Quote:
Originally Posted by Camron Rust
The point remains, you're paying money for access only and they're making very good money. You're not paying for the instruction. How many jobs do you know of do you have to pay for the interview?
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Let's say I wanted to be a cop in a small town. No civil service, the chief hires the cops.
Is it OK for the mayor to:
-- announce he's conducting a "cop camp" and make it clear by words or impressions that if I want the cop job it would be good for me to go to cop camp,
-- charge the people attending cop camp money to work assorted unfilled shifts as a cop without compensation even thought the city budgets for it and collects taxes for it
-- throw some favored off-duty cop a few bucks to 'supervise' with an inherent promise of future favors in return
--keep the money budgeted for the vacant positions for himself.
Now let us say that some of these camps are run by assignors for state associations or public college conferences. Looks crooked as a dog's hind leg. People are making money in exchange for considering people for jobs financed with taxpayer money.
But then, this is a calling in which officials at the highest levels can plead guilty to federal charges for pocketing cash in an airline ticket scam and end calling a world championship game.
In any other business, or in government, demanding cash up front for considering someone for job is a shakedown and it gets you jail time.