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Again should come as no shock. As soon as people made a point of making this VERY public they were just begging for laws against it. Same with 80% lowers. As they have gotten better and easier to complete it's just begging for laws. Since we see we can not get a majority of gun owners to vote or vote for their own rights of course these things are going to get regulated out of the market. I have been shocked it's taken this long.
I wonder how long it will take to outlaw cnc machines, lathes and blocks of steel and aluminum.
They say they want a Revolution....
As far as most folks in the millennial age group are concerned, the revolution they want is to be retired before they ever really have to worry about work.They say they want a Revolution....
I wonder how long it will take to outlaw cnc machines, lathes and blocks of steel and aluminum.
As far as most folks in the millennial age group are concerned, the revolution they want is to be retired before they ever really have to worry about work.
I had an employee that I had tried unsuccessfully to convince that to get a job in a chosen field you need a degree and experience.
For example:
Say a fella starts as a lot guy at an HVAC installation house. Studies and works his way up (earning a degree or furthering education along the way) over the course of, let's say a decade. Owner/manager sees this, recognizes the work put in and knowledge owned, puts said fella in charge when he retires.
This is how it should work, but, according to most folks in my age group, if you have a degree in HVAC installation and say, a semester or two of business management, you should be able to show up, demand a management position, and receive one, based simply on your education, with your lack of working experience in the field not being considered, and if it is, it is considered discriminatory by the potential applicant.
This explains it well.
So, really, the majority of folks in my age group are after the American dream, just the socialist version that they don't have to earn.
Not likely, comfort and complacency have become the way of life for the rich Americans.They'll get what they want.
Similar but different. I agree that the way we were raised had something to do with it. I grew up in the woods, in an area that has been evacuated due to wildfire three times in 30 years. Needless to say, work became a friend early, as the near constant cutting of brush likely saved my mother's home on at least one of those occasions.Argh that girl is annoying as hell. I myself am 30, I have been working for more than half my life, I've been in construction, farming, loaded drove and delivered hay, I am now a civil servant and have been for 4 years. I plan on working in this job for a solid 30 years so I can retire with a comfortable pension. Maybe it is spendy to live in a big city I wouldn't know. I own a small ranch in rural Wa and when I'm not at my day job I'm working here or doing side jobs. I've noticed that there is a moderately sized faction of people my age that want to be lazy sacks of bubblegum, on the flip side most all I associate with have always worked hard and will always work hard. I think it's all in how people were raised. I have a BA degree but paid for it out of my pocket and have no debt from that.