Do you believe Americans who work full time should earn a living wage?

Do you believe Americans who work full time should earn a living wage?


  • Total voters
    56

ItzWordzHo

New Member
what's the matter, benis?

are you bitter that the horse's cock isn;t up your loose, prolapsed asshole, do you yearn for the days when you could even get an erection on your own, or does the image evoke some confusing internal feelings for ya?

whatever the case is, eat a dick you shitbag racist piece of white trash.
dawg uncle ben was rapping like a protester, what a black fag
 

AlecTheGardener

Well-Known Member
that's the type of attitude to have if you want dishonest, unloyal employees who steal from you and are unreliable.

not the best way to run any business, not even the imaginary one that you want us all to believe you have.
Trimmers get paid TOP dollar, why would a business do it any other way? Makes great business sense, always have highest quality employee, retention, product and 'loyalty.' Paying more is one of the best things a well running business can do.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Trimmers get paid TOP dollar, why would a business do it any other way? Makes great business sense, always have highest quality employee, retention, product and 'loyalty.' Paying more is one of the best things a well running business can do.
that's how we always did it in oregon, i haven't checked to see what colorado is paying trimmers. probably only $9 an hour if i had to guess.
 

AlecTheGardener

Well-Known Member
that's how we always did it in oregon, i haven't checked to see what colorado is paying trimmers. probably only $9 an hour if i had to guess.
And if they didn't have the surveillance those kids would rob them of a quarter of what they trim.

Everyone from top to bottom deserves a working wage. I do it. My father does it. My step-father does it. Paying more is the best thing a successful business to do to improve themselves Immediately and lastingly.
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
You have been answered, you don`t like the answer cuz you judge need proof of something or you can`t function. If you are asking, how will you know the correct answer or even if the evidence is correct ? You don`t and want your answer and nothing else.
"All agree that our extreme inequality is not the inevitable result of globalization or technology. It is the result of policy and power. The rules have been rigged. No one reform offers an answer; broad reforms are needed."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-emerging-populist-agenda/2015/05/12/525ad83e-f7f9-11e4-a13c-193b1241d51a_story.html?tid=rssfeed
Nobody is denying the science behind that warming scam
LOL! Just for you dimbulb:


You don't know what the fuck you're talking about, and everybody reading this knows it
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
"Since the 1980s, we've been redistributing wealth upwards thanks to neoliberal ideology. We were told that giving the wealthy a bigger piece of the pie would make the pie bigger for everyone. But all they managed to do with that redistributed wealth was shrink the rate at which the pie grew.

It's time we admit that this experiment in upward redistribution has failed, and increase the taxes on those who had their taxes decreased courtesy of this economic farce.

Following WWII, there was a rapid growth in progressive taxation and social welfare spending in most of the rich capitalist countries. Despite this (or rather partly because of this), the period between 1950 and 1973 saw the highest-ever growth rates in these countries – known as the "Golden Age of Capitalism."

Before the Golden Age, per capita income in the rich capitalist economies used to grow at 1–1.5% per year. During the Golden Age, it grew at 2–3% in the US and Britain, 4–5% in Western Europe, and 8% in Japan. Since then, these countries have never managed to grow faster than that. When growth slowed down in the rich capitalist economies from the mid 1970s, however, the free-marketeers dusted off their nineteenth-century rhetoric and managed to convince others that the reduction in the share of the income going to the investing class was the reason for the slowdown.

Since the 1980s, in many (although not all) of these countries, governments that espouse upward income redistribution have ruled most of the time. Even some so-called left-wing parties, such as Britain’s New Labour under Tony Blair and the American Democratic Party under Bill Clinton, openly advocated such a strategy – the high point being Bill Clinton introducing his welfare reform in 1996, declaring that he wanted to "end welfare as we know it."

In the event, trimming the welfare state down proved more difficult than initially thought. However, its growth has been moderated, despite the structural pressure for greater welfare spending due to the ageing of the population, which increases the need for pensions, disability allowances, healthcare and other spending directed to the elderly. More importantly, in most countries there were also many policies that ended up redistributing income from the poor to the rich. There have been tax cuts for the rich – top income-tax rates were brought down. Financial deregulation has created huge opportunities for speculative gains as well as astronomical paychecks for top managers and financiers. Deregulation in other areas has also allowed companies to make bigger profits, not least because they were more able to exploit their monopoly powers, more freely pollute the environment and more readily sack workers. Increased trade liberalization and increased foreign investment – or at least the threat of them – have also put downward pressure on wages.

As a result, income inequality has increased in most rich countries. For example, according to the ILO, of the twenty advanced economies for which data was available, between 1990 and 2000 income inequality rose in sixteen countries, with only Switzerland among the remaining four experiencing a significant fall. During this period, income inequality in the US, already by far the highest in the rich world, rose to a level comparable to that of some Latin American countries such as Uruguay and Venezuela. The relative increase in income inequality was also high in countries such as Finland, Sweden and Belgium, but these were countries that previously had very low levels of inequality – perhaps too low in the case of Finland, which had an even more equal income distribution than many of the former socialist countries.

According to the Economic Policy Institute, between 1979 and 2006, the top 1% of earners in the US more than doubled their share of national income, from 10% to 22.9%. The top 0.1% did even better, increasing their share by more than three times, from 3.5% in 1979 to 11.6% in 2006. This was mainly because of the astronomical increase in executive pay in the country, whose lack of justification is increasingly becoming obvious in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis (see above about shareholder value maximization). Of the sixty-five developing and former socialist countries covered in the above-mentioned ILO study, income inequality rose in forty-one countries during the same period. While the proportion of countries experiencing rising inequality among them was smaller than for the rich countries, many of these countries already had very high inequality, so the impacts of rising inequality were even worse than in the rich countries."

http://www.reddit.com/r/politics/comments/35tlic/the_emerging_populist_agenda_all_agree_that_our/
 

Harrekin

Well-Known Member
"Since the 1980s, we've been redistributing wealth upwards thanks to neoliberal ideology. We were told that giving the wealthy a bigger piece of the pie would make the pie bigger for everyone. But all they managed to do with that redistributed wealth was shrink the rate at which the pie grew.

It's time we admit that this experiment in upward redistribution has failed, and increase the taxes on those who had their taxes decreased courtesy of this economic farce.

Following WWII, there was a rapid growth in progressive taxation and social welfare spending in most of the rich capitalist countries. Despite this (or rather partly because of this), the period between 1950 and 1973 saw the highest-ever growth rates in these countries – known as the "Golden Age of Capitalism."

Before the Golden Age, per capita income in the rich capitalist economies used to grow at 1–1.5% per year. During the Golden Age, it grew at 2–3% in the US and Britain, 4–5% in Western Europe, and 8% in Japan. Since then, these countries have never managed to grow faster than that. When growth slowed down in the rich capitalist economies from the mid 1970s, however, the free-marketeers dusted off their nineteenth-century rhetoric and managed to convince others that the reduction in the share of the income going to the investing class was the reason for the slowdown.

Since the 1980s, in many (although not all) of these countries, governments that espouse upward income redistribution have ruled most of the time. Even some so-called left-wing parties, such as Britain’s New Labour under Tony Blair and the American Democratic Party under Bill Clinton, openly advocated such a strategy – the high point being Bill Clinton introducing his welfare reform in 1996, declaring that he wanted to "end welfare as we know it."

In the event, trimming the welfare state down proved more difficult than initially thought. However, its growth has been moderated, despite the structural pressure for greater welfare spending due to the ageing of the population, which increases the need for pensions, disability allowances, healthcare and other spending directed to the elderly. More importantly, in most countries there were also many policies that ended up redistributing income from the poor to the rich. There have been tax cuts for the rich – top income-tax rates were brought down. Financial deregulation has created huge opportunities for speculative gains as well as astronomical paychecks for top managers and financiers. Deregulation in other areas has also allowed companies to make bigger profits, not least because they were more able to exploit their monopoly powers, more freely pollute the environment and more readily sack workers. Increased trade liberalization and increased foreign investment – or at least the threat of them – have also put downward pressure on wages.

As a result, income inequality has increased in most rich countries. For example, according to the ILO, of the twenty advanced economies for which data was available, between 1990 and 2000 income inequality rose in sixteen countries, with only Switzerland among the remaining four experiencing a significant fall. During this period, income inequality in the US, already by far the highest in the rich world, rose to a level comparable to that of some Latin American countries such as Uruguay and Venezuela. The relative increase in income inequality was also high in countries such as Finland, Sweden and Belgium, but these were countries that previously had very low levels of inequality – perhaps too low in the case of Finland, which had an even more equal income distribution than many of the former socialist countries.

According to the Economic Policy Institute, between 1979 and 2006, the top 1% of earners in the US more than doubled their share of national income, from 10% to 22.9%. The top 0.1% did even better, increasing their share by more than three times, from 3.5% in 1979 to 11.6% in 2006. This was mainly because of the astronomical increase in executive pay in the country, whose lack of justification is increasingly becoming obvious in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis (see above about shareholder value maximization). Of the sixty-five developing and former socialist countries covered in the above-mentioned ILO study, income inequality rose in forty-one countries during the same period. While the proportion of countries experiencing rising inequality among them was smaller than for the rich countries, many of these countries already had very high inequality, so the impacts of rising inequality were even worse than in the rich countries."

http://www.reddit.com/r/politics/comments/35tlic/the_emerging_populist_agenda_all_agree_that_our/
Oh, an opinion piece from Reddit.

You found your smoking gun there Paddywhacker.
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
You mean physics?

In peer reviewed journals.
Any evidence to support or defend any of the nonsensical theories you and the other financial white knights of Wal-Mart have been espousing in this thread

If you want to talk climate change, you'll first have to explain what you would accept as legitimate evidence, but for some strange reason, you can't seem to do that..

I wonder (I don't wonder) why...
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Sure, I'll cite a multi-year study by a sales manager/trainer/store manager with 15 years of firsthand experience in the retail environment and car business. He was so proficient at sales and customer service, that he retired at age 37. I'd like to introduce you to me.
Maybe it's because 90% of minimum wage workers fail on 100% of those standards. .
I carried both your posts into this one because you have short term memory problems. OK, bring it, bring your source that cites those statistics regarding the work ethics of minimum wage earners. But you are going to reply with some asshat statement instead.
 

MuyLocoNC

Well-Known Member
I carried both your posts into this one because you have short term memory problems. OK, bring it, bring your source that cites those statistics regarding the work ethics of minimum wage earners. But you are going to reply with some asshat statement instead.
Asked already and answered.

My source is me. There isn't another entity on this earth in a better position to comment on this subject. Unless you have a source that can refute my numbers, we'll be using my first hand experience.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Asked already and answered.

My source is me. There isn't another entity on this earth in a better position to comment on this subject. Unless you have a source that can refute my numbers, we'll be using my first hand experience.
Came right out of your ass, just like I thought. You couldn't just come out and say it the first time.
 

potroastV2

Well-Known Member
Asked already and answered.

My source is me. There isn't another entity on this earth in a better position to comment on this subject. Unless you have a source that can refute my numbers, we'll be using my first hand experience.

Many of us recognize grandiose delusions as an indicator of mental instability.

:mrgreen:
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Paddy and Schu are a prime example of how people end up thinking when Government handouts become expected and they steal money from others that have earned it, to give out to someone else. Just like those CEO`s do, Right Paddy ?

Where does the money for handouts from the government come from,...trees, no, people that already earned it but got it taken away. Right Schu ??
what part of 'the system is rigged' do you not get?..seriously? are you a 1%'er? or are you sucking off a 1%er's teat? which is it?
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
what part of 'the system is rigged' do you not get?..seriously? are you a 1%'er? or are you sucking off a 1%er's teat? which is it?
He thinks globalization and technology sprang up overnight in 1978, and that's why 93% of the economic growth created through worker productivity should go to tippy top portion of the population who own corporations

He supports outright theft of workers surplus labor, but when workers demand compensation then it becomes a government handout..

So that pretty much says enough about him already. He hasn't given these ideas very much thought
 

Harrekin

Well-Known Member
Any evidence to support or defend any of the nonsensical theories you and the other financial white knights of Wal-Mart have been espousing in this thread

If you want to talk climate change, you'll first have to explain what you would accept as legitimate evidence, but for some strange reason, you can't seem to do that..

I wonder (I don't wonder) why...
Did I not already ask you for a peer reviewed physics paper on the exact mechanism behind the planet's alleged greenhouse effect?

Reputable source, not Reddit posts please and no Wikipedia.
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
Did I not already ask you for a peer reviewed physics paper on the exact mechanism behind the planet's alleged greenhouse effect?

Reputable source, not Reddit posts please and no Wikipedia.
Yeah, I asked you what you would consider as legitimate evidence?

Is the only guideline that it has to be a "peer reviewed physics paper"?

Will you accept it as evidence then?
 

MuyLocoNC

Well-Known Member
Came right out of your ass, just like I thought. You couldn't just come out and say it the first time.
Actually, I did come out and say it. Apparently, you needed it repeated. Fifteen years of first hand knowledge and experience working side by side, managing and training the very people we're discussing doesn't lend credibility to my position? But, a couple professors with a preconceived agenda, that have zero real world experience in that environment, patch together some bullshit "study" and you'll do backflips touting their horseshit.

Yeah, I'll take experience over liberal bullshit, any day.
 
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