[ 3 / biz / cgl / ck / diy / fa / ic / jp / lit / sci / vr / vt ] [ index / top / reports ] [ become a patron ] [ status ]
2023-11: Warosu is now out of extended maintenance.

/biz/ - Business & Finance

Search:


View post   

>> No.57482809 [View]
File: 165 KB, 482x482, I'm stealing from you fetcher.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
57482809

>>57481752
You can list orgs/professional societies, especially since you don't have work experience, but you need not explain them that much. Tau Beta particularly, since anyone that knows why it looks good was probably in it. Just call it an honor society.

Non of you engineering friends put their senior or 'capstone' project on their resume, because meat space engineers know that those are all makework BS given to baby engineers so they can learn to do leg work. Your projects are just the same, unless you somehow are using them to make money right now.

Your GPA and internship are your selling points as a fresh grad. You will find a job somewhere, it probably won't pay more than 60k starting, it may be a small operation, and you may need to move states to take it. That's normal. Spend a couple years there picking up ownership of tasks or inventing your own job description. Move on.

>> No.53230737 [View]
File: 165 KB, 482x482, I'm stealing from you fetcher.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
53230737

>>53230523
Depends on what school, what program, and what professor you work under. Be specific dude.

>t. PhD ChemE that swept a warehouse today

>> No.52388352 [View]
File: 165 KB, 482x482, I'm stealing from you fetcher.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
52388352

Posts like these tell me how underage /biz/ actually is. "Tiny Homesteading" doesn't work because there is always a minimum footprint required for a plant to thrive, for medium sized animals to live (goats and chicken runs), and to ensure a somewhat reasonable water catchment.

The closest thing to this idea is urban permaculture setups, and even those are fairly limited, with your animals being rabbits, guinea pigs, or quail, plants limited to small amounts of herbs, greens, and the occasional fruit vine or dwarf tree, and most of the watering being limited to what you can store off the roof catchment and strategically send down hill from a raised corner of your lot. If everyone did it, it would go a long way, but it can't ever provide larger animals or replace carb farming.

And for fucks sake, all this talk of making soil by just having animals on it?
>>52386709
>>52386844
Are you being retarded on purpose? You need plant matter for the animals to eat and digest on the scrub land first, you can't just throw shit on bare desert and expect it to sprout grass. And you can't just run an Israeli brand dehumidifier for all your water needs, since there has to be some humidity to start with. Reclaiming drylands starts with finding the seasonal or yearly rain runoff location, and either hardscaping to move it through your land or making your own pools from scratch to "plant the water" into the soil. You'll plant saplings of Mesquite and other desert tress like Jerusalem thorn or Acacia and mulch the fuck out of everything around them, up to a yard deep. That mulch keeps the moisture in the dirt, will breakdown into real soil, and promote the establishment of good soil microbes. Pioneer trees and shrubs are allowed to grow, while taking yearly cuttings to create nitrogen rich mulch to expand the growing bed and make more soil. At this point, succulent ground covers are planted in the shade, and start to overtake bare stone and earth.

>> No.50037945 [View]
File: 165 KB, 482x482, I'm stealing from you fetcher.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
50037945

>>50037673
If you're going to simp for one of the "restoration" emperors you could at least go for the one that got JFK'd before he could fuck up his own legacy. But you're probably more interested in being a contrarian than historically literate, and too many people like Aurelian for your taste.

As unsustainable as the post-Republic economy was (I.E.: it only works so long as you can keep expanding and winning wars forever) Diocletian's price fixing schemes were ultimately what killed it. Consider that the Roman empire actually did turn a blind eye to most conterfeiting in the later empire simply because it increase liquidity at the fringes of the territory, and any kind of state intervention in markets outside of buying up emergency grain was unheard of. By declaring that all Rome's economic issues were due to "greedy traders" and calling actual market values "price gouging" he forced entire sectors of the economy to operate at a permanent loss, to the point where once free men became state dependent slaves. Which, in a Rome were most of the low level labor was already done by slaves, functioned to wipe out the professional classes in the plebs, and set up a system in which the well off Patrician families of Rome would dominate in perpetuity. He created slaves of free Roman men, then made slaves of their as unborn children.

That is the most anti-roman thing conceivable to someone like Marius or Seneca, but here you are acting like shitting all over the Gens of Rome makes for a good leader. He couldn't have done more to ruin the last ember of the Republic if he personally put out the fires kept by the Patricians.

Navigation
View posts[+24][+48][+96]