I given up for any work out here in the west and finding a contractor out in DC area. This state country doesnt support job stability for shits and Colorado is still in a recession so I'm not going to find any work.
FTFY
Seriously though, you should hear some of the stuff coming out of the business-related classes I've been trudging through, lately. It's morbidly hilarious seeing people trying to spin "Companies no longer even try to
fake giving a shit about keeping you around" as a good thing. Or give the whole "rapid increase in temporary work" (read: Companies no longer want to pay
benefits fucking anything) a positive light. And trying to make it sound like us younglings
want to be spending several straight months every few years job hunting, haha.
It's honestly kinda' depressing, really. Grade A propagandist bullshit. Funny when the teachers get called on it and just kinda' go, "Yeeaahh... next topic, haha >_>"
Anyway yeah. Job stability isn't part of the "new contract" between companies and workers, T. You're probably not going to find it, except in companies that are likely to get torn apart by modern short-term focused business practices in relatively short order. E: I think it got traded for what the doublespeak is calling something along the lines of "right to professional self-development", i.e. companies don't want to spend as much money training you. Job stability traded for the financial burden of training being shifted partially or entirely on the employee. Fair trade, haha!