Thursday, December 5, 2013

I should know better than to read the comments on anything

I wasted a fair amount of time today wading into the stupid on the Intertubes. One of the major news stories and ongoing themes on Facebook and in the blogosphere was the nation-wide fast food workers strike. The stupid, it runs deep. I'm lucky I didn't drown.

There are two major refrains that always run through any discussion of upping wages for the folks doing the scut work for society. The first comes from employers whining that it will mean raising prices and that's going to kill business. Here's a news flash for all you McDonald's/Subway/Burger King franchise owners: if the minimum wage goes up, it doesn't just go up for your store alone -- it goes up for everyone. The playing field is still level.

The second piece of stupidity that gets repeated ad nauseum is that all those people doing the scut work are just too damn lazy or uneducated to look for something better. What the minimum wage burger flippers need to do is get an education and improve themselves. Ditto the underpaid hotel maids and nurse aides and a whole lot of other people who work at the dirty jobs that keep this country running. I want to know what planet those people who spout that line live on -- have they bothered to look at the American economy lately? It's a service economy. Where are jobs being created? In retail and in health care, i.e., sales clerks and home health aides. No one needs a college education to qualify to run a cash register at Dollar General or to help old ladies take showers. Yes, it's great if you can get an education and find work as a software engineer or an investment banker, but there's a limited number of those jobs to go around. The reality is that there are a lot of over-educated people flipping burgers or changing diapers.

On the other hand, the fact that you don't need an advanced degree to make change or help old people bathe doesn't mean you don't deserve to be paid a living wage. Regardless of the job, if you put in a full day's labor, you should receive enough pay to live on. I can remember a time when that wasn't such a hard concept to understand. Apparently those days are long gone.

4 comments:

  1. Congress should be paid minimum wage...they don't work nearly as hard as the people at Burger King.

    the Ol'Buzzard

    ReplyDelete
  2. Amen to this post.

    Ol'B, you are dead on...this is the worse Congress in U.S. History in terms of getting legislation passed, or for that matter, getting ANYTHING done to push the country forward. A rank and rile Congressman pulls down $174,000 per year...in addition to some great perks and benefits. A wad over minimum wage, methinks. WTF??!

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  3. I am one of those people who took a job at$10.00 an hour because after nearly a year of looking it was the only offer I got. I felt lucky. By the way, I have a post grad degree and a good resume. But I had been one of those "cherished" at home moms for 16 years and was treated like I was a unskilled drop out by the job market.

    Ten years later I am finally making $16. an hour. It really isn't a living wage - I doubt I could live well at all if I were on my own.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I just took whatever jobs it took to keep on keeping on, some paid well and some didn't, but I've never needed much to keep on keeping on.

    My retirement income is 983 bucks a month and I do great on it.

    ReplyDelete

My space, my rules: play nice and keep it on topic.