Tuesday, August 24, 2010

getting a job you want...

How nice would it be to get jobs in chicago?  Or in any other state for that matter.I'm not talking about a crappy job that you get just to barely survive!!! I mean jobs that you could live of. Wouldnt it be nice to be able to work in the field that you want? Unfortunately there is way too many people that have those jobs that you want, but unlike you, they dread being there! I want that job! half the jobs i would live to have I am very  qualified for!
I've been looking for a driving job for ever, I love driving, and i'm good at it, but getting the licenses and permits for some of the work is just too much of a pain!. for example CDL, Chauffeur, Taxi.
All tho if you are interested, you can easily find the info you need on Google, I'll post some sites on here on here too...but they are gonna be from IL. and thats for those who cant actually Google for them selves.

CDL -  http://tiny.cc/bppo5
Chauffeur - http://tiny.cc/76urr
Taxi - http://tiny.cc/f3mua

hopefully those links were good enough for you. feel free to state what you like in the comments, but just a heads up, the post is just my thoughts that were bothering me for a bit.


to be continued

graff and laws

what is the problem with the stupid graff laws? When are the officials will realize that severe punishments for it will not work for either parties? My friend died running from cops after being seen tagging an abandoned building, the building was abandoned for over 20 years, and yet he had to pay with his life, because he didnt want to go to a county jail for spray painting. here is one of the news articles:


Friends of a graffiti artist who died after plunging into the Chicago River in a chase with police paid tribute the best way they knew how Wednesday: spray-painting a mural in his memory on a brick wall behind a Radio Shack in Chicago's Edgewater neighborhood.
"Just because he was a graffiti artist doesn't mean he was a bad person," A.J. Harris said of his friend Jason Kitchekeg, 26, a popular presence in the city's close-knit graffiti and tagging community, a ragtag collection of teens and young adults celebrated as artists in some circles and derided as vandals in others.
"He wasn't out being malicious or trying to hurt anyone," Harris said. "Sadly, he went out doing what he loved."

So unfair!!!!

I would love to hear what you the reader of this little post have to say or how you feel about the graffiti in the US!