Jobs that cannot be delivered must never be promised. It's unfair to raise people's hopes that way.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
You shouldn't send people out to do a job which you cannot afford to equip them to do.
It is always a challenge to work when people have big expectations. I would much rather feel comfortable working without expectations.
To do work that's not going to be fulfilling doesn't make sense.
Most people spend their whole lives looking for the right job. There are others who never get an opportunity to do work that fulfils them.
We need more good jobs that reward hard work with rising wages, dignity, and a ladder to a better life.
As far as expectations go, you can never work for expectations. You have to work against them.
So you know, I think that the federal government, the Democrats, and President Obama are selling a lot of hope and change, but no delivery of any of those promises.
There are times that everyone hates his or her job. Were they freed from the economic consequences of having these jobs, they'd drop out of the workforce. There are only two problems with this strategy: First, someone has to pay for it; second, it is not the recipe for human fulfillment.
A job is just a job at the end of the day, and work sometimes comes from the most unlikely places.
Hope is the motivation that empowers the unemployed, enabling them to get out of bed every single morning with unbounded enthusiasm as they look for work.