matthew wrote:
Bob......would you please stop with this "magical mystical thinking", please?..........you have to leave such decisions up to employers. An ethical employer will compensate both according to market value, and in turn people will want to come to work for them.
You're making some pretty heavy generalizations here. Your argument relies on what you consider an 'ethical employer', which I think is a bunk term. You may consider this 'shrewd employer,' this 'business savy employer' ethical, but I don't. Your 'ethical employer' pays whats fair in relation to what everyone else is paying. Mine, and I assume that I'm speaking as just another leftie on the forum, pays what is necessary for food, shelter, and medical care. Remember, matthew, being right doesn't always mean being popular. You should have learned that in CCD.
Now, stay with me here. Let's work with your definition of what you consider to be an ethical employer.
You haven't considered the fact that, in a given market:
a) there could possibly be no ethical employers
This could be perfectly possible, say in a small town where the number of businesses has dwindled thanks to everyone's favorite discount nation wide chain. There is less competition for business, and thus less competition for labor.
b) that, in a given market there could be less ethical employers than unethical ones.
Now this question puts a loop in your shit---what if fair market value were too low? What if only a few companies (herein after to be called companies A) paid what what i would consider to be a just price for their labor, while everyone else (herein after companies B) didn't? You couldn't assume that people would just quit and go work with companies A, this is a job market, there are only a limited number of positions that these companies can hire. This is also what you don't understand about being poor. There world is not a one dimensional place, and there's a matter of scale that you're paying absolutely no mind to. A guy on wall street quitting his job with an unfair employer risks much less than a poor guy who decides to do the same thing.
Therefore, the poorer guy is much less apt to haul ass on a company who's fucking him because he needs the job more. Two or three weeks unemployment to a guy with a big savings account isn't the end of the world. It is to someone who doesn't have one. They end up at your soup kitchen, matthew, guys who you think weigh too much to be waiting in line for free food on christmas. What makes you think they didn't think the same thing, anyways?
As far as those employers who compensate way below market value (which is what an unjust wage is, to answer your question)....well....leave it up to the market;
Why leave it up to the market? Why leave it up to an uncontrollable, fragile thing? Why not just set a fair baseline? Remember, these are people, not penny stocks we're talking about.
A lot of people are obviously making an argument that you're not even prepared to examine. You admitting that there should be a minimum wage at all, however small, would make me very happy.
most people except mostly losers who have closed the doors on themselves jobwise will in turn gravitate away from such employers and their jobs.
This is a blanket statement, that given your proposed economic and social background, is ridiculous for you to make.
matthew wrote:And as for a person who attempts to live comfortably on an income which does not not permit such, well........GO GET SOME BETTER OR MORE DESIRABLE JOB SKILLS AND QUALIFICATIONS THEN!
This is not an answer to my question. I didn't say that people didn't have the chance to elevate themselves out of a minimum wage job.
So we can agree that they actually do have a chance, given a little ambition right?
Clocker bob's agreement that poor people can become not poor anymore doesn't mean anything matthew, and I don't see why you would even make a statement like that. However, your adding 'just a little ambition,' will not solve any poverty crisis, anywhere. And instead of you seeing that as a flaw with your own ideology, you see it as a flaw with an entire group of people. That you are right and millions of people are wrong. Your ego is catostrophically huge.
I said there will always be a wide sector of minimum wage labor in this country, some staffed by people who do the work for a short time...
As it should be in most cases since such jobs are not meant for supporting one's self. Are you going to play a 45 year old with a wife and three kids who is a crappy worker 22 and change per hour 40 hours per week to scoop ice cream cones at Baskin Robbins while you pay a 16 year old who is much more industrious $7.50 per hour? I'd walk if I were that kid.
Again, you're putting your own prejudices into arguments. Your employer's are always 'ethical,' its the worker's fault for working in poor condition because 'they could just quit.' Your 45 year old wife with three kids is a 'crappy worker,' and your little 16 year old (I'm guessing he's white, right) is much more industrious.
First of all, I would expect the kid to scoop a few more cones of ice cream per day. He doesn't have three kids! Of course he can work harder, he doesn't have to do it all day? Why don't you pay your 45 year old worker more so she doesn't leave the job? She's 45 years old and working at baskin robbins! If she's got that kind of balls then she definitely deserves more money. i'd like to see you do that now, matthew.
And if this little shitass kid thinks he can walk just because things aren't going his way, then fuck it, hell yes pay him less!
..some for a long time, but in either case, there is a population of people staffing these jobs. although not the same people, month in and month out. For those people, while they hold those jobs, are they deserving of a living wage or not?
They are deserving of whatever the market says their job is worth. We can both agree that they have an opportunity to advance themselves and move on, and in the event that they fall on genuine hardship, there are charitable people and institutions who will always be there.
Oh please, matthew, you're getting really weak here. Why not let the government take care of that? Fuck it! Its either them or the government, right? Well the government can put them on food stamps, just pay taxes! The government can give them transportation to work! Just pay taxes! Why even fucking worry about charities? Give them a fair fucking minimum wage and you won't have to donate to any!
You see, your theory that menial labor must be undercompensated
No. I have not said that. I've only said that menial jobs by legitimate employers generally are worth whatever the market says they are worth, which is not a lot in our economy.
If you could, please define what you mean by market I think you're falling back on the word a little too much "oh that'll just be fixed by the market." "oh that'll be determined by the market." That doesn't really fly, man. You're making these really simple observations that aren't really saying anything.
...to provide an incentive for people to leave menial labor is corrupt.
That's just a coincidental effect of economic realities. You wanna alter reality? Go ahead and try....the market will correct you in the end, and in the end.
See! You're not even christian! This market is a law of nature for you! There is no truth for you other than capitalism, its true. You're so weird, matthew! I love this! This 'market' is a magic word for you to dish out to all these other fucks, isn't? Economics is really hard for those with doctorates in the subject to understand, so its hard to understand for all these other guys, too, isn't it? No one can really argue with you about it because no one is really sure what it is! You will one day understand that the rich stay rich be keeping other people down, and themselves aloft. There is no good to having that much money.
It is not your right to cheat them in the present because you have the smug attitude that you can propel them into your hypothetical future by doing so. You must pay them what they are worth to their employer today.
And all ethical legitimate employers will compensate them according to the market value of their job.
I'm sure I said something about this above. Once again, your terms are really shakey.
Employers love this myth that their menial workforce is a transient workforce, so therefore, depressed wages are acceptable.
Generally it is a transient workforce because.......once again......THAT IS THE MARKET WORKING. The market says that most people who work such jobs don't stick around long- they are mostly teenagers/young adults, adults who lack basic job skills, and retired adults who want some supplemental income (my father is one example). The only people who flip burgers at McDonald's or pump gas for 20 years and try to make ends meet from such jobs are people with no ambition.
Don't bring your dad into this. I seriously doubt that he's a greeter in wal-mart. Be serious and don't try to play into something you're not. Once again, you're making huge blanket statements for a sector of the population whom you haven't dealt with on any real basis.
matthew wrote:Let me elaborate a little bit about why I don't believe in an ABSOLUTE STANDARD WAGE. Essentially it is because both the cost of living and the cost of running a business varies a great deal depending upon where you are, and strictly for businesses.
No kidding. That's why it's a state issue. You're hiding from your original statement again- why is matthew wauck, who wrote that the minimum wage should be $0.00, telling me the that it is difficult to make a minimum wage fit the region or the industry? You say make it $0.00. That's easy to fit into any jobmarket or region of the country.
Not only is it easy and non-invasive, it's a hell of alot more realistic than setting a wage standard according to some statistical abstraction!
"Some statistical abstraction?" Like your "market," perhaps?
I want to (re)elaborate that I see few parallels between your "market" and our actual capitalist job market. In fact I think your economic understanding goes as far as People Should Go to College and How to Write a Check.
Seriously, matthew, though your views do contribute to a National Problem, I am a softie at heart and admire the fact that you're so full of yourself that you've been dishing out bullshit left and right and haven't even flinched. The reamings Steve Albini have given you! Brilliant matthew! i hope one day you grow up and get your head on straight, and I hope that you learn to try to be a little more flexible and forgiving.