£70.00 seems reasonable
i wouldn't recommend anyone start learning a wet trade such as bricklaying, it's getting phased out more and more by the year
Are robots starting to lay our bricks?
£70.00 seems reasonable
i wouldn't recommend anyone start learning a wet trade such as bricklaying, it's getting phased out more and more by the year
Most of you youngsters nowadays will to go to University and end up with a degree that will get you on £7.95 an hour at McDonalds.
Why not wise up and get some vocational skills and earn some real money brick laying, plumbing or sparking before thinking about doing a worthless degree in media studies etc.
Because some people want to do jobs that require a brain, regardless of the money!
Are robots starting to lay our bricks?
Are robots starting to lay our bricks?
Sorry, I'm not being argumentative, but surely you need a certain amount of Brickies to lay bricks and chippys to chip?
You saying before we had lots of them doing not very much? And now we have less doing more per person?
Most of you youngsters nowadays will to go to University and end up with a degree that will get you on £7.95 an hour at McDonalds.
Why not wise up and get some vocational skills and earn some real money brick laying, plumbing or sparking before thinking about doing a worthless degree in media studies etc.
Sorry, I'm not being argumentative, but surely you need a certain amount of Brickies to lay bricks and chippys to chip?
You saying before we had lots of them doing not very much? And now we have less doing more per person?
I went to Uni, and I earn a lot more than £7.95 an hour. I also earn a lot more than my friends who are sparkies, joiners and plumbers. Therefore I deduce that getting a trade is, in fact, worthless.
See, we can all make ridiculous sweeping generalisations which have little basis in reality.
Isn't the going rate for a software engineer around 30K in the south east at 2 years post grad, not much better off than a teacher really who would work less hours for 25K in the north west, Plumbers can earn easily 50K self employed in london with a few years experience, fair enough they will have invested a lot of money on kit but then not have spent money on education and have student loans etc.
A teacher will work many more hours unpaid, lesson planning, marking is a big one, seeing students on lunch breaks etc. No teacher works to rule because they can't.
A software engineer also has the potential to earn more than 30k as they gain experience.
I dont think it sounds steep. He's been there a few times. A lot of plumbers would have charged more than £70. you kind of called him out twice. once for the leak and once for the stop tap so £70 is more than reasonable.