Not in the US at least.
Doug
- Original Message -
From:
Will
Kelleher
To: biofuel@sustainablelists.org
Sent: Tuesday, June 27, 2006 3:47
AM
Subject: Re: [Biofuel] The Death of US
Engineering
Maybe now isn't that best time to get an electrical engineering
Even if they are available for purchase it would help if someone would level the playing field. The ruling class and their corporations have centralized everything (monopolized). You need permission from the public utility commission for example to sell power from your waterwheel to a neighbor if
Maybe now isn't that best time to get an electrical engineering degree :-/Will KOn 6/23/06, D. Mindock
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The Death of US
EngineeringBy Paul Craig RobertsThe
May payroll jobs report released June 2 by the Bureau of LaborStatistics
confirms the jobs pattern for
Engineers have been saying this for years.
I'm the chair of a local ASME chapter so, I hear it a lot. In fact I'm
representative of the lost jobs mentioned in the article, having lost
my last engineering job in September.
I forwarded the article to my ASME chapter and received the following
Will,I earned my B.S. in mechanical engineering technology in 1992 and worked as a mechanical design engineer for seven years. Frustrated by the lack of legitimate and rewarding work, I earned a BSEE in 2000 with the idea that you must apply theory to something which has no moving parts.
I agree. My engineering degree may not get me a job (well, it did, but it was lousy pay, and in a cube), but it (along with alot of hands on experience) will aid immensly when I need to deal with the crazy world we are entering when services such as electricity, food, heat, water, etc, are not
SN: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (most likely to
get me)
- Original Message -
From:
Michael Redler
To: biofuel@sustainablelists.org
Sent: Monday, June 26, 2006 9:00 PM
Subject: Re: [Biofuel] The Death of US
Engineering
Will,I earned my B.S. in mechanical engineering
The Death of US
EngineeringBy Paul Craig RobertsThe
May payroll jobs report released June 2 by the Bureau of LaborStatistics
confirms the jobs pattern for the 21st century US economy:employment growth
is limited to domestic services.In May the economy created only 67,000
private sector