jesse: you will be work at mcdonald s your whole life if you don t study your school books. skills training, numberers, pipe fitters, welders, these people by and large, many are working six figures. they didn t do it by amassing a large amount of debt. they did it by look around and swreeght opportunities are and staying up late and doing all the things that we are telling people will make them unhappy. why are people unhappy is a big question. the reason in my view has nothing or very little to do with what they do for money. jesse: everybody knows it s a homeowner.
jesse: you will be work at mcdonald s your whole life if you don t study your school books. skills training, numberers, pipe fitters, welders, these people by and large, many are working six figures. they didn t do it by amassing a large amount of debt. they did it by look around and swreeght opportunities are and staying up late and doing all the things that we are telling people will make them unhappy. why are people unhappy is a big question. the reason in my view has nothing or very little to do with what they do for money. jesse: everybody knows it s a
we speak. well done, gentlemen. seymour, i m going to start with you. unions are running scared, at least union bosses are, but it seems as though union households gave trump quite a boost in the election. is the split a good thing. i think the election of trump was very good news for many unions, public sector union probably not because trump wants to shrink the government. but when you talk about the old blue collar industrial unions, those unions are going that is to say the workers in those unions are going to do very well because donald trump is very much committed to bringing back the jobs of coal miners and of pipe fitters and truckers and, you know, other kinds of industrial jobs that have left the country. so i think the union leaders wanted to run in one direction and the union members that they re supposed to represent wanted to go in the other. but i think ultimately more jobs is good for unions and i don t
he wants to cut supported for vocational? i think it s cool to have a job and buy a car than sit at home without a job. john, i would wholeheartedly agree there is a major push from washington go to college, go to a four-year university. take out the student loans if you have to. why aren t we saying there is another route. the ceo of that company that i went out to visit he was vocational school kid. he came out of vocational school and got a job and prison en to the top of the company. he did attend college and ended going back and he makes over $10 million a year. john: that is good and department of labor says it predicts job openings for the future maybe 14% employment growth but electricians they say 23%, plumbers and pipe fitters,
security in my mind. you look at iran right now. going into 2012. that s one of my big, you know, things that could blow up in this economy because if that straits of hormuz gets closed. $100 oil is cheap. we re paying 4 to $5 for gasoline and would close down this economy. look where we re getting our oil. out of the top seven, four of them, to put it nicely. have you ever looked at the pipelines, they re running everywhere, what s one more going to do. we ve got a zillion already. dagen. i m perplexed by how the president can turn his back on a pipeline project that even the teamsters and the pipe fitters have gotten by. and that explains the pecking order. environmentalists first and foremost, unions and teamsters. 20,000 jobs would be created immediately, and putting in pipeline in place another one, 118,000 spin-off jobs and then, the