Rynar wrote:
For a guy so quick to post hard data points, and claim it as a character trait, there seems to be an awful lot of speculation presented as fact in your argument, Taskiss. Perhaps it's because the numbers don't agree with you this time?
I've made no claims, other than there is too much difference in the evidence presented in the article to validate the conclusion people seem to have made of it. Not enough "hard data points". The fact still stands that there wasn't a comparison within similar demographics - you absolutely must isolate the differences to ONLY be "government v. private sector" to substantiate the conclusion.
Working for the federal government provides some great benefits, but so does working for the larger companies like Boeing, IBM, etc. In my experience, the top performers in the field I'm in get the best jobs in private sector consulting companies. Still, that's anecdotal evidence and really doesn't matter for the sake of this discussion.
My point that "you have to compare apples to apples" was the extent of the argument I presented.
DFK! wrote:
He's speculating in that it is not a given that there is no data to support the idea that the average government worker in a given field are magically older and/or more experienced than the average private-sector counterpart. All that is given is a government employee saying as much.
If information provided in the article needs to be excluded, then this entire conversation is irrelevant.
Also, using information in the article isn't speculation on my part... it might be on the part of the person making the claim, but my use of that information is as legitimate as anyone using ANY information in the article.