm still living in the UK, taxes are so high. It's not financially worth my time and I'll be basically paying for my own destruction(Ayn Rand style) and to keep the scum above(politicians, upper-middle class public servants) and below(The underclass(Working class who don't work) and ethnic enrichers) alive.
April 2008 Global Population: 6.8 billion
April 2010 Global Population: 7 billion
April 2012 Global Population: 7.2 billion
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Re: Life is good for government bureaucrats

Unread postby shortonsense » Sat 02 Jan 2010, 17:17:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mattduke', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')oday, 46% of government employees say the economy is getting better while just 31% say it’s getting worse. Among those who work in the private sector, the numbers are reversed: 32% say better and 49% worse.

Twenty-four percent (24%) of government employees rate the economy as good or excellent while just nine percent (9%) of those in the private sector are so upbeat.

Fifty-five percent (55%) in the private sector rate the economy as poor, a pessimism shared by 38% of those on the public payroll.

Forty-four percent (44%) of government employees rate their own personal finances as good or excellent while 33% of private sector workers do the same.

Among those on the government payroll, 31% say their finances are getting better, and 40% say they’re getting worse. The comparable private sector numbers are 23% better and 47% worse.


The tax feeders are fat and happy.


Tax feeders is a pretty broad term. Would you consider a police officer working for your local municipality a tax feeder? Would he/she be a tax feeder right up until he/she blows away the random child molestor, bank robber or psycho nutjob threatening you and yours with bodily harm? At which point he/she might become a highly valued, underpaid member of the hardworking middle class, just like everyone else, except with guns and nightsticks?
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Re: Life is good for government bureaucrats

Unread postby mattduke » Sat 02 Jan 2010, 17:43:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('shortonsense', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mattduke', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')oday, 46% of government employees say the economy is getting better while just 31% say it’s getting worse. Among those who work in the private sector, the numbers are reversed: 32% say better and 49% worse.

Twenty-four percent (24%) of government employees rate the economy as good or excellent while just nine percent (9%) of those in the private sector are so upbeat.

Fifty-five percent (55%) in the private sector rate the economy as poor, a pessimism shared by 38% of those on the public payroll.

Forty-four percent (44%) of government employees rate their own personal finances as good or excellent while 33% of private sector workers do the same.

Among those on the government payroll, 31% say their finances are getting better, and 40% say they’re getting worse. The comparable private sector numbers are 23% better and 47% worse.


The tax feeders are fat and happy.


Tax feeders is a pretty broad term. Would you consider a police officer working for your local municipality a tax feeder? Would he/she be a tax feeder right up until he/she blows away the random child molestor, bank robber or psycho nutjob threatening you and yours with bodily harm? At which point he/she might become a highly valued, underpaid member of the hardworking middle class, just like everyone else, except with guns and nightsticks?

The only one to ever raise his weapon and threaten to take my life was the local policeman. Better to take care your own personal defense needs. Police can only arrive after the fact. When they do arrive, they first have to try to determine who the criminal is.
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Re: Life is good for government bureaucrats

Unread postby shortonsense » Sat 02 Jan 2010, 19:47:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mattduke', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('shortonsense', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mattduke', '
')The tax feeders are fat and happy.


Tax feeders is a pretty broad term. Would you consider a police officer working for your local municipality a tax feeder? Would he/she be a tax feeder right up until he/she blows away the random child molestor, bank robber or psycho nutjob threatening you and yours with bodily harm? At which point he/she might become a highly valued, underpaid member of the hardworking middle class, just like everyone else, except with guns and nightsticks?

The only one to ever raise his weapon and threaten to take my life was the local policeman. Better to take care your own personal defense needs. Police can only arrive after the fact. When they do arrive, they first have to try to determine who the criminal is.


So...does that make the cops tax feeders, or protectors of those who can't protect themselves, middle class folks just doing their job? I perfectly agree with you, personal protection within any legal means is a display of personal responsibility at its most pure form...but that doesn't change the fact that most cops are just doing the job which has been laid before them, and that includes figuring out who is the nutjob and who isn't.
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Re: THE Bureaucrats Thread (merged)

Unread postby shortonsense » Sat 02 Jan 2010, 19:48:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GASMON', 'T')he British army have just announced a new weapon. It's called the "Civil Servant" -- It doesn't work, and can't be fired !!

Gasmon


Thats the funniest thing I've heard all day.
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Re: THE Bureaucrats Thread (merged)

Unread postby mattduke » Wed 13 Jan 2010, 21:56:53

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$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')imes are tough - very tough - for millions of Americans... but you could never tell by watching the way Congress spends our tax dollars on themselves.

CBS News has a stunning report on the all-expense paid trip at least 20 members of Congress made to the Copenhagen climate summit last month.

The bipartisan delegation led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was so large - it needed three military jets - two 737s and a Gulfstream Five. Some members brought along their spouses, children... plus there were also senators and staff members who made the trip to Denmark - most of them flying commercial.

Pelosi wouldn't answer any questions about costs or where they all stayed - even though she was the one who decided who went. Her office says only that it will "comply with disclosure requirements."

Jet planes to a climate conference. That's rich.

http://caffertyfile.blogs.cnn.com/2010/ ... recession/
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