the real heros of the poor are going to be enterprizing businesspeople like me, once i get my busness started, but sadly i wont be able to hire but a couple since im forced to pay people more than what they are worth. i get what this is saying. noone goes without a house in america unless they want to, cause if you cant afford it we have the best actually active churches to help out.i am free enterprise!
2/4/2010 8:50:14 PM
My policy preference for increasing low-skilled wages is by decreasing the number of unskilled people in our economy.
2/4/2010 9:34:31 PM
^^ obvious troll is still obvious.But I'm curious what fantasy business will you be entering?
2/4/2010 10:50:39 PM
2/4/2010 10:51:43 PM
^^
2/4/2010 10:52:51 PM
Aha. I too wish to make a product of some sort, and sell it.
2/4/2010 11:00:00 PM
Even though he's an idiot, at least he as ambition, which is still more than most people.[Edited on February 4, 2010 at 11:06 PM. Reason : assuming he's not actually an alias]
2/4/2010 11:05:38 PM
Well then, TerdFerguson, just ignore whatever arguments I make and move on to another appeal to authority. Well, fine, I too can appeal to authority, as the card/krueger study has been thoroughly refuted by Neumark/Wascher, as summarized here by reason magazine (link to study follows summary).
2/4/2010 11:13:37 PM
https://www.fbo.gov/index?s=opportunity&mode=form&id=8d3b076bd4de14bbda5aba699e80621d&tab=core&_cview=1&cck=1&au=&ck=
2/5/2010 10:58:08 AM
^^How is that an appeal to authority?You posted that minimum wage laws depress employment. I posted a case study with evidence that didn't support your argument: the study just happened to be published by someone studying in the field.Go back and read the paper I posted. Its not even the paper that your critique is attacking. In fact, the paper that I posted is a direct reply to the questions raised by Berman and Neumark/Wascher. Card/Krueger use new datasets and methods, taking into account the criticisms they received, and come to the same conclusion, that min wage laws did not reduce fast food employment in New Jersey during the early 90s.Regardless of who you think is correct in this case study (Card/Krueger or Neumark/Wascher), it shows that the topic isn't nearly as cut and dry as the "bad outcomes of the min. wage laws" that you posted.
2/5/2010 11:06:45 AM
2/5/2010 11:09:43 AM
Why is an office that's supposed to be purely administrative buying guns, dude?
2/5/2010 11:10:23 AM
What's "purely administrative" supposed to mean in this context? Is it to imply that they have no authority to enforce laws or protect their agents?[Edited on February 5, 2010 at 11:14 AM. Reason : ]
2/5/2010 11:13:46 AM
I found this:
2/5/2010 11:16:29 AM
Uh, yeah?You've just conceded a whole lot of points. Do you still have one?
2/5/2010 11:17:57 AM
The point, now that I've done more research, is that we're way past the point of government overstepping its bounds. Now, it's just a matter of time before they begin gunning down regular citizens because they aren't willing to fork over half of their wages to fund a military empire and an out of control welfare state.
2/5/2010 11:20:57 AM
Alright, I'm going to need to see one example of an IRS agent killing someone who wasn't pointing a gun at the agent.Hell, you probably can't find an example of an IRS agent killing someone, period. And
2/5/2010 11:26:50 AM
On the 50% number, you don't think taxes could get that high? How else are we going to pay off this debt? You probably deny that inflation is a possibility, while supporting running budget deficits, so where is the money going to come from? The government needs more revenue.I'm not speaking of things that have already happened, I'm speaking of things that could happen in the future. Obviously, the IRS is prepared to kill people over tax issues if necessary. As our debt continues to balloon, and the government loses its ability to shelter people from the effects of mass unemployment, why are people going to want to continue paying taxes? They already see very little return on the taxes they do pay, because the government pisses it away on things they don't want. I think there will come a point when large numbers of people refuse to pay taxes, and I don't think the government (and the IRS, apparently) is just going to accept it.I don't think we should have an armed tax collection agency. If you're going to make not paying taxes illegal, then law enforcement should be dealing with it...not IRS agents. There should be a separation of the administrative and enforcement branches.
2/5/2010 11:35:52 AM
2/5/2010 11:39:59 AM
We'll at least now we know that d357r0y3r is a nut case.
2/5/2010 4:19:20 PM
Short-barreled shotguns require an extra $200 tax-stamp. Oh..I forget it's for the IRS. "Have you got receipts for that deduction Punk? Well...DO YA??... Go Ahead Make My Audit!"
2/6/2010 1:16:12 AM
2/6/2010 5:59:23 PM
I guess nobody will think i'm the same person as this clown anymore
2/6/2010 6:55:01 PM
LOL at Walmart being the bad guy again. Yes, it's so terrible that they provide cheap goods so that poor kids can own a basketball, poor families can have furniture, toiletries, and CLOTHES to wear.You guys are idiots. If McDonalds was allowed to pay 17 year olds $4.50 an hour instead of $7.25 an hour then they could afford to sell poor people food for $3 instead of $6.Don't you see how this works?A working mom could SAVE money by buying CHEAPER goods if businesses were allowed to hire people at CHEAPER wages. On top of that her children could EARN wages instead of being shut out from labor markets because LIBERAL TIGERSHARKS insist on them STARVING instead of WORKING.
2/6/2010 8:35:36 PM
2/6/2010 11:31:45 PM
I suppose everyone here knows which market failure price ceilings attempt to address, right?
2/7/2010 12:14:11 AM
2/8/2010 2:45:40 AM
I just used their summary for brevity. As most scholarly works, the actual paper did not make for good excerpts.
2/8/2010 9:35:31 AM
Yes, thats exactly what I want. You hit the nail on the head. I take it you would prefer the poor working for 14 hours, and still not making enough to afford rent and food.you never really responded to:
2/8/2010 11:14:33 AM
2/8/2010 1:04:09 PM
^^ There are studies on both sides, I find mine convincing and so do most economists. And there is a logic process which needs making: we know how a higher price floor should decrease hours worked and by extension, employment, but there is no reasonable mechanism for a higher price floor to result in more employment. As such, barring convincing evidence, which we don't have, it would be far easier to believe New Jersey just happened to raise the floor during a localized economic boom. But, fine, let us go back to what I said back on page 1: "Look at Earthdog's statistics, we're only talking about 286,000 workers here. Compare that to the 1.9 million that are already both exempt from the minimum wage and earning below it..."We are talking about a tiny percentage of the workforce that is affected by the minimum wage, a workforce that is dwarfed by the workforce that is exempt from and earns less than the minimum wage. It is no accident that statisticians have difficulty proving the harm/benefits of the price floor: 1) we have almost no data, as those affected are truly poor and therefore have no phone, rendering them beyond the reach of government statisticians. 2) the data we do have is lost in a sea of noise, as the workers thrown out of the job by the minimum wage often join their 1.9 million peers with a job that is exempt from the minimum wage.
2/8/2010 6:45:53 PM
2/8/2010 8:57:07 PM
2/8/2010 10:43:27 PM
My economic plan actually involves elimination of minimum wage but provides an alternative that would be disliked much more by the greedy capitalists that oppose the minimum wage. People who oppose minimum wage for the real problems it can cause the everyday person would probably be happy with it though.
2/9/2010 9:21:23 PM
We don't need another alternative to the minimum wage, we already have one. It is called the Earned Income Tax Credit. Jack that up and instantly all the poor will be richer without sacrificing some of them to die in the street.
2/9/2010 10:43:43 PM
free enterprise: still the only option for succeesss
2/15/2010 1:44:40 PM