A similar "fuck you" should go out to the people who start families despite having low income status.But how do you prevent someone from doing that?
if it wasn't blindingly obvious for anyone else, don't have children if you don't think you can adequately support them.
Who cares if it doesn't require education or anyone could do it given a day or two of training, the person is working and they are doing something productive
Quote from: eggsalad on September 27, 2015, 12:32:02 PMWho cares if it doesn't require education or anyone could do it given a day or two of training, the person is working and they are doing something productiveClearly the economy cares, since the existence of a minimum wage means those jobs are artificially valued above what they're actually worth. You can't just magically make more money appear by raising that minimum wage, and it's not a constraint of capitalism that an increase in the cost of labor will result in an increase in price of goods sold or a decrease in the demand for labor; that's simply how economy works, in any form. So when confronted with the knowledge that, despite not being the intention of said positions, minimum wage is currently "supporting" nearly 5% of all hourly workers, and that itself is an issue due to rising costs of living coupled with a higher expectation of quality of life, what do you believe is a good policy solution?
But go ahead and try to come up with whatever pathetic counter arguments you guys want to.
I honestly think people should be taking more individual responsibility instead of automatically expecting the state to intervene.Don't want to put in the effort for an affluent lifestyle and just want to live a moderately comfortable existence? That's fine. Just don't expect an exuberant standard of living for yourself, and if it wasn't blindingly obvious for anyone else, don't have children if you don't think you can adequately support them.
Quote from: A E S T H E T I C S on September 27, 2015, 12:47:44 PMI guess the appeal to emotions argument was bound to occur at some point ITT.Funnily enough, emotions matter. Workers aren't slaves. They're not robots. They're people with families and lives, pride and dreams. You don't treat people like a statistic as if their well being doesn't matter. People working minimum wage jobs are overworked and underpaid. They're treated like garbage, and their hard work is very, very rarely appreciated. They work a shit ton of hours a week and can barely afford rent. Decent, hard working people. And how are they treated when they want a little more money for their hard work? Like they're greedy scum. When the REAL greedy scum are the ones making hundreds of thousands and even millions of dollars and on top of it getting bonuses, are treated as gods. Fact is you'd rather look after the interests of the ones screwing you than help your brothers live better. Raising the minimum wage needs to come with checks to the welfare system so people don't exploit shit. But that doesn't mean people shouldn't earn more money. I mean, people like you are the type to say "don't live in such an expensive city". Rent for a place in Crenshaw boulevard (a fucking shithole) was $1,000. I saw that recently on the Internet. This is a place where you hear gun shots every night. How is somebody from the ghetto supposed to save money and go to another city or even state? Why should he? It's the same for middle class people. Why should they leave behind everything they know and leave because it's too expensive? You people have no regard for anybody, come up with ridiculous "solutions" that show just how ignorant and detached you are, and you shill for the people fucking everything up.
I guess the appeal to emotions argument was bound to occur at some point ITT.
The people are the state.
Do any of you realize just how many human beings there are on this planet? Not everybody can work at Walmart then become a fucking scientist. The job market is flooded with people as is and your grand solution is to say "well you're not supposed to live off these jobs." Why not? Who's going to work these jobs if everybody and their grandmother become computer scientists after working a minimum wage job for a few months?You people are so detached from reality it's depressing. These jobs need better pay, because they're jobs we're SUPPOSED to respect. You shouldn't have the life quality of a Brazilian slum working minimum wage. It should pay decent enough for people to live a little. To be able to enjoy life. It's easy for those of you fortunate enough to go to college and have parents and a house and stable income to say this because you've never struggled. You've never really starved or been desperate enough to constantly contemplate robbing and selling drugs because you either can't get a job, or if you do it's not enough money for shit. But then, of course, we have people who say "well I was poor and worked hard and yada yada". Not everybody's circumstances are the same. Some people can dig themselves out of that hole, most can't. But go ahead and try to come up with whatever pathetic counter arguments you guys want to. There's no argument to be had. The status quo is fucked, the middle class that decent people have worked so hard for is slowly becoming peasantry again, and you guys are shilling for the people doing this. Fuck you. You fucking house slave.
Quote from: A E S T H E T I C S on September 27, 2015, 01:11:32 PMFirst off, I never denied there was a contemporary social mobility issue.Second, you really think hiking the minimum wage is a viable solution? Where is the reason, where is the evidence? Demonstrate to us why increasing the MW works, don't just whine about the oh-so-poor, oppressed working class. Time and time again astronomically high MW laws have exemplified their ineffectiveness in alleviating poverty, and has instead, created a disemployment due to its damaging effects on small businesses struggling to maintain costs just so they can stay afloat.It's all very nice championing this valiant cause for the poor, but when push comes to shove, implementing actual policies to combat the issue is a very different story. Unless you've got this wonderful magical solution to the problem at hand that doesn't involve bullying businesses into inflating their labour costs, I really don't know what you can bring to the table besides muh poor people need to be paid more."stop bullying the poor business owners""muh small businesses"Your shilling is legendary.
First off, I never denied there was a contemporary social mobility issue.Second, you really think hiking the minimum wage is a viable solution? Where is the reason, where is the evidence? Demonstrate to us why increasing the MW works, don't just whine about the oh-so-poor, oppressed working class. Time and time again astronomically high MW laws have exemplified their ineffectiveness in alleviating poverty, and has instead, created a disemployment due to its damaging effects on small businesses struggling to maintain costs just so they can stay afloat.It's all very nice championing this valiant cause for the poor, but when push comes to shove, implementing actual policies to combat the issue is a very different story. Unless you've got this wonderful magical solution to the problem at hand that doesn't involve bullying businesses into inflating their labour costs, I really don't know what you can bring to the table besides muh poor people need to be paid more.
Quote from: A E S T H E T I C S on September 27, 2015, 01:59:35 PMQuote from: challengerX on September 27, 2015, 01:58:51 PMQuote from: A E S T H E T I C S on September 27, 2015, 01:11:32 PMFirst off, I never denied there was a contemporary social mobility issue.Second, you really think hiking the minimum wage is a viable solution? Where is the reason, where is the evidence? Demonstrate to us why increasing the MW works, don't just whine about the oh-so-poor, oppressed working class. Time and time again astronomically high MW laws have exemplified their ineffectiveness in alleviating poverty, and has instead, created a disemployment due to its damaging effects on small businesses struggling to maintain costs just so they can stay afloat.It's all very nice championing this valiant cause for the poor, but when push comes to shove, implementing actual policies to combat the issue is a very different story. Unless you've got this wonderful magical solution to the problem at hand that doesn't involve bullying businesses into inflating their labour costs, I really don't know what you can bring to the table besides muh poor people need to be paid more."stop bullying the poor business owners""muh small businesses"Your shilling is legendary.So you don't have an argument backed by empirical evidence then, gotcha.This isn't a Harvard debate, it's a forum. Your constant appeal to macroeconomics and raw data statistics has absolutely NOTHING to do with a high cost of living and extremely shitty pay. Frankly, people earning minimum wage shouldn't be taxed at all. Please, explain to me how the status quo is acceptable.
Quote from: challengerX on September 27, 2015, 01:58:51 PMQuote from: A E S T H E T I C S on September 27, 2015, 01:11:32 PMFirst off, I never denied there was a contemporary social mobility issue.Second, you really think hiking the minimum wage is a viable solution? Where is the reason, where is the evidence? Demonstrate to us why increasing the MW works, don't just whine about the oh-so-poor, oppressed working class. Time and time again astronomically high MW laws have exemplified their ineffectiveness in alleviating poverty, and has instead, created a disemployment due to its damaging effects on small businesses struggling to maintain costs just so they can stay afloat.It's all very nice championing this valiant cause for the poor, but when push comes to shove, implementing actual policies to combat the issue is a very different story. Unless you've got this wonderful magical solution to the problem at hand that doesn't involve bullying businesses into inflating their labour costs, I really don't know what you can bring to the table besides muh poor people need to be paid more."stop bullying the poor business owners""muh small businesses"Your shilling is legendary.So you don't have an argument backed by empirical evidence then, gotcha.
Quote from: Tsirist on September 27, 2015, 01:05:02 PMThe people are the state.I'm not really sure what you mean by this presupposition.