HOW DO YOU GET TO SWING THIS?
By Pete Moore On August 11th, 2012Lemme guess: trade unions are involved, right?
While searching for something else I came across “The Epoch Times” and its feature called: Global Q&A: ‘What is the most inspiring moment for you in the Olympics?’ In its own words, “The Epoch Times asked people outside Olympic Park in London what the most inspiring moment has been for them thus far.” You might or might not find it interesting, but among those asked was a Dominick Posillipo of Stony Point, New York. Can you spot the interesting fact about him? I might have helped with dash of yellow highlighting.
You’d think he’d been a state employee (oh yeah – whoops!). I hear complaints about outsourcing. When investors see this kind of thing you understand why it happens.






‘Investors’ would not £ 14 Billion, have cured world hunger, in one swift benevolent motion?
So what, if one person ran one nano-second faster than another?
Think about that.
Retired also sounds better than unemployed. So he might not actually be retired but didn’t want to say he was an unemployed 50 year old.
Seamus -
A poor, unfortunate, unemployed American in London for the Olympics?
Maybe not a poor, unfortunate, unemployed American. You can be unemployed at not poor (inherited money, claim, wife’s got money etc). He very easily could be retired (which should be ridiculous at 50) but there is other reasonable explanations as well.
Harri
A small fraction of what the ‘Big 5′ spend on Nuclear weapons would also cure world hunger.
It’s not such a mystery is it, many auto workers were offered early retirement when they were looking to shrink their workforce.
I’m 48.
I’m retired.
25 years in the Civil Service.
Living of my £5k per year ‘gold plated’ pension.
Not everyone retires early through personal choice.
It states no where in the link why this man has retired?
It’s silly to presume?
Based on where the man is from there is a decent chance that he once worked here
http://citynoise.org/article/1785
There would be a lot of folks in his shoes. Some with skills that did not transfer too well to other, new, careers.