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Chuck, do you think increasing the minimum wage will slow down the
illegal immigration across our southern border? Or, will it just become worse? If the situation is so bad, why do we get three million illegals a year? John H I believe an employer should follow all the applicable laws regarding hiring and employment, and that nobody should be expected to work for less than the legal minimum. The minimum wage is a state's right issue, (over and above the $5 something federal requirement), so nobody can say that across the board the miniwage has to be increased. An individual working 40 hours a week ought to be able to, in the spirit of fairness, live an an adequate shelter, enjoy adequate nutrition, and obtain the most fundamental basic necessities of life. Those necessities don't include a new car, (or maybe even any car) a 35" plasma TV, etc.Nobody realistically expects the people on the bottom rung to be awarded a luxurious lifestyle- but if a person is offering his life's energy to an employer it shouldn't fall to society at large to get that person off the street and fed at least a subsistence diet. Our $7 + miniwage around here might sound like a lot of money to somebody living where rents are still $350 a month- but it takes some creative arranging to stretch $14,000 a year in an economy where marginally liveable apartments are $700-1000 a month. Different states and local economies have different costs and pay scales. |