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Marriage
So, my ten year wedding anniversary is coming up and my mother-in-law asked my husband and I what we wanted. My husband tells her two season passes for Fallout 76 so we can play the game together. She just looked at him with this wtf face and said, “Isn’t playing video games not spending time together, the opposite of celebrating an anniversary.”
We proceeded to explain the positives of playing multiplayer with your spouse is rewarding and helps marriages, but only if both people enjoy the gaming and the game.
This is why I love being in a relationship with a fellow gamer.
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Grooms Profile
#Unmarried Profile UAE#Canada Divorced Profile#Canada Unmarried Profile#Qatar Unmarried Profile#Qatar Divorced Profile Profile#Sri Lanka Islamic Profile#Sri Lanka Islamic Unmarried Profile
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#Bathroom designing contractor#Bathroom Repairs#Bathroom Repairs Northern Virginia#Northern Virginia Bathroom repairs#Northern Virginia Bathroom designers#Northern Virginia Bathroom Redesign#Build Bathroom Northern Virginia
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What time is it? Week in Review-time.
tl;dr—K-pop group BTS embarked on their world tour and released their latest album, encouraging us all to love ourselves. Blizzard’s new animated short featured Overwatch hero D.Va defending Busan against omnics. Make us your phone wallpaper so we know it’s real: Peter Kavinsky stole all of our hearts as the male lead in To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before. This is Tumblr’s Week in Review.
BTS
To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before
Voltron: Legendary Defender
Boku no Hero Academia
Overwatch
Klance | Keith & Lance, Voltron: Legendary Defender
Noah Centineo
Marvel
Artists on Tumblr
Peter Kavinsky | To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before
Jungkook | BTS
Jimin | BTS
Critical Role
Steven Universe
Detroit: Become Human
Big Brother 20
Keith | Voltron: Legendary Defender
Pokémon
Tony Stark | Marvel
D.Va | Overwatch
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Rainbow grasshopper - Manuel Antonio National Park, CR
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#Sri Lanka Home stay 1 week packages#Sri Lanka itinerary 1 week#Sri Lanka itinerary 7 days#Sri Lanka Itinerary for 1 week#Sri Lanka Itinerary for 7 days#Sri Lanka tour for 1 week#Sri Lanka tour for 7 days
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someone who works at our local opshop/thrift shop just put goldblums in every single photo frame in the store
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Skills gap hobbles US employers
By Hal Weitzman in Chicago and Robin Harding in Washington, Financial Times, Dec. 13, 2011 Drew Greenblatt has been looking for more than a year for three sheet-metal set-up operators to work day, night or weekend shifts.
The president of Marlin Steel Wire Products, a company in Baltimore with 30 employees, Mr Greenblatt says his inability to find qualified workers is hampering his business’s growth. “If I could fill those positions, I could raise our annual revenues from $5m to $7m,” he says.
He is offering a salary of more than $80,000 with overtime, including health and pension benefits. Yet in spite of extensive advertising, he has had no qualified applicants. He is trying to train some of his unskilled staff but says none has the ability or drive to complete the training.
Mr Greenblatt’s predicament speaks to one of the biggest economic debates about today’s 8.6 per cent US unemployment rate: is it merely a cyclical problem that will shrink as demand recovers? Or is it something deeper and more structural, a “mismatch” between the skills workers have and those companies need?
The idea there is something structurally wrong with the US workforce is controversial among economists but has a certain resonance with the public. Since the emergence of Japan as a technology and manufacturing powerhouse in the 1970s, Americans have been anxious that they were losing their competitive edge to better-educated, harder-working rivals.
Economists trying to figure out whether unemployment is cyclical or structural have turned to what they call the Beveridge curve: the relationship between unemployment and the job vacancy rate.
Vacancies, the number of unfilled positions, have risen by 35 per cent since their trough in June 2009–but the unemployment rate has remained stubbornly high. If there are jobs but people are not filling them, it may be because their skills are not up to scratch, say those who fear structural unemployment.
Ben Bernanke, chairman of the US Federal Reserve, told an audience in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, in August that the US had to “foster the development of a skilled workforce” if it was to enjoy good longer-term prospects. The US education system “despite considerable strengths, poorly serves a substantial portion of our population,” he said.
US companies that are growing say an unqualified workforce is already a significant barrier to hiring.
In a September poll of owners of fast-growing, privately held US companies undertaken by the non-profit Kauffman Foundation, the inability to find qualified workers was cited as the biggest obstacle to growth. Some 40 per cent of respondents said they were being held back by the skills gap, compared with just 13 per cent by lack of demand.
Advanced Technology Services (ATS), a manufacturing equipment maintenance company based in Peoria, Illinois, whose clients include Caterpillar, BorgWarner, Honeywell, Eaton and Textron, is finding it tough to fill the 160 job openings it has available for roles such as maintenance and machine technicians.
The company’s revenues grew by 35 per cent last year and are on course for 25 per cent growth this year. But Jeff Owens, chief executive, says it could expand faster if it could find qualified workers more quickly. “In other businesses the capacity constraint is buildings, plant or equipment,” he says. “In our business, a service business, it’s people.”
US manufacturers have 600,000 unfilled positions because of a lack of qualified skilled workers, according to a report released in October by Deloitte, the consultants, and the National Association of Manufacturers, an industry body.
Jill Bellak, chief operating officer of MBX, a company in suburban Chicago that makes computer hardware, says the fast-growing business is finding it tough to find good software engineers, production workers and salespeople to add to its 78-strong workforce.
“You hear how high unemployment is and you think it would be easy to hire, but companies have tended to cut their lower performers and retain their best people,” says Ms Bellak. “Meanwhile, talented people are less inclined to leave their current positions than they would be in good times.”
In manufacturing, the skills problem dates at least to the 1970s and 1980s, when companies began automating factories and outsourcing production. As a result, manufacturers found they did not have jobs for the people leaving their in-house training programmes, some of which were then scrapped.
Some big manufacturers still train in-house, including Boeing, the aerospace manufacturer, which spends $80m a year on training its existing workforce. But not all do. “Technology moves fast and most companies don’t have the money or resources to pay for extensive retraining,” said Sir James Dyson, the British household appliances engineer.
Without in-house training programmes, companies have often been left looking for staff with specific skills. “A generation ago, employers would hire and train employees. Now, they demand trained workers,” says Peter Cappelli, a professor of management at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton business school.
“The skills gap is largely a figment of companies’ imagination,” says Mr Cappelli. “They cannot find workers to do the very specific tasks they want done. That is different from not being able to find capable workers.”
Companies counter that today’s jobs require a broad set of skills, and that the US educational system is not producing workers with the flexibility they need.
“We have a training programme, but if someone applies for a job and doesn’t have basic math, I don’t have the wherewithal to teach them basic math,” says Charles Cannon, chief executive of JBT, a maker of food-processing machinery and airport equipment.
American 15-year-olds ranked 25th among the 34 developed countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development in maths, 17th in science and 14th in reading ability, according to a 2009 OECD study.
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Break of dawn in Bora Bora Follow me: www.instagram.com/erubes1
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