โAug-01-2021 08:08 AM
โAug-03-2021 04:20 AM
The Atlantic wrote:
Last fall, 94 percent of employees surveyed in a Mercer study reported that remote work was either business as usual or better than working in the office, likely because it lacks the distractions, annoyances, and soft abuses that come with co-workers and middle managers. Workers are happier because they donโt have to commute and can be evaluated mostly on their actual work rather than on the optics-driven albatross of โoffice culture,โ which is largely based on either the HR handbook or the pieces of the HR handbook your boss chooses to ignore.
The reason working from home is so nightmarish for many managers and executives is that a great deal of modern business has been built on the substrate of in-person work. As a society, we tend to consider management a title rather than a skill, something to promote people to, as well as a way in which you can abstract yourself from the work product. When you remove the physical office spaceโthe place where people are yelled at in private offices or singled out in meetingsโit becomes a lot harder to spook people as a type of management. In fact, your position at a company becomes more difficult to justify if all you do is delegate and nag people.
โAug-02-2021 05:49 PM
D.E.Bishop wrote:
My wife and I have been on the road for a few weeks, we went up I-5 from Los Angeles and over to the central Oregon coast and now down into California on 101. We think that we have seen a larger number of high end class A's that appear brand new than ever before. I'm talking clean, dirt free wheel wells and running gear new.
I'm thinking that the owners are new to the life style and bought way over their heads, that, or the average RVer just can't afford to travel right now. We're in an ocean/bay front park right now, nothing special, no trees or hedges dividing the spaces, no paved roads, only about a 8'X8' pad next to the parking spot, no gravel or paving to park on in the sites just dirt, no fire rings, just dead grass but it is an ocean/bay front park with great views. Normally we are among rigs similar to ours, a few years old gassers with a little wear and tear, not this trip, DP's all over very clean and stately, in what if it were not for the views is a low end park with no facilities to speak of, not what we are accustomed to seeing. The number of really big trailers is also greater than normal.
It just seems that it has been this way since we left home.
โAug-02-2021 03:34 PM
โAug-02-2021 01:30 PM
โAug-02-2021 12:48 PM
โAug-02-2021 11:24 AM
valhalla360 wrote:way2roll wrote:
Why is everyone so concerned about everyone else's finances and judging people they don't even know?
If we are talking about a stray individual, you are probably correct.
If we are talking about repeating it on large scale...it impacts can have unexpected consequences that do impact others.
Example: We didn't take out one of the "liar loans" on a house we couldn't afford back in the early 2000's...our 401k still took a big hit for a few years when the market blew up.
โAug-02-2021 11:15 AM
2014 RAM 3500 Diesel 4x4 Dually long bed. B&W RVK3600 hitch โข 2015 Crossroads Elevation Homestead Toy Hauler ("The Taj Mahauler") โข <\br >Toys:
โAug-02-2021 11:00 AM
wapiticountry wrote:+1 Never underestimate a person's resources at the high end.
Why is it assumed that everyone in a big rig is living above their means? In my personal experiences, both owning big rigs and owning an RV park I have found the opposite to be the case. Not everyone is teetering on bankruptcy.
โAug-02-2021 10:42 AM
way2roll wrote:
Why is everyone so concerned about everyone else's finances and judging people they don't even know?
โAug-02-2021 08:47 AM
obiwancanoli wrote:
I wonder... if they defaulted on the RV loan, is it considered a foreclosure?
โAug-02-2021 08:23 AM
โAug-02-2021 07:53 AM
โAug-02-2021 07:39 AM
โAug-02-2021 07:38 AM