with no spouse income and a kid? lol no
why are you having kids if your career is cashiering at mcdonalds...
with no spouse income and a kid? lol no
I doubt it. If you were given the option of being a CEO or being a McDonald's cashier and the pay and hours were the same, would you really choose cashier - a job where you get no autonomy, no respect, is extremely repetitive, makes you deal with rude customers, etc?
White collar jobs are not harder to perform, they are harder to obtain.
Since no one has replied to this yet, I just want to quote myself. For people in favor of paying a living wage, should I have been paid more when I was 16? Why or why not?
Her striking will not raise her pay. It's retarded.
did you work at those companies for decades, with multiple dependents, making the same wage the entire time?
I've never worked a minimum wage job, but I know how much I make, and seeing people who have far more responsibilities than me having to work a much harder job for far less money makes me know they're not being compensated.
This is not the 1900 labor movement.Did you fall asleep during the history lessons on the early 1900s labor movement?
You're clearly not familiar with the idea of a labor strike.Her striking will not raise her pay. It's retarded.
So, you're telling me running a huge business is easier then working a register or flipping burgers?
Playing devil's advocate, some might say it's that individual's responsibility to seek employment that better enables them to provide for their families.
This is not the 1900 labor movement.
I seem to remember you making a thread where you talked about getting your hours severely cut at work or something to that effect. What's with the corporate boot-licking?
You should get paid enough to actually support yourself, and 7 bucks an hour definitely isnt enough to support 1 person. Family? Well, hopefully there is another person making at least a living wage and government assistance can help
I did that when I was 16. So a 16 year old looking to make extra spending money should be paid enough to support a family? That would have been great at the time to make a few more bucks, but I don't think that can be expected from employers.
I did that when I was 16. So a 16 year old looking to make extra spending money should be paid enough to support a family? That would have been great at the time to make a few more bucks, but I don't think that can be expected from employers.
Then implement a seniority/tenure requirement.I did that when I was 16. So a 16 year old looking to make extra spending money should be paid enough to support a family? That would have been great at the time to make a few more bucks, but I don't think that can be expected from employers.
you're not working full time at 16. You're lucky to put in 8 hours a week, let alone 30-40. You always will be making less because you just can't work the same amount of time.
Then implement a seniority/tenure requirement.
Start workers at a lower wage, then after a year raise their wages/benefits to a more humane level.
So pay should scale with hours worked or with age? A 16 year old should be getting paid less to do the same job just because they're not an unemployed 50 year old taking care of a parent?
so having kids or an ailing relative means you can't crack open a newspaper or go to monster.com? Its impossible to look for work and work at the same time now. They aren't even full time so its not like McDonalds is forcing her to stay in the store.
They are living paycheck to paycheck, working so hard they can't look for new work....but she is striking.
This is a valid point. I feel people should take this into account with their life situation and job when having a child let alone multiples, but there is no doubt that minimum wage is not really a valid number pertaining to anything.why are you having kids if your career is cashiering at mcdonalds...
Good for them. Minimum wage is such a joke.
1. Yes. You move to a different company that pays more. Simple as that. People with actual disabilities do so what is her excuse?But there's always the "what if they can't"
Maybe they have a learning disability. Maybe they work multiple jobs and have no time to even look for a new job, let alone interview.
With the inability to take time off to get education, where do you go? To another cash register paying you around the same wage? Hope Costco is hiring?
Ignoring history is an ignorant position to take. Do you really want to pretend that the movement was successful not because of the tactics, but because it was 1900?
If the wage was $15 an hour there would be more competition for the job. If you got hired over the other competition, then yes you deserve $15 an hour.Since no one has replied to this yet, I just want to quote myself. For people in favor of paying a living wage, should I have been paid more when I was 16? Why or why not?
Yea, being paid more for working more hours is kind of how minimum wage jobs work. A 16 year old can't work the same amount of hours a 50 year old can, they have a very obvious other responsibility that takes up that time, and if they don't, then they are probably close to independent anyway, and should be making the higher wage.
A 16 year old will be paid less not by raw wage per hour, but because they can't work the number of hours 50 year olds can.
they'll just have to put up more kiosks or robots.
You're clearly not familiar with the idea of a labor strike.
Of course her alone striking won't raise her pay--but if she gets most of the people she works with to join in then they have a chance.
Why do you think the Walmarts, Targets and fast food chains of the world put so much energy into preventing workers from organizing?
1. The disability thing comes somewhat anecdotal, because I know someone who has a learning disability and is stuck moving between minimum wage jobs because they tried college and flunked out because they just couldn't understand it.1. Yes. You move to a different company that pays more. Simple as that. People with actual disabilities do so what is her excuse?
2. The labor movement was not low skilled labor. They were skilled for the time and in many instances were seen as desirable me. Working in a factory was better than working in a farm. They had leverage.
Modern day equivalent would be like working g at a tech company or specialized manufacturing plant. Not McDonalds.
a 16 year old is lucky if he can work 5 one shift. A 50 year woman can work multiple shifts in the same day (and companies don't hire a new person for every shift just because the pool is there, there'd be no reason to).But companies typically don't hire minimum wagers on full time, and they have enough of a labor pool to not have to.
you're not working full time at 16. You're lucky to put in 8 hours a week, let alone 30-40. You always will be making less because you just can't work the same amount of time.
The opposite actually, I live in the countryside, having a cheap car will cost more than public transport in the long run, if it's cheap the fuel economy will likely suck, it will be high maintenance also including insurance, do you not have bus and trains which offer annual passes?
1. ....Okay1. The disability thing comes somewhat anecdotal, because I know someone who has a learning disability and is stuck moving between minimum wage jobs because they tried college and flunked out because they just couldn't understand it.
2. Yep, those coal mining 11 year olds were very skilled laborers.
a 16 year old is lucky if he can work 5 one shift. A 50 year woman can work multiple shifts in the same day (and companies don't hire a new person for every shift just because the pool is there, there'd be no reason to).
So a full time worker, doing the same job, should not only get more hours but we're talking a huge per hour wage increase? Wouldn't this just make companies hire less full time employees and have more part timers (even more so than now for companies who try to save money on paying benefits).
Relevant to the discussion.
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They would need to increase prices by 20% to double the Crew Payroll. Which if you assume they all make minimum wage would put them close to $15/hour.
I believe our current minimum wage is too low and should keep pace with inflation over time.
That said, I don't think employers should be obliged to provide a living wage for anyone other than the person they hired. If that individual has a family, a mortgage, 2 other jobs, etc. they should be expected to seek employment accordingly, even if that means working 2 other jobs at a similar rate of pay.
Now, that does not mean I disagree with the strike. I think it's necessary, and I think minimum wage should be raised to at least $10/hour. I just don't think employers should be expected to pay employees with the assumption that they're supporting a family on their own. You have to be realistic about such things.
How many Walmart or McDonalds have you seen close early because of this?
You said white collar jobs are not harder to perform.
Onerous and tedious are two different things.
Have you been to a grocery store with automated check-outs? How many times does the doofus in front of you screw up bagging their items and has to call for help? Does a robot roll over to the customer or does a worker?
40*7.25 is $290.00 a week. That is barely enough to support yourself going to school, even if you are getting loans and full loans for the actual schooling part. That is realistically not even enough to live with a roomate, pay for gas to get back and forth to school every day and to work, food, personal upkeep, ect. And this would be for a 2 year technical training type of job. Forget trying to do this for 4-5 years for a 4-year degree in college. And now after you get out of your 18-month to 2 year schooling or even 4 year bachelors degree and you can't find a job. Now you have school loans to worry about on top of that.
Oh, and don't even get me started on those "fake" schools that give an iPad to every new student... :| Everest, Colorado Tech, ect. People do get sucked into those and taken for a ride and then left to pay the debt they accrued with no education and still working that minimum wage job. They may not be the smartest people, but they are desperate, and the government can't really do anything to shut these places down either.
2. The labor movement was not low skilled labor. They were skilled for the time and in many instances were seen as desirable me. Working in a factory was better than working in a farm. They had leverage.
Modern day equivalent would be like working g at a tech company or specialized manufacturing plant. Not McDonalds.
that's not at all what I said. I said by the nature of part time jobs and the nature of a 16 year old needing to go to school they'd make less money than someone older because the older person can simply work more hours and make more money from their hours.
Minimum wage @ 10 dollars
16 year old works 3 hours a day (because of school), makes 150 dollars a week
30 year old works 7 hours a day, makes 350 dollars a week
More money, same pay.
Of course the fact that it was 1900 helped. The economy was completely different. You are arguing these jobs are equivalent to the industrial jobs of the 1900 but they aren't the same. At all.so you ARE arguing it was successful not because the tactics but because it was 1900, I knew it.
Yes, a strike in 2012 requires more people striking than one in 1900, this is obvious to anyone. Just because the scale required for success has increased, doesn't mean success is impossible.
If it's not possible to change anything with strikes, why do companies try their hardest to eliminate them, and to push away unions and employee collectives?
Paying a McDonald's cashier $15 an hour would be insane.
Currently white collar jobs pay a lot more, not because fewer people want to do those jobs, but because fewer people are capable of doing them. But I think the real key is that it's not that they're incapable because of some innate lack of mental acuity or moral defect, but rather because they cannot afford to spend several years receiving the requisite training.
Skinner graduated high school in 1962 at West High School in Davenport, Iowa. He went on to start serving nearly ten years in the United States Navy, Skinner began his career with McDonald’s as a restaurant manager trainee in Carpentersville, Illinois in 1971, and since then has held numerous leadership positions. He never graduated from college. He started out like so many other teenagers, working as an entry-level crew person at the old McDonald’s on Brady Street in Davenport.
Of course the fact that it was 1900 helped. The economy was completely different. You are arguing these jobs are equivalent to the industrial jobs of the 1900 but they aren't the same. At all.
The truth is she is easily replaceable and unless this catches like wildfire, which is looking unlikely this will fail.
Relevant to the discussion.
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They would need to increase prices by 20% to double the Crew Payroll. Which if you assume they all make minimum wage would put them close to $15/hour.