Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller
- December 05, 2008
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Tags: bank, job, loss, sympathetic. Add Tags

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Tags: bank, job, loss, sympathetic. Add Tags
Collectible Prints are always available for all editions. Original art is available on a first-come, first-served basis. Just contact Wiley Miller for either.
Information on Non Sequitur original art:Upon availability, the original art sells for $350 for a daily edition, and $450 for a Sunday edition.
All original art, including most Sunday editions, are in black & white line art (color in newspapers is done in a separate process).
Prints are available (black and white only) for any edition of Non Sequitur for $75 each.
Most Sunday editions are available in color prints for $150 each.
All prints are on high quality, 11" x 14" cardstock, suitable for framing.
If you would like to have either a print or original personally inscribed, please include a note indicating who it is to inscribed for. Otherwise, the work will NOT be signed.
About Non Sequitur
Non Sequitur is Wiley Miller’s wry look at the absurdities of everyday life. A hit with fans of all ages, the strip is syndicated in more than 700 newspapers. Non Sequitur has received four National Cartoonists Society divisional awards, the most prestigious in cartooning. It is the only comic strip to win the coveted award in its first year of syndication and the only one to ever win in both the best comic strip and best comic panel categories.This hilarious creation is not only creative but also clever. It tackles current cultural issues such as politics, celebrities, male-female relations, materialistic desires and society’s obsession with weight. Non Sequitur will have you laughing at the controversy of everyday life.
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Comments (22) Jump to Comments Form
Danny Holstein said, 11 months ago
If I were a banker, I’d say ouch.
Not to mess with comic perfection, but instead of “closed”, how about, “not getting bonuses this year”?
BirishB said, 11 months ago
I cannot laugh at the misfortune of others. But I can snicker a little.
wvandenburgh said, 11 months ago
Dear Sirs,
I am writing to you to address your heartless and “least sympathetic comic strip”. I was recently laid-off by JPMorgan Chase and do not see the humor in your comic. I have over 20 years experience working in the financial industry rising from the clerical staff to Vice President by working my butt off and protecting not only the customer but the financial system itself. Over the years I have gone to work sick, through transit strikes and after spending the night in the emergency room with a sick child. Not all of us “got rich” working in the financial industry but we all felt satisfaction doing our jobs to the best of our ability. I personally did not get guaranteed annual raises but made due with raises after 18 to 24 months. This was to prevent lay-offs when times got bad. However, as we had our raises pushed back, the executive management teams got their huge bonuses. The workers who got laid-off did not cause the current poor economic situation. It was greed not found only in the finance industry but in many other industries, for example the auto industry. I believe that you owe us an apology and a retraction of your asinine comic. Either that or come to Long Island so I can whip your ass. Happy Holidays.
aerwalt
said,
11 months ago
Wvandenburgh has a point.
BirishB said, 11 months ago
wv – Let me be first to say that I empathize with you. I do not take pleasure in anyone losing their job.
You must realize that you were not the only one to go to work sick and tough it out through hardships. Many, many Americans “did the right thing” only to be ripped to shreds by ineptitude and greed in the banking and finance industries. This has created a lot of frustration, and the comic you see here is a representation of American ethos in late 2008.
You have the misfortune of being associated with an industry being rightly scapegoated at this time. Yet, this cartoon, in my opinion, represents the industry and not the individuals who worked in that industry. And that industry not only does not apologize for its past greed, it also now further perpetuates that greed at the expense of the consumer.
Mr. Miller’s cartoons act as a necessary commentary, and in my opinion, no retraction is warranted. Instead, I think it would be a shame if we pulled the wool over our own eyes and hid from the truth.
kfaatz925 said, 11 months ago
Wvandenburg, I offer my sympathy and hope things improve for you. Your point is well taken, though I doubt that Mr. Miller, who has come across overall as an intelligent social observer, intended to blame honest bank employees for the current recession. Best wishes to you.
YouWereWarned said, 11 months ago
wvandenburgh: Just post your salary & bonuses as VP…
Oh, and your address in Long Island.
jaydubya58 said, 11 months ago
wvandenburgh- I also empathize with you but you stated “the executive management teams got their huge bonuses” & I feel Mr. Miller is directing his ire to them and not to those, such as yourself, who (used to) work for them. You may very well be the one out front with the cup while they sit, nice & warm sipping their cognacs. Not very noble of them.
I imagine there might be a warm, special place in Hades that looks like the strip from two days ago just for them, but with punji stakes for a landing pad.
Blessings on you & your household and my your days ahead be complete with opportunity and prosperity.
keabu1 said, 11 months ago
People shoudln’t be offended by comics…If you are, you take life too serioulsy. I’ve been active duty military for 25 years and still going. You don’t even want to hear my horror stories of young enlisted guys (including myself at one time) who can’t afford this or that…AND these guys VOLUNTEER to put their lives on the line.
wvandenburgh said, 11 months ago
I’d like to address this to YouWereWarned. I was on an annual salary so regardless the number of hours I worked I received the same base salary. However, I usually worked between 50 and 60 hours per week in the office, plus another 2-4 hours per day at home. Therefore, my hourly salary, including bonus, was approx. $40. per hour. Also, Keabu’1, I am also a veteran who served 4 years in the US Navy serving overseas for one year and aboard a carrier for three. When I was discharged from the service, I used the GI Bill to help pay for college while I worked full time and attended classes full time. I did my part.
circuit7 said, 11 months ago
Thank you both (from a fellow vet) for your service to our country - still great in times of hardship.
Whenever I am inclined to take a comic seriously, I find myself considering the details.
Please notice that the humor in this is found in the multiple cups, each adding to the expected gratuity a fee or surcharge to the extent that the giver is unfairly taken advantage of. Now consider who would do this - the executives, and not the loyal, and hardworking employees. The employees are every bit as exploited as the sought-after donor targeted by the beggar’s efforts.
keabu1 said, 11 months ago
Circuit7, thanks for your comments and THANKS for your service as well.
WV, I’m just saying take a comic as a comic. I certainly am not making light of your situation. If I were one to be offended by comics, Doonesbury would offend me every day. I’m almost at the oppostite end of the spectrum from his political views. But I just chuckle and go on. On the other hand, some of the comments people post at the Doonesbury comic get me going :)
Margueritem
said,
11 months ago
In my eyes, the cartoon is a commentary on all the fees that banks charge for services today. I find it very funny. That said,
W, I’m sorry for your troubles.
grazer said, 11 months ago
A lot of very good people work for very bad systems. Unfortunately, it’s the bad systems, not the good people, who are getting bailed out.
Let’s not take the funnypapers too seriously while licking our wounds and learning our lessons.
omhr77 said, 11 months ago
I’m sorry, but I find this to true. While I feel for anyone who has lost his or her job…I don’t believe a VP at any level in an organization is completely blameless. wvandenburgh…you made significantly more money than many of the people around you. You mentioned working your way up. Unfortunately, most businesses don’t afford workers that opportunity today. To get into banking these days you have to be from a top school or already have 20 years of experience. There were workers all around you living paycheck to paycheck that didn’t have the bonuses or the high base salary that you probably did. What are they supposed to do? I have more sympathy for them than I do for you. You probably made enough that you could have been debt free and had at least a years salary put in savings for just such an emergency. As far as military experience goes…I served as well…like you for 4 years. However, I have many friends and family members who have served considerably longer. Their jobs are no safer than anyone elses’ right now. They certainly aren’t making what they’re worth at their jobs. I don’t think you can compare your 4 years of service to someones 20+.
attyush said, 11 months ago
Could be just a perception, but designations are handed out in the finance industry rather early. So you could really have a VP in a bank living on salary and not having any bonuses.
KingRat said, 11 months ago
Considering the housing prices on long island $160K a year isn’t much.
VP positions tend to be fairly abundant in some businesses and rather focused (i.e. VP of lending rocky mountain division). Combine this with the fact that only a small number of divisions at any company initiate most of the problems with that company and VPs have little power over what happens in the big picture.
shippingtroll said, 11 months ago
While I have never in my live been close to a salary of $40 /hour, I do know a few little things about corporate structure. One of the lessons I have learned in my life is that the higher up the ladder you get the more likely that someone above you will use you as a scapegoat. Deserved or not, it happens and it will continue to happen as long as the corporate structure exists. I say be glad you got as far as you did before the roof came tumbling in on you. You sound like a pretty solid human being, I think that you will probably come out of this with you skin intact. But you need to quit taking comics quite so seriously and laugh, it’s way better than crying, and more likely to make you some friends.
The Knight Who Says ... said, 11 months ago
I kind of agree with wvandenburgh…all the ‘economic crisis’ strips have become a bit boring, if you’re reading this, Wiley. I mean they’re funny, pretty much, but they get boring after a while.
Wildmustang1262 said, 11 months ago
I posted my comment on Doonesbury on Nov. 3rd. Here was my comment;
It must be very sad for all of those people who loved to work for long time had to leave and find another jobs with low pays, no health benefits unless must have health benefits for our healths’sakes and so forth. Let God bless all of us to find the jobs that will be better than nothing.
wvandenburgh, I know how you feel that you just lost the best job that you worked for long time. It was so pain to lose the job Hopefully you will find the better job that will be better than nothing. I will pray for you to get better job.
Jez Cave said, 11 months ago
Surely when you criticise a comic you’re only criticising the view of a single person? It seems unnecessary to cause such a fuss.
Wildmustang1262 said, 11 months ago
Jez Cave says: Surely when you criticise a comic you’re only criticising the view of a single person? It seems unnecessary to cause such a fuss.
You nitwit! You have no brain to understand what the person talked about losing his job. Sheesh! give him bloody break!