Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]()
posted to alt.sailing.asa
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Frank Boettcher wrote: Much of the cost of having employees these days is the other costs... ins, workers comp, etc. How is that relavent to the discussion? We were discussing costs to employers. Wages are just one of many costs. I'm curious. Working where? I live in the poorest state in the nation and we can't hire fast food workers at minimum. You have positions where you work that would ordinarily be at minimum? In the Bay area? Please expand with details. In the bay area, but not currently, as I'm not in a management position, being self-employed... probably, I'll be staying that way, at least for the next couple of years... pays better, lower stress, more free time. G Sorry, but a lot of them are considered poor. Paying more than the minimum required doesn't ensure they're above the poverty line. The post had nothing to do with the minimum. Had to do with people who choose not to work. They might be poor, but unlike your original comment to Max's post, it is actually their fault. Most poor want to work - most poor do work. The working poor are at fault? Let's see, done this before but I'll try again. You take a job at entry level whatever the scale is you work hard and do well and you move up. You keep working hard and doing well and you keep moving up. When you have a reputation of working hard and doing well, moving up is almost automatic. That's not likely to happen at say McDonalds. Maybe in a factory, but certainly unlikely in a production line. How long do you have to work there before you have a living wage? That's the concept you can't understand, right? That's why you think it is appropriate for individuls to refuse to work, because they can't move up? Huh? I think you're blatherin now. Why should I care whether or not you like my comment. Sure, there are people who choose not to work or refuse to be trained or whatver, but most people want to work. That argument is as old as the hills but continues to be simplistic and inaccurate. You admit that there are people who won't work, then you say the argument is simplistic and "inaccurate". How could it be both true and inaccurate? Because that doesn't address the issue. There are always people who don't act on what is best for them. But, to use that as an argument, leaves out quite a bit. Significant phrase... small percentage... and yes, it's better just to support them as dead weight than to let them die. It's the right thing to do... not everything is required to be beholdin to the bottom line. They called that welfare when it started. Did a great job. became self perpetuating and grew with gusto. After slavery, the greatest disservice that has ever been done to those at the bottom of the rung in this country. I believe Clinton fixed a large part of the welfare problem. But, being a moderate (now called left-wing) he must have been wrong. is. Or figure out how to blame Bush for people refusing to take those jobs or to prepare themselves to take any job. I don't have to .. it's obvious. You do realize that tax dollars from that bottom line are where the so called support you advocate comes from. Or do you? That "bottom line"? Which bottom line? The corporate/Halliburton/ cutting and running offshore bottom line? Just came back from Nashville. Booming. Just came back from Colorado, booming every place I went. Maybe it's just a California thing. You should get out more. Maybe you should. Did you take a poll or just look in the paper for want ads? -- Capt. JG @@ www.sailnow.com |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Flying Pig Damage Assessment and update | Boat Building | |||
Flying Pig Damage Assessment and update | Cruising |