Quote:
Originally Posted by Col996s Why anyone would want to work for Alan Sugar is beyond me, the blokes a ****. IMHO. |
Ed Zackery. Who would want to be (more or less) a personal slave to a coarse, arrogant, dick-swinging, money-grubbing old dinosaur like him?
And with respect to the issue of Sralan's appointment to the Govt:
(1) He's not immune from making astonishingly bad predictions even in his own field (for example, in 2005 he confidently predicted that the iPod would be dead and buried by the following Christmas), so I'm not exactly filled with confidence at his ability to steer other businesses or the country as a whole through uncharted waters.
(2) He is, at best, a mediocre businessman. Amstrad ended up as a bit of a failure, his em@iler phone was an anachronistic white elephant and he has described his time at Spurs as "A waste of my life". In fact most of his money has been made on property speculation, which (a) doesn't require a great deal of brains, and (b) is, to a large extent, what got the UK economy into the mess it is in at the moment.
(3) His ethics are questionable. During last year's final, one of the candidates was discovered to have lied in his CV. Nevertheless, Sralan gave him the job and the much vaunted and coveted "six figure salary". In most businesses, if a successful applicant is subsquently found to have told lies in their application, it would earn them the sack and quite possibly a claim for breach of contract. It's also a criminal offence (obtaining a pecuniary advantage by deception). However, in Sralan's barrow boy world, deception and underhand behaviour is rewarded. What sort of message does this send to the country?
(4) If Gordon Brown wanted to distract the press and public with a shallow celebrity appointment, he should at least have nominated someone with a bit more credibility - Joanna Lumley for the Foreign Office anyone?