The Watcher September 2nd 2017
Leading stories for this day in history North Korea claims to have successfully test an h-bomb that they are capable of launching on an ICBM missile
according to the Washington Post I think it was the Washington Post could have been another newspaper though but anyway Solid Source says that the IRS is going to start coming after Bitcoin and spokesman for the IRS says basically Bitcoin is like mining gold and since you have to pay revenues on mining any kind of commodity if you are mining Bitcoin you will have to pay tax revenues on that commodity just like if you were mining silver or gold.
post President Obama offers Donald Trump suggestions on how to be president and get along with Congress multiple newspapers are picking up article put out by the New York Times discussing the rising economic inequalities of income with a comparison between an employee from Kodak in the mid-80s and employee and the exact same position that works for Apple today. So today I'm going to post at the bottom of the full article well at least one of the articles on the disparagement rising economic inequality in America and I'm just going to leave it at that . You read the articles and judge for yourself.
I do want to tell you one thing.
It is my advice to you that you go out and try to find yourself about 5 Acres of quality farmland where you can grow enough food to sustain yourself and for other. people through the winter and the summer.
Artificial intelligence and Robotics are going to rapidly supplant the entire Workforce in major industry and Technology Within 10 years .
We will be transitioning back to egalitarian society so just get ready for that cuzz ... that's where we're headed.
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the referenced article is below
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ICYMI, being low level at a tech company like Apple sucks so much more now.
Working at Apple may sound glamorous, broadly speaking. But janitors and other lower-level workers don't have it easy with their gigs at the most profitable company in the world.
Unfortunately for these workers, that wasn't always the case at tech giants in America. The New York Times explored these differences Sunday by comparing a janitor working at Apple in 2017 to a janitor working at Kodak in 1987.
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Their day jobs appeared to be quite similar. Yet, Gail Evans was able to rise through the ranks of Kodak. She went from cleaning the floors to working in IT and later to serving as chief technology officer of the entire organization. Such a trajectory hasn't been accessible to Marta Ramos at Apple.
For one, Ramos is classified as a contract worker. Evans worked full-time, granting her benefits like paid vacation and bonuses. But these days at tech giant Apple, Ramos and her fellow contract workers are regarded more as dispensable.
"It’s not just janitors and security guards. In Silicon Valley, the people who test operating systems for bugs, review social media posts that may violate guidelines, and screen thousands of job applications are unlikely to receive a paycheck directly from the company they are ultimately working for," Neil Irwin wrote the NYTimes.
Apple's products may be in the hands of millions of consumers in the United States just like Kodak's once were, but the people who help guarantee the future of those companies aren't equally rewarded.
It's another example of how working at a tech giant isn't necessarily so glorifying despite the industry's prestige. Recently, women, like former Uber engineer Susan Fowler Rigetti, have spoken out about the sexism and other toxic workplace habits they faced. Google employees have alleged racism and other problems with diversity in the tech industry.
Read more about inequality in the tech industry here.
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