If there’s one large-scale example of the thesis playing out, and the thesis holds that it’s describing a ubiquitous phenomenon, something doesn’t add up. Hobart rightly concedes that many jobs aren’t fun to do and also that many people are in the wrong jobs for them, personally. ...
The strongest jobs growth was in hospitality © Getty Images UK employment continued to recover in June, with the gradual reopening of the economy boosting jobs in hospitality and retail, even as rising Covid-19 infection rates hit confidence in the government’s plans to lift almost all restr...
] So the TEA hit piece got its well-deserved thrashing, and the Cummins video deserves the same. The guy has *zero* qualification in virology or epidemiology, and his video is a textbook example how to abuse data for propagandistic purpose: –extreme cherry-picking –Covid-19 = influenza?
like going against an index – there is a feeling that experts are more likely to take a “good for the whole country” approach and would sacrifice the masses if it means higher gdp, and then try to sell that. The talk of unfilled jobs, and yet never the mention that that may raise...