3chordcharlie
Diamond Member
- Mar 30, 2004
- 9,859
- 1
- 81
What's it's purpose, then?
-John
Alkemyst already told you that.
What's it's purpose, then?
-John
What's it's purpose, then?
-John
You have completely forgotten what made America great.Are you serious?
It's to prevent all companies from setting the bar at $1/hr or less for work.
You realize they would end up getting people to work if that was the only wage available.
Crime and other things would spiral out of control to make up that missing money.
There is a big reason crime is prevailant at lower incomes, sadly it's sometimes just about putting food on the table.
In the end though, if people accepted their status in life and lived more communally they'd be a lot better off. However, everyone thinks they deserve a big screen TV, a LV or Gucci bag, iPhone and a nice laptop.
My wife's coworkers shared a 6 or 7 bedroom house. It was about 12-14 people living in it (I am sure the neighbors loved that)...they got it for a steal renting it as the previous owners gutted a lot of it.
I couldn't handle living in it and I thought it was interesting until I found out they were all maxed out on credit cards, leasing higher end cars, everyone had a 50" or larger TV in their bedrooms and most had two laptops.
Fuckers got robbed one day (probably by someone else in their circle of friends) and the cops were questioning people about the number of TV's and computers at one physical address.
They also lost 'custom glassware' and scientific scales worth a few thousand dollars.
The kicker: NO INSURANCE...they expected the State of Florida / Police to cover them.
The poor fuck themselves.
The main problem is you are not flexible on where you can live. Its probably going to be a nasty area with bad schools, neighbors and crime. Unless you have the luxory of staying with relatives.
What i really dont like is how people who dont need it seem to get it and people who do, don't.
We just need a clear mission amd staffing that can consistantly deliver on that through the application process
Minimum wage in practice is for labor that a chimpanzee can do after losing most of its brain stem, so if I could hire a high school kid to dunk fries at such and such an hour why would I hire an older person doing the same task at more per hour?the uk does something that makes sense, depending on your age, there are different minimum wages.
this means that your high school equivalent gets paid less than a 18 year old student who gets paid less than your 25 year old uneducated but needs to make a living adult.
it makes it more possible for businesses to hire younger workers for reduced wages and allows a realistic minimum wage to be set for those who need to make a living.
the best idea i have heard so far though is from a post somewhere in this thread, base minimum wage on the fiscal health of the company. Walmart can afford to pay people more, the mom and pop shop cannot.
Minimum wage in practice is for labor that a chimpanzee can do after losing most of its brain stem, so if I could hire a high school kid to dunk fries at such and such an hour why would I hire an older person doing the same task at more per hour?
It's amazing how so few people in this thread don't realize that minimum wage is a) only what a tiny fraction of workers actually get and b) heavily biased toward young people using it for spending money and old folk supplementing their income. Few people do actually use it to live for years on end.
I almost fall out of my chair every time I see someone claim minimum wage jobs are mostly for high school kids. I'm guessing a lot of forum members have lived very sheltered lives in the wealthy suburbs.
I almost fall out of my chair every time I see someone claim minimum wage jobs are mostly for high school kids. I'm guessing a lot of forum members have lived very sheltered lives in the wealthy suburbs.
I grew up in a rural town in Southwestern Virginia and most (60%-75%) of the people who worked for minimum wage were teenagers/high school kids. I went to work full time in a grocery store after I graduated (1976) for almost double the minimum wage.
I grew up in a rural town in Southwestern Virginia and most (60%-75%) of the people who worked for minimum wage were teenagers/high school kids. I went to work full time in a grocery store after I graduated (1976) for almost double the minimum wage.
Indeed. There are actually a lot more poor people than anyone wants to admit.Demographics are showing people are lucky to secure $25/HR of household income.
Demographics are showing people are lucky to secure $25/HR of household income.
$25/hr is how many times the minimum wage?
40 years ago is a bit different than today.
Demographics are showing people are lucky to secure $25/HR of household income.
Indeed. There are actually a lot more poor people than anyone wants to admit.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_income_in_the_United_States
"Of those individuals with income who were older than 25 years of age, over 42% had incomes below $25,000 while the top 10% had incomes exceeding $82,500 a year."
Let that sink in for a second. If you make over 82.5k per year as an individual, you're technically in the top 10% of the entire US. ~40% of Americans over the age of 25 are working bullshit McDonalds jobs. No joke. The median family income in the US is around $50k, so basically the median family in the US is 2 parents working the night shift at Walmart.
I grew up in a rural town in Southwestern Virginia and most (60%-75%) of the people who worked for minimum wage were teenagers/high school kids. I went to work full time in a grocery store after I graduated (1976) for almost double the minimum wage.
That $50k income is also reported as a median. It's much HIGHER than the real average.
I'm thinking 1976 is the key word here.
That grocery store probably doesn't exist anymore because they've been put out of business by the Always Low Prices at Wal Mart.
Now the teenagers aren't working and their parents are doing the minimum wage jobs, because the real jobs went to China, making crap for that same Wal Mart.
A few rich people like Bill Gates and Warren Buffet can completely throw the average so it's much higher than the median.
That grocery store probably doesn't exist anymore because they've been put out of business by the Always Low Prices at Wal Mart.
What's that mean in dollars and cents? It means that buying the same items that you might buy once a week, is costing you more at every store in our survey.
$4.34 more at Kroger. $2.47 more at HEB. $5.25 more at Wal-Mart.
