Was it a matter of cost or something else that you went to a Protestant school and not a Catholic? You were raised Mormon? No Mormon schools?

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literally not what an investment bank does lmao... you're thinking of hedge funds and asset managers buddy.Dilbert_X wrote:
So who at investment banks makes investment decisions? 50-60 year olds who were once 20.
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https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/01/ … erm=secondWhile the prospect of long-term remote work has sparked debate over everything from efficiency and corporate culture to the time saved and the environmental impact of less commuting, one thing is certain: Friendships will suffer when so many move out of more traditional office settings for the long haul. This change in daily routines and in-person points of contact will cause deep harm to the country as it exacerbates long-term trends involving declining friendships and social isolation.
With Americans trying to rebuild their lives and reconnect with others, recent survey data from the Survey Center on American Life reveal that friendships are most frequently formed not in one’s neighborhood or school, but rather at one’s workplace, and this critical social site is now under threat.
I think some of this is backwards. It seems to me that GG had better spending power, with enough left after housing and children, and other crucial expenses, to invest, buy toys, and go on vacation. Buy an RV to live in while building your new beach house? Why not! Friends frequently made outside of work, and sometimes out of social class. Blue and white collars drinking together, mass hysteria! Of course there was also the racism and the sexism and whatnot, and their own world-sundering events.uziq wrote:
the era of the workplace also being the main means of 'society' and sociality is so fucking 1950s. we do indeed have other forms of social organization now, facilitated by new technologies and different ways of organizing our social and identity groups.
that type of view belongs to the sort of era when worker housing was built around factories, when towns and cities often had single industries or single uses, and when the entire work:leisure balance was tipped firmly in favour of work, with the notional 'leisure' part still being organized by the employers or owning classes.
workers do not need an office to have a social life or organize their leisure time. so fucking gross.
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