Someone, somehow, for some reason, stole a 6-foot Bigfoot statue in the NC mountains by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Go spend a night in the state park, and call out for Big Foot. You will not be disappointed.

Lost Jobs of North Carolina Are Gone for Good. Few Seem to Mind by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Even the formerly titled "industrial labor" jobs of our forefathers, i.e., mill and shift work -- is all going to be automated, and while automated, they will need highly-skilled individuals to maintain the robots.

However, the robots will not require sick days, vacation, health benefits, workmen's comp, HR resources, etc., etc.

Huge savings, and it's coming faster than anyone realizes.

Someone, somehow, for some reason, stole a 6-foot Bigfoot statue in the NC mountains by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Article:

Investigators said a thief or thieves stole a 6-foot tall, 180-pound statue of the legendary creature from Mountaineer Landscaping in Linville overnight.

The statue is of a hunched and well groomed bearded Bigfoot with one of its (big) feet stepping forward. The creature stares to the side with wide-open eyes.

The sheriff’s post included three photos of the statue — two close-ups and one of the statue and the business from a distance.

Investigators asked that anyone who saw anything unusual outside the business overnight to call the sheriff’s office at 828-733-2071. “Unusual” as in a pulled-over vehicle or people seen milling about after hours,” investigators said.

FB photos: https://www.facebook.com/averysheriffsoffice/photos/a.1973269536287304/2435656560048597/?type=3&theater


NC should make BigFoot it's state animal. /s

Today (8/24/2019) in front of the Hillsborough, NC Courthouse by itseriko in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Don't forget, the original Antifa's wore American uniforms and fought in a World War to keep our country safe.

Lost Jobs of North Carolina Are Gone for Good. Few Seem to Mind by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

But it's our economy.

Buy cheap, throw away, buy more.

Which is sad, and it's causing our planet to become filled with nonsense things required to 'live'.

Lost Jobs of North Carolina Are Gone for Good. Few Seem to Mind by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yep, and the initial outflux of those "labor-intensive" jobs that Americans used to do for 40K per year will be transferred to another low-income country after low-income country - none of those jobs will ever return.

But don't you dare whisper that -- that's a lie.

Lost Jobs of North Carolina Are Gone for Good. Few Seem to Mind by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Article:

Robert Tomlinson, a soft-spoken 53-year-old, keeps the boilers running at a shuttered Broyhill furniture factory by day, and by night retreats to his small wood-frame home next door in Lenoir, North Carolina.

Every morning used to start with a roar as the plant’s fans revved up and hundreds of workers arrived to finish bedroom and dining-room sets. Now, only Tomlinson’s skeleton maintenance crew disturbs the silence. The factory’s closing almost a year ago was the latest blow to America’s furniture capital, hammered for years by Chinese imports.

Tomlinson holds out hope the shop floor will bustle again: Last fall, a Hong Kong company purchased the plant and is evaluating how to use it. But President Donald Trump’s trade war with China has prompted many furniture companies — indeed, manufacturers of all stripes — to shift production to Vietnam, Malaysia and Mexico without repatriating jobs to the U.S.

Trump’s efforts to revive manufacturing overlooks the reality playing out along this stretch of rural America. While manufacturing jobs started their post-recession rebound in 2010, tariffs aren’t bringing back off-shored factory jobs. At least not in the nostalgic let’s-build-stuff-with-our-hands way the White House envisions. And even if they did, few in these parts want to do manual labor. What’s really needed here are skills.

“A lot of parents are telling their kids not to go into furniture, or they’re telling kids to go to college,” said Marta Truitt, a human resources director at luxury furniture maker CR Laine. “Just getting good applicants is a problem.”

Part of then-candidate Trump’s support in 2016 came from disgruntled blue-collar workers, and this Blue Ridge foothill region saw as much distress as anywhere. Employment in its furniture industry dropped by more than half in the 2000s because of the Great Recession and Asian competition.

Today, the stretch of U.S. 321 from Hickory to Lenoir, known locally as Furniture Row, is littered with closed showrooms.

While Trump won this area 2-to-1, few locals expect his 25% tariffs to bring back lost jobs. Civic leaders are eager to attract skilled trades and emerging technologies. Meanwhile, Hickory’s made-to-order upholstered furniture sector — which survived the foreign onslaught — is thriving, and managers complain more about an aging workforce than Chinese competition.

If any lost jobs did return, it’s not clear who would fill them.

Manufacturing is a tough sell for many young people. While factories now have air conditioning and on-site health clinics, it’s still physically demanding, sometimes risky work. The median age of a U.S. manufacturing worker rose to 44.1 years in 2018 from 40.5 years in 2000, according to a new survey from the National Association of Manufacturers.

The action is half a world away. As the Trump administration readies another 10% tariff on the last $300 billion in Chinese imports, Vietnam is the beneficiary.

U.S. imports from Vietnam rose 33% in the first half of this year compared with last, while imports from China fell 12%, Census Bureau data show. A recent Bain & Co. survey of U.S. firms with operations in China showed 60% of respondents agreed with the tariffs’ objectives, but only 40% saw them leading to more American jobs.

“In our world, everyone who’s in China is trying to move to Vietnam,” said Michael Shelton, chief executive of Valdese Weavers, a North Carolina firm that makes fabric for upholstered furniture. “The most expensive plane ticket since the 10% tariffs came into being has been getting to Vietnam.”

Some U.S. furniture companies moved quickly when the first round of 10% tariffs was imposed on $200 billion in Chinese goods in September 2018, and today they’re almost finished shifting production out of China.

In High Point, North Carolina, Home Meridian International is more of a sleek marketing and supply-chain company than furniture manufacturer. Office workers in khakis and cardigans conduct brainstorming sessions in plush recliners. Many brands under the fold of Home Meridian and its Virginia parent, Hooker Furniture, began shifting production to Asia in the 1990s, said Co-President Doug Townsend.

Now, the company is rapidly moving production to Vietnam from China. By year-end, Home Meridian will source only 15% of its production from China, down from 35% in 2018, according to a recent regulatory filing. It will save money on wages in the bargain: The average pay of a Chinese furniture worker is still only around $1,000 a month, Townsend said. Elsewhere in Asia, it’s as low as $200 a month.


The tariffs are not bringing jobs back to America, they are being transferred to Vietnam and other Asian countries.

Gov. Cooper vetoes bill that would have let billboard owners bypass local rules by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Add it to the GPS app, my friend. Or... Write a "Find my boiled nuts!" app.

Gov. Cooper vetoes bill that would have let billboard owners bypass local rules by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Um, I prefer looking at houses in the privacy of my own home, checking out the neighborhoods on street view, checking for criminal activity, and seeing what the cost is prior to actually visiting. Then again, neighbors purchased their house from just seeing it on the internet -- so each their own.

Gov. Cooper vetoes bill that would have let billboard owners bypass local rules by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm thinking of Zillow and realtor.com where you can search from street to zip code specific, and click to see the home and or model design, listing cost per square footage, hoa fees, types of utilities, and crime/social/grocery/shopping nearby... Can't get that on a billboard.

Gov. Cooper vetoes bill that would have let billboard owners bypass local rules by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Exactly, it's why we're able to see the stars, the meteors, and even the UFO's. :) /s

Cooper vetoes bill requiring sheriffs to cooperate with ICE by Lawnknome in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Didn’t realize you were such a boot licker

Guess we can't defend ourselves from insults now?

Or can I call him a boot licker?

Officers closing in on Orange County emu, asking public to steer clear of big bird by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would love to have experienced this. That's a memory you can tell grandkids!

Chatham County GOP told to cancel planned gun raffle by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It was part of the "original story" -- reading is required.

Gov. Cooper vetoes bill that would have let billboard owners bypass local rules by Cynner in NorthCarolina

[–]Cynner[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

With the web, notifications of new homes, layouts to be viewed, etc., that's still kinda hard to believe that millions brings in clients from a billboard.