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RedVEVO wrote:Hmm ..
Who lit the fuse on your tampon ?
88sins wrote:Numb3r4 wrote:Okay how 'bout this one liquor license and a rum shop as a business?
Alcohol sells, & it could make plenty profits too. But it risky, because it don't take much for a bar to bust. A bad incident, a crooked worker, a few robberies, ppl perception of the establishment changed, etc. I've seen quite a few decent bars in high traffic areas open & close within a year for one reason or another.
It have careers & business ideas you can start working on that you would make it in, but you have to find the one that's the right fit for you that you really enjoy & excel at for you if you want it to endure.
Biomechanical engineering is a nice field of study with room to grow & advance career-wise. Not sure of anywhere locally offering a program in those fields though.
*$kїđž!™ wrote:Man hadda padd up for elections next few years...
Dizzy28 wrote:Regularization of immigrants is a positive approach to a very serious problem Trinidad has - a declining population.
You all can sit and be xenophobes or realize that without a robust 18-60 age group we cannot hope to achieve economic growth particularly without oil and gas. NIS payments depend on contributions and the number of contributors are declining. If we can get more then the burden becomes less on each one of us.
EFFECTIC DESIGNS wrote:Dizzy28 wrote:Regularization of immigrants is a positive approach to a very serious problem Trinidad has - a declining population.
You all can sit and be xenophobes or realize that without a robust 18-60 age group we cannot hope to achieve economic growth particularly without oil and gas. NIS payments depend on contributions and the number of contributors are declining. If we can get more then the burden becomes less on each one of us.
In every country where they tried to increase their population it has resulted in more rape, crime, violence, trash, filth and poverty. This country cannot sustain the amount of people it is taking in, as it stands you already cannot find employment even in places like hardware. Employers have decided to take advantage of this by abusing workers verbally and physically.
NIS payments become meaningless if there are no jobs for people. Especially when in this country many employers do NOT pay NIS even though they take it out of your salary.
You think it's joke ,basicosenso wrote:That's strangely suspicious to let so many people enter during hard times like this.
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