here is what your missing about teabaggers

Status
Not open for further replies.
Redivider,

The average teachers salart in New Jersey is $55,000 per year, and they pay nothing into their or their family's medical insurance.
Further they get a 5% cost of living increase every year even if the cost of living does down, or remains the same, and lets not forget their retirement plan.
The rest of the US is suffering, but the Unions don't care - it is all about them - screw the taxpayers who fund their lives.

Christie simply asked them to freeze the cost of living increase for one year, and to pay $750 per year tword the cost of their family's medical insurance, and the union refused - that is why teachers have lost jobs.

The union cost the jobs of teachers, and not Christie

55k?? starting salary??? what planet are you from man???? my sister's a 15 year veteran biology/chemistry teacher. she earns 35k per year. and that's the truth.

55k starting salary for a teacher...... plus a 5% increase per year... .HAHA...... that calculation would exponentially increase teacher's salaries to over 100k before 10 years of teaching. if teaching paid so well, everybody would want to teach......all the big houses would be filled with teachers, not doctors.....

i have NEVER met a single teacher who earns more than 65k. maybe professors with high positions in colleges. and I used to go out with one that had a PHD in English and she was the head of the English department at a VERY expensive private school....... salary?? 57k per year.

i don't know where you get your facts, but get them straight.
 
Redivider,

The average teachers salart in New Jersey is $55,000 per year, and they pay nothing into their or their family's medical insurance.
Further they get a 5% cost of living increase every year even if the cost of living does down, or remains the same, and lets not forget their retirement plan.
The rest of the US is suffering, but the Unions don't care - it is all about them - screw the taxpayers who fund their lives.

Christie simply asked them to freeze the cost of living increase for one year, and to pay $750 per year tword the cost of their family's medical insurance, and the union refused - that is why teachers have lost jobs.

The union cost the jobs of teachers, and not Christie
Not to mention the fat pension which is not representative of pay.

It's said that government workers now make, on average, 30% more than private-sector workers. Put that fantasy aside. It far underestimates the real figures. By my calculations government workers make more than twice as much. They are America's fastest-growing group of millionaires.

Doubt it? Then ask yourself: What is the net present value of an $80,000 annual pension payout with additional full health benefits? Working backward the total NPV would depend on expected returns of a basket of safe investments--blue-chip stocks, dividends and U.S. Treasury bonds.

Investment pros such as my friend Barry Glassman of Glassman Wealth Services say 4% is a good, safe return today. But that's a pitiful yield, isn't it? It's sure to disappoint the millions of baby boomers who will soon enter retirement with nothing more than their desiccated 401(k)s--down 30% on average from 30 months ago--and a bit of Social Security.

Based on this small but unfortunately realistic 4% return, an $80,000 annual pension payout implies a rather large pot of money behind it--$2 million, to be precise. That's a lot. One might guess that a $2 million stash would be in the 95th percentile for the 77 million baby boomers who will soon face retirement.
http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2010/0...-digital-rules-millionaire-cop-next-door.html

Also consider the job security.

Or the cushy schedule. Weekends off. Summer off. Winter break. Spring break. Holidays off. What other profession gives it's employees time off in terms of months.

Or the Cadillac Health Coverage.

Or level of difficulty. How hard is to boss a bunch of kids around?

Yeah, teaching is hell itself.

I love the fact that teachers are constantly yelping for more funding when the level of education does not improve from the last time they got their precious funding increase. Here's some advice: If teachers want to justify funding increases, stop passing and graduating dumbasses.

Cry me a river teachers.
 
okay, so the paycheck in question was issued to me by a STATE agency. you tell me how to go into the pay office and tell them to stop taking taxes off of me? then tell me how to get that particular job back because they would have just fired me when i asked?

i am all ears......

edit; or for that matter tell me how anyone in any company that gets a check. tell me what to tell my employer to stop taking taxes out of my check.

When you do a bit of reading you will understand this all in full. BAsically as you say, the whole non-citizen concept is not beneficial to everyone, the individual makes the choice based on his situation and needs. For instance, my work is not from the state, i do not make use of any of my tax paid benefits such as the NHS etc, and i do not agree to my taxes being spent wherever they like without my consent, for example, spending £400,000 of tax payer money on an olympic logo, then to insult furhter it is utter ant totally SHIT! :lol: but yes, in short,. for me, due to my lifestyle,habbits and personality, the concept is beneficial to me, to someone such as yourself, it is not, so there is no big reason to change.

Put simply, it's an individual choice over whether they think the governemnt they are employed by (by that i mean EVERYONE with a birth cirtificate is a corporate employee of their governemnt) offers enough benefits to counter the negatives the governemtn demands (parking fines, whatever get's you fired) or whether their interests are not best for you. For me, they aren't.

edit: Like with claiming tax back for a business expense, you keep all of your reciepts and bills and manually send them off for a tax return. (there are other methods i briefly noticed but have not read up on yet)
 
55k?? starting salary??? what planet are you from man???? my sister's a 15 year veteran biology/chemistry teacher. she earns 35k per year. and that's the truth.

55k starting salary for a teacher...... plus a 5% increase per year... .HAHA...... that calculation would exponentially increase teacher's salaries to over 100k before 10 years of teaching. if teaching paid so well, everybody would want to teach......all the big houses would be filled with teachers, not doctors.....

i have NEVER met a single teacher who earns more than 65k. maybe professors with high positions in colleges. and I used to go out with one that had a PHD in English and she was the head of the English department at a VERY expensive private school....... salary?? 57k per year.

i don't know where you get your facts, but get them straight.

tell your sister to move.

btw, thats not including benefits

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/05/nj_teachers_pay_freeze_salarie.html
 
its well known teachers make shit

just because teachers in YOUR area get paid a lot doesnt mean teachers in california make that much
 
yes, dont pay your taxes here and see what that gets ya. seriously dude, get a grip.

on second thought, i bet your a leech. i bet you take handouts and leech off of those who at least try to do the right things.

which is it, uneducated about the US tax system or leech?
I think he's talking about this stuff here::blsmoke:


[video=youtube;En8pRqh-Dik]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=En8pRqh-Dik[/video]
[video=youtube;aZqb0TW15EE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aZqb0TW15EE[/video]
[video=youtube;uU7G6XIMt2Q]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uU7G6XIMt2Q[/video]
[video=youtube;8SivGfS31CQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SivGfS31CQ[/video]
 
Rediver,

You are an absolute ignorant Ass, spouting about things you know nothing of. I know that you must impress yourself, but not anyone who actually researches subjects befor typing.

I never said that was a starting salary - I said average salary (I did have a typo on salary), but nowhere did I say starting.

"plus a 5% increase per year... .HAHA...... that calculation would exponentially increase teacher's salaries to over 100k before 10 years of teaching"
That is exactly how their cost of living is awarded - 5% per year, and their medical dental and vision plans are at no cost to them in most cases.

Further those plans cover the employee plus the whole family - again at no cost to the teacher, and the employee's insurance stays in force for life at retirement.

Since reading comprehension is not your cup of tea - I will put up some videos for you to watch.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PkuTm-ON904
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nceBCFEiivQ&feature=related
 
 
Keenly2,

You are right up there with Rediver with your ignorant statements:
"its well known teachers make shit

just because teachers in YOUR area get paid a lot doesnt mean teachers in california make that much"
The most recent report included a list of teacher salaries by state. The state with the highest average teacher salary was Connecticut, at $57,760. California was a very close second, where the average teacher salary is $57,604. New Jersey teachers make approximately $56,635 per year. Rounding out the top five were Illinois and Rhode Island, with the average teacher salary at $56,494 and $56,432, respectively. The state with the lowest average teacher salary was South Dakota, at $34,039.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top