page 2I've been waiting for a long time to set 'em up. I don't know whether to be happy or ashamed.[Edited on November 16, 2006 at 6:30 PM. Reason : blah]
11/16/2006 6:29:11 PM
We covered that already: people do not need food stamps. People did not starve to death before food stamps and they damn sure are not going to starve to death today when the real price of food is 1/20th what it was. For example, from 1980 to 2006 (the data I have available) the average price of a lb of white bread went from $0.50 to $1.10. Meanwhile, the average hourly wage went from $2.50 to $16.91. So, in 1980 earning the prevalent wage you needed to work 12 minutes to afford a lb of bread, in 2006 you need to work 3.9 minutes. Today, if you rake one family's yard you can feed your kids for a week. The same could not be said in 1964, when the food stamp act was passed.
11/16/2006 6:31:19 PM
the average hourly wage in 1980 was 2.50???also saying that the average hourly wage now is $16.91 also includes people like bill gates who makes $100000000000000 dollars an hour.im not trying to say your wrong or anything but im just questioning those facts. Also raking a familys yard will not feed your kids for a week. I worked at a the record exchange and I made $5.40 an hour and I worked about 30 hours a week. No way I would be able to pay rent and feed multiple kids even if i worked 40 hours a week. My kids would be unhealthy from eating fast food and there would be no health care. Im not saying food stamps are need at all but you live in lala land.
11/16/2006 6:40:59 PM
just found thisAverage Hourly Wages (Total private industry, 1982 dollars)Year Wage1947 $4.881948 4.901949 5.141950 5.341951 5.391952 5.511953 5.791954 5.911955 6.151956 6.381957 6.471958 6.501959 6.691960 6.791961 6.881962 7.071963 7.171964 7.331965 7.521966 7.621967 7.721968 7.891969 7.981970 8.031971 8.211972 8.531973 8.551974 8.281975 8.121976 8.241977 8.361978 8.401979 8.171980 7.781981 7.691982 7.681983 7.791984 7.801985 7.771986 7.811987 7.731988 7.691989 7.641990 7.521991 7.451992 7.411993 7.391994 7.401995 7.40Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Series ID: eeu00500049
11/16/2006 6:42:07 PM
i haven't crunched the numbers, but i suspect that you're right.that said, food stamps (and even welfare in general) are very low on the list of dumbass fiscal programs that I hate. They're more of a perennial whipping boy than a real priority problem.Social Security is probably the biggest offender, followed by capital gains and then estate taxes, and then the steeply increasing progressive income tax brackets.The amount of money I pay in taxes to support welfare (to include food stamps) is comparatively small. Furthermore, I don't begrudge helping the truly destitute, up until the point that they are capable of doing better for themselves and just aren't trying (for example, a large percentage of the people on welfare are poor single mothers).What I hate is the bullshit Robin Hood approach of taking from me to ease the load on Joe Blow, when I busted my ass in school, went to college and busted my ass there getting a mechanical engineering degree, busted my ass to become an officer in the Marine Corps, am busting my ass to become a military aviator. I'm working 70 hours per week at a fairly high-pressure job at which I could get fucking KILLED, and saving/investing 25% of my pay so that someday I will be wealthy...and my wallet is getting raided so that some dude who's lollygagging through life, working banker's hours, buying whatever he wants and not saving shit will have an easier time? Fuck that.[Edited on November 16, 2006 at 6:49 PM. Reason : asdfas]
11/16/2006 6:46:51 PM
11/16/2006 10:23:40 PM
11/16/2006 10:28:48 PM
11/16/2006 10:36:21 PM
11/16/2006 10:47:32 PM
11/16/2006 10:48:35 PM
11/16/2006 11:30:41 PM
11/16/2006 11:38:34 PM
11/17/2006 2:00:57 AM
^^no, of course it's not possible. there will always be movers and shakers who strive to get ahead, and there will always be others who take a more laid back approach (and then there are a few who are downright lazy, but they're another issue), and that's perfectly fine. I'm not saying that they are bad--I'm just saying that I don't get any of that guy's extra time, and he shouldn't get any of my money.
11/17/2006 5:59:04 AM
Kris, my numbers are correct. "In 1980 you needed to work 4.57 minutes for a lb of bread, in 2004 you needed to work 3.66 minutes, a reduction of...20%."http://data.bls.gov/PDQ/outside.jsp?survey=aphttp://www.bls.gov/home.htm
11/17/2006 7:54:54 AM
this thread has kinda gotten ahead of me but....
11/17/2006 9:50:02 AM
Sorry, I misunderstood your question. Bill Gates is not skewing my hourly wage numbers because Bill Gates is not paid by the hour. If you clicked the link, you would see the graph labelled "AVERAGE HOURLY EARNINGS OF PRODUCTION WORKERS".
11/17/2006 10:22:51 AM
that makes senseso then who has an hourly wage and how high up do they go on those numbers?
11/17/2006 10:24:42 AM
While that is a sensible question I cannot answer it. My data comes from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and they do not describe the data set any further than "Average hourly earnings of production or nonsupervisory workers (1) on private nonfarm payrolls"A more in-dept description I'm sure can be found somewhere on the http://www.bls.gov website, but I have not located it.
11/17/2006 11:09:35 AM
well they lived on a farm so they ate alot of eggs, beef and pork and now all have heart disease.also, fast food is easier for the lazy parent of any income bracket (no clean up or prep). Which is a shame.
11/17/2006 11:18:58 AM
Well, you don't have to get double mcBurgers and fries everytime you eat fast food.
11/17/2006 11:21:36 AM
even the small burgers have way to much sodium and saturated fat. but how many people are full off of one of those little things? But I guess this is about why kids are fat to begin with.
11/17/2006 11:40:51 AM
http://wendys.com/food/Nutrition.jspThis is what I get for fast food when I go out. Crispy Chicken Sandwich and a small cup of chiliIt costs me around $2.25.I don't know all that much about nutrition. Is this killing me? (it very well may be)
11/17/2006 12:18:44 PM
11/17/2006 12:49:03 PM
11/17/2006 1:22:40 PM
if no one was lazy then hypothetical everyone would work the same amount and at the same pace and efficiency. Then we would be in a socialist collective buttfuck orgy.
11/17/2006 4:48:12 PM
I think you're ignoring inherent differences in people's abilities and their interests, damn that was lame.[Edited on November 17, 2006 at 4:53 PM. Reason : .]
11/17/2006 4:53:33 PM
but if no on was lazy then who would we say is the model of "unlazyness"obviously if no one was lazy then everyone would be exactly the same.
11/17/2006 4:55:39 PM
11/17/2006 6:50:19 PM
11/17/2006 6:55:41 PM
i agree some people are worthless but...Where does the line of laziness get drawn. Someone might think Duke is a lazy mother fucker and should be allowed to drive on roads because he didnt help build them or cant eat food at the super market because he didnt grow any of it.now those examples are silly but who says you have to be a complete asshole to those you think are lazy when its obvious someone out there thinks you to are a lazy shit who used the military to get where you are today when "they" dug up rocks and ate them for years and then bla bla bla bla. Its kinda silly to make claims like this.
11/18/2006 11:18:05 AM
i'm not advocating drawing any lines.I understand that I (and probably a high percentage of people in this forum) work harder and have greater ambition than the average person. That's fine--I understand someone having a ho-hum, 8-5 job (I'm not talking about the truly lazy who are a minority, but a legitimate problem). He has more free time, lower stress, more flexibility on when he goes on a ski trip or takes his kids to the beach, etc. Those are perfectly legitimate legitimate things to consider in choosing such a job (and yes, those jobs absolutely have to be done).All I'm arguing is that redistribution of wealth is shitty. Yes, I make more money than a lot of people (although still nothing more than the middle of the middle class). Yes, I will eventually make a substantially higher than average wage, and further down the road, will have a great deal of wealth from investments. However, I've paid a price in a number of ways, and there are still a LOT more dues to be paid. By the time I really have a lot of money, I will have done a helluva lot of hard work, made a lot of smart decisions, and sacrificed things I could've had or done at the time in order for a greater return later.the guy that Robin Hood is giving my money to (and by giving my money to, I don't mean welfare so much as hammering me excessively on taxes to keep him from having to pay) didn't pay his dues, and in return, saw the aforementioned benefits.
11/18/2006 1:01:27 PM
yeah can kinda agree with that.and robin hood did pay his dues. He had to fight that dude in the river and kinda got his ass kicked.
11/18/2006 1:05:37 PM
11/18/2006 2:47:24 PM
Kris, you do realize that you could bus them there...right?
11/18/2006 3:04:28 PM
Meals on wheels, Kris. Meals on wheels! Besides, when I lived in Tennessee a local business bought breakfast for every student in the county. It wasn't much, a pint of milk and a granola bar. But that is irrelevant: parents should use their EITC and make their kids some damn breakfast. Oatmeal is fucking cheap, it's like a dollar for twenty bowls worth. It's the poor man's cereal and it is easy to make if you have running hot water available, otherwise you need a stove or coffee maker. It is even good tasting if you have some sugar and raisins.
11/18/2006 3:09:22 PM
11/18/2006 3:19:23 PM
Kris, of course I'd want to see some plans and costs on it, but with the Soup Kitchen you don't have to worry about the parent's using the food on themselves (whom we aren't responsible to feed). And why couldn't you just have them eat at specified times? It works for schools, right?
11/18/2006 3:21:06 PM
11/18/2006 3:26:28 PM
11/18/2006 3:41:37 PM
ha kris completely goes to extremes in every situation.
11/18/2006 3:47:34 PM
11/18/2006 6:26:38 PM
11/18/2006 8:07:07 PM
11/18/2006 10:03:05 PM
And why is setting up this entirely new system for hungry people better than just privatizing it and using the system we already have?
11/18/2006 10:26:55 PM
Well, that would depend on the CBA of how well the system works now. How often it is abused and what it costs to operate it vs. a new one.What, are you a traditionalist or something? (lol)
11/18/2006 10:35:58 PM
There's more than just costs involved, the systems operate in a different way, and one offers benefits that you aren't considering. I mean if you started suggesting we start up government owned grocery stores or socialized to grocery stores we already have, I'd say it would be fine to do a cost-benefit analysis, but you're suggesting to use a model that simply wouldn't work for the majority of people who would be using it.
11/18/2006 10:58:41 PM