Also, the government hasn't granted a "closed shop" since Taft-Hartley.
10/24/2013 7:11:29 PM
10/24/2013 7:37:53 PM
^multiply that by 1 million people. That's a lot of money saved. Every penny counts. So...you're welcome.
10/25/2013 12:02:06 AM
Those savings don't accrue to one person. One million people removing one million light bulbs from one million refrigerators is still 95 cents saved by each person.I can save enough money over 60 years to take the wife out to a nice lunch at Applebee's and a matinee movie. So, yes, you are correct that every penny counts.
10/25/2013 12:42:45 AM
should I have written additional financial advice to satisfy you? perhaps something that would help poor people save for retirement as well? I'll get a document together and send you the proof for approval before posting it. also, fast food workers shouldn't get $15/hr.
10/25/2013 9:56:45 AM
I agree fast food workers shouldn't get $15/hr. They should unscrew their refrigerator light bulbs--that's like giving yourself a 0.05 cents per hour raise!
10/25/2013 3:04:10 PM
show me a fry chef that makes 15 dollars an hour, and I'll show you an employee that will be replaced by the AutoFry1000 in a year.Most people making minimum wage aren't skilled labor in any sense. I'm not saying they don't work hard, I am however saying that the work in and of itself isn't difficult for someone who actually is willing to do it.15 dollars an hour will start pricing people in the man vs machine price range...
10/26/2013 1:21:30 AM
everything you buy "made in china" is handmade by artisans. yea they're skilled and they can be "retooled" in a few hours over Tsingdaos
10/26/2013 4:18:02 AM
These jobs are going to be replaced by machines in the very near future regardless if we pay them $8 or $15. Higher pay may speed up the process, but the end result is the same, why are we attempting to delay the inevitable? By suppressing wages, giving out welfare (so that workers can survive), and trying to make people competitive with automation we are subsidizing these franchises as they pocket millions.The vast majority of low skill American workers aren't going to be able to out compete automation/machines, just like they weren't able to compete with Bangladeshi child workers or Chinese mega factories.
10/26/2013 10:18:09 AM
Well, they could out-bid the machines if their hands weren't tied by the government. As the price of machines comes down, the workers could negotiate lower wages to keep their jobs, rather than being forced into unemployment to die on the street.
10/26/2013 12:16:26 PM
They could learn to invent / build machines.
10/26/2013 5:24:39 PM
"Hey boss, I would like to negotiate a lower wage." LOL, what a moron.Who's going to buy all the products the machines make when workers have no money because they get paid $3/hr?
10/26/2013 6:12:07 PM
10/26/2013 6:53:03 PM
10/26/2013 8:08:13 PM
I can't believe that I'm watching people seriously argue that businesses should deliberately operate inefficiently.
10/26/2013 9:56:34 PM
10/26/2013 9:58:48 PM
10/26/2013 10:04:30 PM
i was really referring to eschewing automation, but whatever, the same applies to wages.(though sometimes, for some jobs, I think that spending more on wages would pay for itself and then some in company earnings. Not for Wal-Mart cashiers, though (although I do wonder if they would benefit from paying more cashiers the same low wage).[Edited on October 26, 2013 at 10:11 PM. Reason : ^ of course they can, but why would they do that unless there's something in it for them?]
10/26/2013 10:10:45 PM
This one capitalist tycoon, Henry Ford, had this wild idea that if he paid his workers enough money to buy his new car, he would actually sell some cars! He was totally looking out for his profits, though.Only commies would pay more than a minimum they could get away with, but now even in the US the hard-working shareholders have to pay those suckers flippin' dem burgers MORE than the actual market rate, because we got communist Obummer in charge and them dang on librals writing those labor laws and stifling our daggone economy!Why, WHY would ANYONE do something unless they could make a quick buck on it??You people are the embodiment of the capitalist caricatures that were part of the "communist propaganda." You might as well get you a top hat, some monocles, and a walking cane.
10/27/2013 1:37:37 AM
10/27/2013 3:39:45 AM
What about the argument that the economy does better as a whole when workers are laid more money (than they are currently paid)? If we have knowledge on how to so this, why not use it?
10/27/2013 4:33:10 AM
10/27/2013 8:34:33 AM
The total lack of financial literacy and understanding of how money works is a much bigger problem than the minimum wage.The amount of time we piss away on abstinence only "sex ed" or PE would be much better spent on basic personal finance.
10/27/2013 5:24:58 PM
yeah, well, bible
10/27/2013 6:03:28 PM
10/28/2013 12:51:03 AM
10/28/2013 2:00:32 AM
10/28/2013 9:02:43 AM
10/28/2013 9:33:40 AM
So regardless of his motivation, the results of the increased wages was a higher efficiency for organization and increased profitability due to low turnover and employee's greater purchasing power
10/28/2013 1:27:18 PM
you are making a conclusion that you haven't supported; provide evidence showing that increased efficiency is due in any part to the purchasing power of the employee and not solely due to reduced turnover
10/28/2013 1:32:02 PM
10/28/2013 2:53:38 PM
^Ok, ownership of home can be substituted by any other significant and reliable investment that requires low maintenance from financial point of view, and would allow them to live somewhere through the older years when they are unable to work, or build enough equity to provide for basic living expenses during retirement years. Or maybe Hiro has a better even better path to home ownership in mind, which will allow this family to bypass the mortgage all together. You know, so these guys don't have to be enslaved to their bankers.[Edited on October 28, 2013 at 11:53 PM. Reason : /]
10/28/2013 11:53:40 PM
I don't see a reason for government bureaucrats to get involved, here. We shouldn't make flipping burgers a comfortable job for people to do for a long time.
10/29/2013 1:27:28 AM
If flipping burgers isn't a viable job then who do you expect to operate the tens of thousands of quick service restaurants that grace our majestic lands?
10/29/2013 2:13:42 AM
^http://www.psfk.com/2012/11/burger-making-robot.html
10/29/2013 8:23:08 AM
10/30/2013 9:52:19 AM
There's nothing wrong with renting.Also no one "flips" burgers at these places. [Edited on October 30, 2013 at 9:59 AM. Reason : B]
10/30/2013 9:56:52 AM
10/30/2013 11:15:47 AM
That logic is so terribly flawed.We aren't subsidizing Wal-Mart's profits, we are subsidizing that person's laziness, stupidity, ineptitude, or decision not to pay attention in school, or whatever excuse they have for working a minimum wage job. Wal-Mart doesn't have some moral obligation to provide anyone a comfortable living. What they do owe them is a fair wage based on the value their labor provides. If you're only doing $8/hour worth of work you shouldn't be provided $12/hour in wages.Furthermore, if we did just force an arbitrary wage rate hike it would be passed on to consumers. Unless you feel like capping profit margins, in which case you'll shutter a lot of businesses. Most retailers operate on a remarkably small profit margin as it is, so monkeying with large controllable expenses can do massive damage to even large businesses if they don't have a much in the way of profit margin. What's more, is that as Wal-Mart and other retailers continue to face more and more competition from Amazon and other online retailers who can operate at even lower margins because of their much lower operating costs there is even less that they can afford to absorb in expenses and remain price competitive.
10/30/2013 12:08:32 PM
10/30/2013 12:22:01 PM
10/30/2013 12:26:30 PM
10/30/2013 12:35:03 PM
10/30/2013 1:11:52 PM
that's why we need to remove unemployment entirely
10/30/2013 1:36:15 PM
Laws of Supply and Demand apply to wages as well.If Wal-Mart, McDonalds, et al. could not sufficiently staff their stores, then they would have to adjust their compensation to attract employees. This would affect their prices too.I get the argument that government is subsidizing the minimum wage workforce, but what is the fix?Arbitrarily raising the minimum wage doesn't fix anything...it just kicks the can a little farther down the road. Prices of nearly every good or service are affected by the minimum wage (especially union wages), thereby raising the cost of living.
10/30/2013 1:51:28 PM
10/30/2013 6:13:39 PM
^So is Walmart hiring only robots and zombies?
10/30/2013 6:35:05 PM
jesus fucking christ
10/30/2013 7:49:18 PM
10/30/2013 8:04:50 PM
10/30/2013 8:40:55 PM