JHZR2
Staff member
Originally Posted By: ZZman
Originally Posted By: JHZR2
So to respond to the second part of the commentary, dont they deserve a decent wage... They surely do. And they surely get it. Work at McDonalds for $7.25 an hour and over the standard 2087hr man-year, you bring in $15130. That's above the poverty line for a family of two from here:
http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/11poverty.shtml
Does it mean it will go far? Absolutely not! But it means that someone earning $20/hr, roughly $40k/yr is WELL above the poverty line. So define decent wage? Does this mean a roof over your head and nutritious food in the stomach? If so, it is doable. If it is supposed to mean 20 MPG car an cell and cable and 74 in the winter and 65 in the summer, perhaps we have a little bit of a discrepancy.
It may mean discomfort and a lot of hard work to move from those conditions, but hard work is what it takes. Settle into the modern "I deserve it" mindset, and the work that is being performed goes nowhere but to the marketers and make them rich.
A little more Dave Ramsey, a little less MTV, IMO.
So poverty is our line huh? Maybe you think $ 7.25 an hour is doable and living but I don't. I call that surviving not living. Maybe for a kid in school or a second income for a spouse maybe.
A decent wage in my opinion would be at a bare minimum $ 10.00 an hour with benefits for one person. Much higher if you are raising a family.
So nice to talk about the poverty line and surviving when some CEO's make more in a one day than the average American makes in a year. Or in this case more in a few hours than poverty people make in a year.
If hard work means college degrees than many will never make it. If hard work means hard work than many do that already working 2-3 jobs to try and get by and live a fairly comfortable life. Yes having a car, cell phone, cable does make life more comfortable. That may mean a ratty car and cheap cell phone. It is no fun having nothing and watching others have theirs.
Where did I say that at $7.25 an hour they would expect the lap of luxury? I didnt.
Nor did I say it was good/right for a CEO's 40 hours to be worth thousands of times their laborer's wage.
You are saying bare minimum is $10/hr? I was hinting at $20/hr to be more like it... And that gets you a roof over the head and food on the table. I know people in NJ, a very expensive state, getting by on $40k a year, which is roughly $20/hr.
Do they live in the lap of luxury? No. But nobody deserves luxury. That has been my point all along. Everyone should have nutritious (not processed) food and a roof over their heads. Some level of heat in the winter. Not necessarily even AC. Beyond that most everything is a luxury. Heck, living in the suburbs miles away from one's job is a luxury. Did people do that 200 years ago?
So beyond that it is all about how one manages their money, works hard to move up in life and in situation. That may mean saving harder than the next guy and working harder than him too. So be it. There are no guarantees.
But the reality is this. CEOs making excessive compensation, especially when offshoring US jobs is IMO wrong. Excessive downward pressure on wages because of the threat of offshoring is wrong. But the benefit, especially in the USA, is that if you do work hard, with good ethic, then you will do "well". Maybe that means being able to afford a car and a microwave (people were happy with those two 30 years ago). Maybe a cellphone and basic cable. Maybe more. If you are the best darn ____________ (insert vocation here), even if not college-degreed, you will do well. Machinists, tool and die experts, plumbers, electricians, etc. all can do quite well.
Nobody can help the next guy if they dont have the aptitude or capability to be the best in their field.
If one machinsit was better than the other, would you also advocate that the better machinist be given less pay so that the worse one can have a more decent wage?
Originally Posted By: JHZR2
So to respond to the second part of the commentary, dont they deserve a decent wage... They surely do. And they surely get it. Work at McDonalds for $7.25 an hour and over the standard 2087hr man-year, you bring in $15130. That's above the poverty line for a family of two from here:
http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/11poverty.shtml
Does it mean it will go far? Absolutely not! But it means that someone earning $20/hr, roughly $40k/yr is WELL above the poverty line. So define decent wage? Does this mean a roof over your head and nutritious food in the stomach? If so, it is doable. If it is supposed to mean 20 MPG car an cell and cable and 74 in the winter and 65 in the summer, perhaps we have a little bit of a discrepancy.
It may mean discomfort and a lot of hard work to move from those conditions, but hard work is what it takes. Settle into the modern "I deserve it" mindset, and the work that is being performed goes nowhere but to the marketers and make them rich.
A little more Dave Ramsey, a little less MTV, IMO.
So poverty is our line huh? Maybe you think $ 7.25 an hour is doable and living but I don't. I call that surviving not living. Maybe for a kid in school or a second income for a spouse maybe.
A decent wage in my opinion would be at a bare minimum $ 10.00 an hour with benefits for one person. Much higher if you are raising a family.
So nice to talk about the poverty line and surviving when some CEO's make more in a one day than the average American makes in a year. Or in this case more in a few hours than poverty people make in a year.
If hard work means college degrees than many will never make it. If hard work means hard work than many do that already working 2-3 jobs to try and get by and live a fairly comfortable life. Yes having a car, cell phone, cable does make life more comfortable. That may mean a ratty car and cheap cell phone. It is no fun having nothing and watching others have theirs.
Where did I say that at $7.25 an hour they would expect the lap of luxury? I didnt.
Nor did I say it was good/right for a CEO's 40 hours to be worth thousands of times their laborer's wage.
You are saying bare minimum is $10/hr? I was hinting at $20/hr to be more like it... And that gets you a roof over the head and food on the table. I know people in NJ, a very expensive state, getting by on $40k a year, which is roughly $20/hr.
Do they live in the lap of luxury? No. But nobody deserves luxury. That has been my point all along. Everyone should have nutritious (not processed) food and a roof over their heads. Some level of heat in the winter. Not necessarily even AC. Beyond that most everything is a luxury. Heck, living in the suburbs miles away from one's job is a luxury. Did people do that 200 years ago?
So beyond that it is all about how one manages their money, works hard to move up in life and in situation. That may mean saving harder than the next guy and working harder than him too. So be it. There are no guarantees.
But the reality is this. CEOs making excessive compensation, especially when offshoring US jobs is IMO wrong. Excessive downward pressure on wages because of the threat of offshoring is wrong. But the benefit, especially in the USA, is that if you do work hard, with good ethic, then you will do "well". Maybe that means being able to afford a car and a microwave (people were happy with those two 30 years ago). Maybe a cellphone and basic cable. Maybe more. If you are the best darn ____________ (insert vocation here), even if not college-degreed, you will do well. Machinists, tool and die experts, plumbers, electricians, etc. all can do quite well.
Nobody can help the next guy if they dont have the aptitude or capability to be the best in their field.
If one machinsit was better than the other, would you also advocate that the better machinist be given less pay so that the worse one can have a more decent wage?