Originally posted by TGTool
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(And for those thinking the excerpt quoted above was anything but tongue-in-cheek, even if written verbatim, geeze, grow a sense of humor, wouldya? He was about as serious as somebody saying he'd "kill" to have one of those, or that he'd "give his left arm" to have that whatever.


However, I've read some of the guy's descriptions of CAD and 3D printing problem-solving, including some innovations that got widely distributed through printer community during the C-19 thing, and he's by no means entirely full of hot air. He knows what he's taking about.
But I have to admit a similar touch of skepticism- for someone with his qualifications being unable to get a good job (and not just during the outbreak) one really does have to start wondering what the common denominator is.
On the other hand, I have heard similar horror stories from other corners- not this systemic and not necessarily from Nebraska, but I think everyone has a collection of tales of bad bosses, botched interviews, or getting hired for one thing and being stuck on another job. Personally, I had a poor experience in the oil field, with bad bosses, power-hungry administrative types, and a ton of backstabbers- that I thankfully got to watch as a contractor, from the "outside", rather than a direct employee. But that was enough that convinced me that no matter how well they paid, I wasn't interested in a career of soaking in that particular septic pond.
I'm pretty sure that at this point, if I had to go work for somebody else, especially if it wasn't a very good boss, there's probably be bloodshed. (That's called "hyperbole", by the way, and was not said as a statement of truthful fact.

Doc.
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