Hayward Field Construction complete- University Officially takes Possession
Comments
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Lolz. I laffed. I literally know people who would argue for 10 straight hours over fluoride if you let them.dtd said:
Brainwashed near retard level IQ right wingers like him don't like rivers, or restaurants, or bars, or neighborhoods, or parks, or architecture. Can you imagine the city of Portland putting FLUORIDE in their water? Leftist conspiracy to chem trail the population via its drinking supply.creepycoug said:
It's a city that still exists on a human scale. There are real neighborhoods that adjoin the downtown. Great parks nearby. The riverfront, decent old and interested architecture, rows of restaurants on what feel like neighborhood streets (what people in Seattle now drive to Ballard to experience), a really underrated food and bar scene. IDK, what don't you like about it that doesn't have to do with politics?DJDuck said:
You must be an ignorant nutjob lib that doesn’t have a clue about Portland and doesn’t have to live here I would guess. What do you find so great about Portland? Be specific please. I know Portland and every neighborhood in it better than anyone I have ever met. Not brag just fact.creepycoug said:Portland is a great town.
Mind you this is my hometown and it still sucks. -
If you can get past the smell of urine and shit, Portland is great!!creepycoug said:
It's a city that still exists on a human scale. There are real neighborhoods that adjoin the downtown. Great parks nearby. The riverfront, decent old and interested architecture, rows of restaurants on what feel like neighborhood streets (what people in Seattle now drive to Ballard to experience), a really underrated food and bar scene. IDK, what don't you like about it that doesn't have to do with politics?DJDuck said:
You must be an ignorant nutjob lib that doesn’t have a clue about Portland and doesn’t have to live here I would guess. What do you find so great about Portland? Be specific please. I know Portland and every neighborhood in it better than anyone I have ever met. Not brag just fact.creepycoug said:Portland is a great town.
Mind you this is my hometown and it still sucks.
Take a couple week trip to Scottsdale then come back to Portland. You’ll probably throw up within 15 minutes of being back home. -
creepycoug said:
It's a city that still exists on a human scale. There are real neighborhoods that adjoin the downtown. Great parks nearby. The riverfront, decent old and interested architecture, rows of restaurants on what feel like neighborhood streets (what people in Seattle now drive to Ballard to experience), a really underrated food and bar scene. IDK, what don't you like about it that doesn't have to do with politics?DJDuck said:
You must be an ignorant nutjob lib that doesn’t have a clue about Portland and doesn’t have to live here I would guess. What do you find so great about Portland? Be specific please. I know Portland and every neighborhood in it better than anyone I have ever met. Not brag just fact.creepycoug said:Portland is a great town.
Mind you this is my hometown and it still sucks.
Portland is a city run by hypocrites. Those neighborhoods have winners and losers. Where the Democrat elites favor life is great. SE neighborhoods like Foster-Powell, Lents, Brentwood Darlington, Arleta, Rockwood etc. and all of felony flats are forgotten with horrible pothole streets, failing schools and crime rates higher than other favored parts of the city.creepycoug said:
It's a city that still exists on a human scale. There are real neighborhoods that adjoin the downtown. Great parks nearby. The riverfront, decent old and interested architecture, rows of restaurants on what feel like neighborhood streets (what people in Seattle now drive to Ballard to experience), a really underrated food and bar scene. IDK, what don't you like about it that doesn't have to do with politics?DJDuck said:
You must be an ignorant nutjob lib that doesn’t have a clue about Portland and doesn’t have to live here I would guess. What do you find so great about Portland? Be specific please. I know Portland and every neighborhood in it better than anyone I have ever met. Not brag just fact.creepycoug said:Portland is a great town.
Mind you this is my hometown and it still sucks.
At the same time where many Elite Democrat politicians Live in the Pearl the people that bought condos there were given a break on their property taxes.
The main Anchor High School in SE Portland, Marshall even though one of the newest was chosen to close. SE Portland kids have to be bused to Franklin, Cleveland or other schools.
Why vote in Portland. The North-South light rail was turned down twice by the voters of Portland and Vancouver. Democrat Elites gave the voters the middle finger and built it anyway.
Our taxes are continually used illegally for things they weren’t meant for. They used CITY sewer funds to fund Portland Public Schools which isn’t administered by the city.
Portland passed it’s own gas tax and only a small portion goes to roads. I’m sure none of the roads in SE Portland will be fixed before the planned bike paths are finished which will be never.
Portland has a patina of civility covering bigotry, bias and favoritism towards the liberal well healed.
Portland used to be the 2nd leading dry goods port on the West Coast. Because of strikes and lack of imagination and support by politicians it is a shadow of it’s former self.
This is only touching the surface why I can’t stand my hometown.
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Everyone has their own opinion and I respect yours however many opinions are based on either lack of knowledge or different priorities. For instance I don’t give a damn about any city’s restaurant or bar “scene”. I know the best restaurants and bars in Portland and none of them are probably in “the scene”.
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Seattle and Portland both have homeless problems that, over the last few years, have become out of control. Same with San Francisco. They are nonetheless great cities.greenblood said:
If you can get past the smell of urine and shit, Portland is great!!creepycoug said:
It's a city that still exists on a human scale. There are real neighborhoods that adjoin the downtown. Great parks nearby. The riverfront, decent old and interested architecture, rows of restaurants on what feel like neighborhood streets (what people in Seattle now drive to Ballard to experience), a really underrated food and bar scene. IDK, what don't you like about it that doesn't have to do with politics?DJDuck said:
You must be an ignorant nutjob lib that doesn’t have a clue about Portland and doesn’t have to live here I would guess. What do you find so great about Portland? Be specific please. I know Portland and every neighborhood in it better than anyone I have ever met. Not brag just fact.creepycoug said:Portland is a great town.
Mind you this is my hometown and it still sucks.
Take a couple week trip to Scottsdale then come back to Portland. You’ll probably throw up within 15 minutes of being back home.
Scottsdale is fine; I could never spend two weeks there though. -
I could easily be immune to all this hypocrisy and bias but it just doesn’t sit right with us and I don’t care whether it happens in other cities.
We could just ignore it because we are blessed to live in one of the great parts of the city which is wonderful for families. We live in Vermont Hills (Hayhurst Neighborhood) where I actually grew up. Washington County and Beaverton are only a few blocks away. Alpenrose Dairy is only a block away. It doesn’t feel like you live in a city here. -
NOCDJDuck said:I could easily be immune to all this hypocrisy and bias but it just doesn’t sit right with us and I don’t care whether it happens in other cities.
We could just ignore it because we are blessed to live in one of the great parts of the city which is wonderful for families. We live in Vermont Hills (Hayhurst Neighborhood) where I actually grew up. Washington County and Beaverton are only a few blocks away. Alpenrose Dairy is only a block away. It doesn’t feel like you live in a city here.
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Well, yeah, I don't live there so those issues aren't top of mind for me. I'm just telling you it's a city I've historically liked when visiting. And there are always winners and losers in American society. I can't think of a city I like that doesn't have shit-hole parts of town. Seattle has a lot of the same issues you outline; and while I live here and a lot of them bother me, it's still a great city by my measure. As you said, it's about priorities. There are some redeeming qualities to Memphis, but the bad far outweighs the good, for me, so I don't score that place very highly. Depends on what you care about.DJDuck said:Everyone has their own opinion and I respect yours however many opinions are based on either lack of knowledge or different priorities. For instance I don’t give a damn about any city’s restaurant or bar “scene”. I know the best restaurants and bars in Portland and none of them are probably in “the scene”.
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FUCK OFFcreepycoug said:
Well, yeah, I don't live there so those issues aren't top of mind for me. I'm just telling you it's a city I've historically liked when visiting. And there are always winners and losers in American society. I can't think of a city I like that doesn't have shit-hole parts of town. Seattle has a lot of the same issues you outline; and while I live here and a lot of them bother me, it's still a great city by my measure. As you said, it's about priorities. There are some redeeming qualities to Memphis, but the bad far outweighs the good, for me, so I don't score that place very highly. Depends on what you care about.DJDuck said:Everyone has their own opinion and I respect yours however many opinions are based on either lack of knowledge or different priorities. For instance I don’t give a damn about any city’s restaurant or bar “scene”. I know the best restaurants and bars in Portland and none of them are probably in “the scene”.
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I will acknowledge that it appears to be a place where it's very easy to live like a fat cat. That's appealing.dnc said:
FUCK OFFcreepycoug said:
Well, yeah, I don't live there so those issues aren't top of mind for me. I'm just telling you it's a city I've historically liked when visiting. And there are always winners and losers in American society. I can't think of a city I like that doesn't have shit-hole parts of town. Seattle has a lot of the same issues you outline; and while I live here and a lot of them bother me, it's still a great city by my measure. As you said, it's about priorities. There are some redeeming qualities to Memphis, but the bad far outweighs the good, for me, so I don't score that place very highly. Depends on what you care about.DJDuck said:Everyone has their own opinion and I respect yours however many opinions are based on either lack of knowledge or different priorities. For instance I don’t give a damn about any city’s restaurant or bar “scene”. I know the best restaurants and bars in Portland and none of them are probably in “the scene”.
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However all here pay taxes. That the rich get breaks to live in the Pearl is just a symptom of a systemic problem in Portland. Also in most cities when the voters vote on something they expect that vote to be adhered to. I live in a city where I get outvoted by carpetbaggers all the time. I live with it. It’s hard to live with your winning vote being overturned because elitist politicians just don’t think you know what’s good for you. BTW that “human size city” is rapidly disappearing.creepycoug said:
Well, yeah, I don't live there so those issues aren't top of mind for me. I'm just telling you it's a city I've historically liked when visiting. And there are always winners and losers in American society. I can't think of a city I like that doesn't have shit-hole parts of town. Seattle has a lot of the same issues you outline; and while I live here and a lot of them bother me, it's still a great city by my measure. As you said, it's about priorities. There are some redeeming qualities to Memphis, but the bad far outweighs the good, for me, so I don't score that place very highly. Depends on what you care about.DJDuck said:Everyone has their own opinion and I respect yours however many opinions are based on either lack of knowledge or different priorities. For instance I don’t give a damn about any city’s restaurant or bar “scene”. I know the best restaurants and bars in Portland and none of them are probably in “the scene”.
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Great cities but not anywhere near as great as they used to be. Quality of life in all 3 cities is in decline.creepycoug said:
Seattle and Portland both have homeless problems that, over the last few years, have become out of control. Same with San Francisco. They are nonetheless great cities.greenblood said:
If you can get past the smell of urine and shit, Portland is great!!creepycoug said:
It's a city that still exists on a human scale. There are real neighborhoods that adjoin the downtown. Great parks nearby. The riverfront, decent old and interested architecture, rows of restaurants on what feel like neighborhood streets (what people in Seattle now drive to Ballard to experience), a really underrated food and bar scene. IDK, what don't you like about it that doesn't have to do with politics?DJDuck said:
You must be an ignorant nutjob lib that doesn’t have a clue about Portland and doesn’t have to live here I would guess. What do you find so great about Portland? Be specific please. I know Portland and every neighborhood in it better than anyone I have ever met. Not brag just fact.creepycoug said:Portland is a great town.
Mind you this is my hometown and it still sucks.
Take a couple week trip to Scottsdale then come back to Portland. You’ll probably throw up within 15 minutes of being back home.
Scottsdale is fine; I could never spend two weeks there though. -
It isn’t about shithole parts of town. It’s about government neglect of parts of town that they are obligated to oversee. It’s the roads that they don’t address and the closing of the only high school in the area when others weren’t. These neighborhoods are pretty decent except for government neglect and bias.
Portland is seen as decent by most because of the shitholes they come from. I guess it is “decent” to some degree. But that is about as far as I would go.
I really love Washington as well as Oregon but you couldn’t pay me to live in Seattle and environs. -
When I lived in San Francisco in 1964 it was a wonderful place.SFGbob said:
Great cities but not anywhere near as great as they used to be. Quality of life in all 3 cities is in decline.creepycoug said:
Seattle and Portland both have homeless problems that, over the last few years, have become out of control. Same with San Francisco. They are nonetheless great cities.greenblood said:
If you can get past the smell of urine and shit, Portland is great!!creepycoug said:
It's a city that still exists on a human scale. There are real neighborhoods that adjoin the downtown. Great parks nearby. The riverfront, decent old and interested architecture, rows of restaurants on what feel like neighborhood streets (what people in Seattle now drive to Ballard to experience), a really underrated food and bar scene. IDK, what don't you like about it that doesn't have to do with politics?DJDuck said:
You must be an ignorant nutjob lib that doesn’t have a clue about Portland and doesn’t have to live here I would guess. What do you find so great about Portland? Be specific please. I know Portland and every neighborhood in it better than anyone I have ever met. Not brag just fact.creepycoug said:Portland is a great town.
Mind you this is my hometown and it still sucks.
Take a couple week trip to Scottsdale then come back to Portland. You’ll probably throw up within 15 minutes of being back home.
Scottsdale is fine; I could never spend two weeks there though.
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Summer of loveDJDuck said:
When I lived in San Francisco in 1964 it was a wonderful place.SFGbob said:
Great cities but not anywhere near as great as they used to be. Quality of life in all 3 cities is in decline.creepycoug said:
Seattle and Portland both have homeless problems that, over the last few years, have become out of control. Same with San Francisco. They are nonetheless great cities.greenblood said:
If you can get past the smell of urine and shit, Portland is great!!creepycoug said:
It's a city that still exists on a human scale. There are real neighborhoods that adjoin the downtown. Great parks nearby. The riverfront, decent old and interested architecture, rows of restaurants on what feel like neighborhood streets (what people in Seattle now drive to Ballard to experience), a really underrated food and bar scene. IDK, what don't you like about it that doesn't have to do with politics?DJDuck said:
You must be an ignorant nutjob lib that doesn’t have a clue about Portland and doesn’t have to live here I would guess. What do you find so great about Portland? Be specific please. I know Portland and every neighborhood in it better than anyone I have ever met. Not brag just fact.creepycoug said:Portland is a great town.
Mind you this is my hometown and it still sucks.
Take a couple week trip to Scottsdale then come back to Portland. You’ll probably throw up within 15 minutes of being back home.
Scottsdale is fine; I could never spend two weeks there though. -
Yeah, I'll bet it was. When I first moved here in 1986 it was still pretty damn good. Back when you moved there SF was still a working class town where blue collar folks with family still lived. Those days are long gone.DJDuck said:
When I lived in San Francisco in 1964 it was a wonderful place.SFGbob said:
Great cities but not anywhere near as great as they used to be. Quality of life in all 3 cities is in decline.creepycoug said:
Seattle and Portland both have homeless problems that, over the last few years, have become out of control. Same with San Francisco. They are nonetheless great cities.greenblood said:
If you can get past the smell of urine and shit, Portland is great!!creepycoug said:
It's a city that still exists on a human scale. There are real neighborhoods that adjoin the downtown. Great parks nearby. The riverfront, decent old and interested architecture, rows of restaurants on what feel like neighborhood streets (what people in Seattle now drive to Ballard to experience), a really underrated food and bar scene. IDK, what don't you like about it that doesn't have to do with politics?DJDuck said:
You must be an ignorant nutjob lib that doesn’t have a clue about Portland and doesn’t have to live here I would guess. What do you find so great about Portland? Be specific please. I know Portland and every neighborhood in it better than anyone I have ever met. Not brag just fact.creepycoug said:Portland is a great town.
Mind you this is my hometown and it still sucks.
Take a couple week trip to Scottsdale then come back to Portland. You’ll probably throw up within 15 minutes of being back home.
Scottsdale is fine; I could never spend two weeks there though.
The thought of the DiFi run SF when I moved here in 1986 allowing people to just shit in the streets and break into vehicles with no fear of being prosecuted would have been unthinkable. You could still afford to live in the city and be an artist and or someone like me who had just got out of college. It hasn't been that way for over 25 years now. -
You’re trying too hard.haie said:
Lol you think I bag on Oregon because of UW's apathy alone and not my own personal experiences being a CTO in Portland watching your alums draw stick figures for me w crayons?SFGbob said:
The sad thing is you're bagging on Oregon solely because your own football team sucks.haie said:
The funny thing is you don't see Eugene doing the same eventually.greenblood said:
Really? Even with CHOP owning your city? Sorry but the game is over and Seattle won. Your town might not be white trash, but we can smell your city’s fish stench down here. At least you guys have Spirit Fox.haie said:I remember sitting in Hayward field as a high school senior while Bellotti gave some contractually obligated speech thinking, "God this school is white trash. Thank God I grew up north of the river."
Imagine what happens to this loser piece of shit if Oregon goes on another 10 football ass reaming of UW.
I’m a business owner, and my employees are UW, WSU, UO, Seattle U, Portland State, Sac St, and one Chapman grad. All of them bring value, although I’d say the Sac St head shows the most promise, long term. The Chapman grad requires the most hand holding, and the WSU grad is probably the hardest worker. None of this means anything, but let’s just say that I have to question your leadership acumen as an executive, if you’re going to degrade your rank and file reports because they were educated at a school who’s football team you don’t like. I’m going to question you even further if you’re paying these people to draw stick figures for you.
I guess my advice is to try not to press so much. It’s coming off as forced and awkward.
HTH -
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Generally speaking, you're not going to notice a difference in the typical undergrad from any of the P-12 schools with the possible exception of Stanford, and even then it usually doesn't matter on the job.thechatch said:
You’re trying too hard.haie said:
Lol you think I bag on Oregon because of UW's apathy alone and not my own personal experiences being a CTO in Portland watching your alums draw stick figures for me w crayons?SFGbob said:
The sad thing is you're bagging on Oregon solely because your own football team sucks.haie said:
The funny thing is you don't see Eugene doing the same eventually.greenblood said:
Really? Even with CHOP owning your city? Sorry but the game is over and Seattle won. Your town might not be white trash, but we can smell your city’s fish stench down here. At least you guys have Spirit Fox.haie said:I remember sitting in Hayward field as a high school senior while Bellotti gave some contractually obligated speech thinking, "God this school is white trash. Thank God I grew up north of the river."
Imagine what happens to this loser piece of shit if Oregon goes on another 10 football ass reaming of UW.
I’m a business owner, and my employees are UW, WSU, UO, Seattle U, Portland State, Sac St, and one Chapman grad. All of them bring value, although I’d say the Sac St head shows the most promise, long term. The Chapman grad requires the most hand holding, and the WSU grad is probably the hardest worker. None of this means anything, but let’s just say that I have to question your leadership acumen as an executive, if you’re going to degrade your rank and file reports because they were educated at a school who’s football team you don’t like. I’m going to question you even further if you’re paying these people to draw stick figures for you.
I guess my advice is to try not to press so much. It’s coming off as forced and awkward.
HTH
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A good (academis) school gives you a leg up on your first, and in rare cases your second job. Once you have 4+ years of work experience, no one gives a shit where you went to school. They care about your references and work performance.creepycoug said:
Generally speaking, you're not going to notice a difference in the typical undergrad from any of the P-12 schools with the possible exception of Stanford, and even then it usually doesn't matter on the job.thechatch said:
You’re trying too hard.haie said:
Lol you think I bag on Oregon because of UW's apathy alone and not my own personal experiences being a CTO in Portland watching your alums draw stick figures for me w crayons?SFGbob said:
The sad thing is you're bagging on Oregon solely because your own football team sucks.haie said:
The funny thing is you don't see Eugene doing the same eventually.greenblood said:
Really? Even with CHOP owning your city? Sorry but the game is over and Seattle won. Your town might not be white trash, but we can smell your city’s fish stench down here. At least you guys have Spirit Fox.haie said:I remember sitting in Hayward field as a high school senior while Bellotti gave some contractually obligated speech thinking, "God this school is white trash. Thank God I grew up north of the river."
Imagine what happens to this loser piece of shit if Oregon goes on another 10 football ass reaming of UW.
I’m a business owner, and my employees are UW, WSU, UO, Seattle U, Portland State, Sac St, and one Chapman grad. All of them bring value, although I’d say the Sac St head shows the most promise, long term. The Chapman grad requires the most hand holding, and the WSU grad is probably the hardest worker. None of this means anything, but let’s just say that I have to question your leadership acumen as an executive, if you’re going to degrade your rank and file reports because they were educated at a school who’s football team you don’t like. I’m going to question you even further if you’re paying these people to draw stick figures for you.
I guess my advice is to try not to press so much. It’s coming off as forced and awkward.
HTH
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And but for the most selective schools, it's hard to tell the difference with kids straight out. Yeah, the average kid from Pomona or Princeton is likely going to be a better writer than the average kid coming out of whatever state. Chicago doesn't graduate people who don't achieve a given level of literacy, and most large state schools, and crappy small private schools, do. So you'll see that a little. But as you say, over time, it just doesn't matter. Although it can help for grad school.ntxduck said:
A good (academis) school gives you a leg up on your first, and in rare cases your second job. Once you have 4+ years of work experience, no one gives a shit where you went to school. They care about your references and work performance.creepycoug said:
Generally speaking, you're not going to notice a difference in the typical undergrad from any of the P-12 schools with the possible exception of Stanford, and even then it usually doesn't matter on the job.thechatch said:
You’re trying too hard.haie said:
Lol you think I bag on Oregon because of UW's apathy alone and not my own personal experiences being a CTO in Portland watching your alums draw stick figures for me w crayons?SFGbob said:
The sad thing is you're bagging on Oregon solely because your own football team sucks.haie said:
The funny thing is you don't see Eugene doing the same eventually.greenblood said:
Really? Even with CHOP owning your city? Sorry but the game is over and Seattle won. Your town might not be white trash, but we can smell your city’s fish stench down here. At least you guys have Spirit Fox.haie said:I remember sitting in Hayward field as a high school senior while Bellotti gave some contractually obligated speech thinking, "God this school is white trash. Thank God I grew up north of the river."
Imagine what happens to this loser piece of shit if Oregon goes on another 10 football ass reaming of UW.
I’m a business owner, and my employees are UW, WSU, UO, Seattle U, Portland State, Sac St, and one Chapman grad. All of them bring value, although I’d say the Sac St head shows the most promise, long term. The Chapman grad requires the most hand holding, and the WSU grad is probably the hardest worker. None of this means anything, but let’s just say that I have to question your leadership acumen as an executive, if you’re going to degrade your rank and file reports because they were educated at a school who’s football team you don’t like. I’m going to question you even further if you’re paying these people to draw stick figures for you.
I guess my advice is to try not to press so much. It’s coming off as forced and awkward.
HTH -
El oh El.thechatch said:
You’re trying too hard.haie said:
Lol you think I bag on Oregon because of UW's apathy alone and not my own personal experiences being a CTO in Portland watching your alums draw stick figures for me w crayons?SFGbob said:
The sad thing is you're bagging on Oregon solely because your own football team sucks.haie said:
The funny thing is you don't see Eugene doing the same eventually.greenblood said:
Really? Even with CHOP owning your city? Sorry but the game is over and Seattle won. Your town might not be white trash, but we can smell your city’s fish stench down here. At least you guys have Spirit Fox.haie said:I remember sitting in Hayward field as a high school senior while Bellotti gave some contractually obligated speech thinking, "God this school is white trash. Thank God I grew up north of the river."
Imagine what happens to this loser piece of shit if Oregon goes on another 10 football ass reaming of UW.
I’m a business owner, and my employees are UW, WSU, UO, Seattle U, Portland State, Sac St, and one Chapman grad. All of them bring value, although I’d say the Sac St head shows the most promise, long term. The Chapman grad requires the most hand holding, and the WSU grad is probably the hardest worker. None of this means anything, but let’s just say that I have to question your leadership acumen as an executive, if you’re going to degrade your rank and file reports because they were educated at a school who’s football team you don’t like. I’m going to question you even further if you’re paying these people to draw stick figures for you.
I guess my advice is to try not to press so much. It’s coming off as forced and awkward.
HTH
I have two brothers in law who are Oregon grads. If Oregon grads can show me an ability to architect cloud solutions for large companies in e commerce, I prefer that. They probably actually care about college football and would be enjoyable to work with. Having some common ground matters in what I do given the time commitment.
But in the richest part of downtown I've only seen the ability from doogs, Cuogs (majority of my department), beavlet, some Vikings and other local colleges, and some self taught people. Have a Texas State grad and a longhorn.
Some quooks have come and gone within sales, fortifying my argument even more.
Sure you can go Oregon and be some marketing/sales peon and puke grellow with your fat wife and talk shit to doogs at Autzen. That's not the game I play though. -
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That's a badass track stadium, no question.
No excuse for Oregon to ever lose a T & F natty going forward. -
Sure, that's what you do. People do other things for a living. He's right; you work way too hard on this, particularly when you try and bolster Cuog in the effort. Kids graduating from Amherst probably can't hang with you playing computer but, trust me on this, they are bright, literate and talented af.haie said:
El oh El.thechatch said:
You’re trying too hard.haie said:
Lol you think I bag on Oregon because of UW's apathy alone and not my own personal experiences being a CTO in Portland watching your alums draw stick figures for me w crayons?SFGbob said:
The sad thing is you're bagging on Oregon solely because your own football team sucks.haie said:
The funny thing is you don't see Eugene doing the same eventually.greenblood said:
Really? Even with CHOP owning your city? Sorry but the game is over and Seattle won. Your town might not be white trash, but we can smell your city’s fish stench down here. At least you guys have Spirit Fox.haie said:I remember sitting in Hayward field as a high school senior while Bellotti gave some contractually obligated speech thinking, "God this school is white trash. Thank God I grew up north of the river."
Imagine what happens to this loser piece of shit if Oregon goes on another 10 football ass reaming of UW.
I’m a business owner, and my employees are UW, WSU, UO, Seattle U, Portland State, Sac St, and one Chapman grad. All of them bring value, although I’d say the Sac St head shows the most promise, long term. The Chapman grad requires the most hand holding, and the WSU grad is probably the hardest worker. None of this means anything, but let’s just say that I have to question your leadership acumen as an executive, if you’re going to degrade your rank and file reports because they were educated at a school who’s football team you don’t like. I’m going to question you even further if you’re paying these people to draw stick figures for you.
I guess my advice is to try not to press so much. It’s coming off as forced and awkward.
HTH
I have two brothers in law who are Oregon grads. If Oregon grads can show me an ability to architect cloud solutions for large companies in e commerce, I prefer that. They probably actually care about college football and would be enjoyable to work with. Having some common ground matters in what I do given the time commitment.
But in the richest part of downtown I've only seen the ability from doogs, Cuogs (majority of my department), beavlet, some Vikings and other local colleges, and some self taught people. Have a Texas State grad and a longhorn.
Some quooks have come and gone within sales, fortifying my argument even more.
Sure you can go Oregon and be some marketing/sales peon and puke grellow with your fat wife and talk shit to doogs at Autzen. That's not the game I play though.
So, IOW, your critque is narrow and loaded. -
FREE PUB!!!!!!!!!!haie said:
El oh El.thechatch said:
You’re trying too hard.haie said:
Lol you think I bag on Oregon because of UW's apathy alone and not my own personal experiences being a CTO in Portland watching your alums draw stick figures for me w crayons?SFGbob said:
The sad thing is you're bagging on Oregon solely because your own football team sucks.haie said:
The funny thing is you don't see Eugene doing the same eventually.greenblood said:
Really? Even with CHOP owning your city? Sorry but the game is over and Seattle won. Your town might not be white trash, but we can smell your city’s fish stench down here. At least you guys have Spirit Fox.haie said:I remember sitting in Hayward field as a high school senior while Bellotti gave some contractually obligated speech thinking, "God this school is white trash. Thank God I grew up north of the river."
Imagine what happens to this loser piece of shit if Oregon goes on another 10 football ass reaming of UW.
I’m a business owner, and my employees are UW, WSU, UO, Seattle U, Portland State, Sac St, and one Chapman grad. All of them bring value, although I’d say the Sac St head shows the most promise, long term. The Chapman grad requires the most hand holding, and the WSU grad is probably the hardest worker. None of this means anything, but let’s just say that I have to question your leadership acumen as an executive, if you’re going to degrade your rank and file reports because they were educated at a school who’s football team you don’t like. I’m going to question you even further if you’re paying these people to draw stick figures for you.
I guess my advice is to try not to press so much. It’s coming off as forced and awkward.
HTH
I have two brothers in law who are Oregon grads. If Oregon grads can show me an ability to architect cloud solutions for large companies in e commerce, I prefer that. They probably actually care about college football and would be enjoyable to work with. Having some common ground matters in what I do given the time commitment.
But in the richest part of downtown I've only seen the ability from doogs, Cuogs (majority of my department), beavlet, some Vikings and other local colleges, and some self taught people. Have a Texas State grad and a longhorn.
Some quooks have come and gone within sales, fortifying my argument even more.
Sure you can go Oregon and be some marketing/sales peon and puke grellow with your fat wife and talk shit to doogs at Autzen. That's not the game I play though. -
The dirty little secret about hiring is that the first paragraph of a resume is as far as I have ever got.
Some people then nail the interview
But when your paycheck starts you better fucking produce or your gone
Lawyers, doctors and masters of the universe on Wall Street need the big Ivy paper and its worth the cost.
Most case as we like to say, no. Go somewhere cheap and stay out of debt -
Thank you for sharing some of your sports’ viewing preferences. Shall we all share? @creepycoug, your turn?dtd said:I can honestly not imagine giving a fuck about T&F beyond the 10 seconds every 4 years I watch the men's 100m Olympic final.
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Yes. I love T&F, particularly the sprints and the jumps. Not a huge fan of the 5k, or whatever, but I even appreciate a good mile. And female T&F athletes, sans the shot put and discuss gals, are nice to look at.NorthwestFresh said:
Thank you for sharing some of your sports’ viewing preferences. Shall we all share? @creepycoug, your turn?dtd said:I can honestly not imagine giving a fuck about T&F beyond the 10 seconds every 4 years I watch the men's 100m Olympic final.