Moderator: Soñadora
Panope wrote:...snip...
In contrast, I read an article about home prices in Rural japan. Apparently, there are some 10 million empty homes that can be had for extremely low prices or sometimes free. Shrinking population. Young people want city life. Small towns are desperate for people to move in for fear of collapse.
Benno von Humpback wrote:Janell has started calling her partners and telling them that she's retiring effective 31 Oct. COVID was the main precipitating factor.
Ajax wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Janell has started calling her partners and telling them that she's retiring effective 31 Oct. COVID was the main precipitating factor.
Wow, that's certainly big news. I sense that it wasn't totally willingly. I wish her happiness and purpose in retirement.
Benno von Humpback wrote:Ajax wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Janell has started calling her partners and telling them that she's retiring effective 31 Oct. COVID was the main precipitating factor.
Wow, that's certainly big news. I sense that it wasn't totally willingly. I wish her happiness and purpose in retirement.
She’d been thinking about it for a couple of years and the time seemed right. She’ll be happy. She wants to go sailing when there’s wind.
Ajax wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Ajax wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Janell has started calling her partners and telling them that she's retiring effective 31 Oct. COVID was the main precipitating factor.
Wow, that's certainly big news. I sense that it wasn't totally willingly. I wish her happiness and purpose in retirement.
She’d been thinking about it for a couple of years and the time seemed right. She’ll be happy. She wants to go sailing when there’s wind.
I hope we can raft up a few times in the river this fall. Our boats are large enough that we can visit and maintain a healthful distance.
Benno von Humpback wrote:Janell has started calling her partners and telling them that she's retiring effective 31 Oct. COVID was the main precipitating factor.
Tim Ford wrote:That's fine Beau, I actually agree to some extent.
But there are extenuating circumstances to the phenomenon. There are certainly places on the planet where unfettered immigration has been a nightmare, due to unprepared populations, (socially, culturally, economically) having suffered dire consequences.
Some folks are wealthy enough to insulate themselves from being affected. Good for them! Point is, there are plenty of folks, folks who aren't wealthy enough, who have definitely NOT benefitted by the sudden onset of an immigrant population and the sociopolitical conditions imposed on an unprepared population. That has happened right here in the good old Estados Unidos, and countless places internationally.
You'd have to be pretty, if not COMPLETELY, naive not acknowledge this ^
I've lived, worked and been shot at in anger, in places as described above. Multiculturalism makes a great platitude, but not always the most comfortable living situation for them-there folks already living in the area.
Immigration during the first five years of the 1850s reached a level five times greater than a decade earlier. Most of the new arrivals were poor Catholic peasants or laborers from Ireland and Germany who crowded into the tenements of large cities. Crime and welfare costs soared. Cincinnati's crime rate, for example, tripled between 1846 and 1853 and its murder rate increased sevenfold. Boston's expenditures for poor relief rose threefold during the same period.
LarryHoward wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Janell has started calling her partners and telling them that she's retiring effective 31 Oct. COVID was the main precipitating factor.
That’s big news. We’ll expect to see More of you guys in this part of the Bay. I’ve been thinking a lot about retiring but am so invested in the growth of the division I’ve founded, I’m not ready to walk away. Maybe in another couple of years.
TheOffice wrote:Benno,
I missed the big news. Congrats!!
Another post-doc? In sail trim or diesel maintenance or something else useful I hope!
Joel
Benno von Humpback wrote:TheOffice wrote:Benno,
I missed the big news. Congrats!!
Another post-doc? In sail trim or diesel maintenance or something else useful I hope!
Joel
Ah. No, a postdoc in my lab whom I need to launch before I can call it quits.
JoeP wrote:Congratulations Benno! The coronavirus economy has shrunk the workforce and as such my job was eliminated (last in, first out) a few weeks ago. Since then I have considered myself as semi retired, since I am collecting unemployment. Boy, did i time that perfectly or what?When it runs out I will be fully retired.
Olaf Hart wrote:So much for contact tracing...
BeauV wrote:Larry, I agree at the National and state level. But, in various cities, like SF, there is abundant free testing. The data from that area is useful. But shouldn’t be compared with other areas with restricted testing.
I think it’s appalling that testing isn’t free and abundant everywhere.
Jamie wrote:Right now it’s very difficult to get a test in Florida and the state-by-state collection of data means there are many inconsistencies. You’d think this would be perfect for a national organization to step in and help harmonize.
Deaths are a lagging indicator, so Florida has time to catch up. Hopefully things have been learned about care to reduce the death rate.