Up With Which I Cannot Put

It turns out that prepositions are okay things to end sentences with:

“But sentences ending with prepositions can be found in the works of most of the great writers since the Renaissance. In fact, English syntax not only allows but sometimes even requires final placement of the preposition….”

Hidden Foodcourt

Looking down from the elevator on my way up to the Old Post Office Tower in DC. Few people notice the food court and shopping mall tucked away inside the lower levels.

Photo taken with a Palm Zire 71.

Desperation

Commuter train restroom. I don’t think pieces torn from cardboard toilet paper tubes did much good for the situation.

Photo taken with a Palm Zire 71.

Brewed Coffee and Pool Tables

Followup from Mikoid on the outsourcing issue: “We’re not talking Nike sweatshops and backbreaking child labor.” According to Mike’s figures, salaries are pretty generous relative to the Filipino median, which is a good thing; it puts to rest my initial worries that offshore hiring is just a way to abuse cheap international labor. As for whether America should let big companies outsource those jobs, that, I grant, is for legislation, labor unions, and the free market to decide.

Now, my ambivalence on this issue turns instead towards the Philippine labor market’s own reliance on outsourced jobs from the US. Like I say above, it’s a good thing for skilled Filipino workers that these openings provide them with better working conditions, better pay, and more opportunities for advancement, but what of the Philippine economy’s already burdensome dependence on American capital; doesn’t this sink the Philippines deeper into the mire of subservience to American corporate interests? Or is this simply the natural progression of the global economy?

(And why am I blogging about this stuff? What originally got my goat was the unfair use of the stereotype of fat, whiny, donut-eating, SUV-driving Americans, not the outsourcing debate. Now I’m starting to sound like the Wall Street Journal. Must be my age showing. Next thing you know I’ll be talking about stock markets and pork bellies. Mmmm. Pork bellies.)