kungfucarrie:

alexandraerin:

som3thing-cl3v3r:

workingamerica:

Fast food workers “occupying” Wall Street. #imlovinit

If you can’t fucking survive on fucking $7.25 go to fucking school and get another fucking job. Those people who run the fucking restaurants and shops who fucking give out minimum fucking wage need to make a fucking profit too. Get off your lazy fucking ass and make way for the fucking high school students and college students who fucking need that job that pays $7.25.

Funny thing: the workers who are stuck in minimum wage jobs (many of whom have degrees… and huge amounts of debt racked up getting them, because of the myth that going to school is THE path to a high-paying job) are also the biggest single customer base for these sorts of corporations, and most other ones.

You know the thing that’s really going to imperil corporate profits?

The way they pay their workers.

The news keeps saying things about “consumer confidence” being low. Supposedly, it’s low “confidence” that is depressing sales of big ticket items like homes and cars, and if the current trends continue, it’s taking bites out of things like… eating out. Going to the movies. And other things that drive the minimum wage sectors of the economy.

Funny thing: people have to have money to spend money. Right now, most revenue goes straight into the accounts of the major stakeholders in the company. What does it there? It… accrues. It… adds up. What doesn’t it do? It doesn’t circulate. It doesn’t get spent. It doesn’t do anyone any good.

If you gave everyone working at McDonald’s another dollar an hour out of the profits that are currently just being pocketed, those dollars… well, they’d be spent. Almost immediately. And in the end, they’d probably end up being stuck in some millionaire’s low risk, steady return, not-at-all entrepreneurial portfolio, which is where most money ends up.

But just by the magic passing through more hands before it comes to rest, those same dollars would each be spent several more times. MAGIC, right? Same dollar, getting spent again and again and again. And every time, someone benefits. In effect, every time, everyone benefits.

When money goes to the top, it stops moving. Money that isn’t moving isn’t really money any more. It’s as useless as the high score of a video game.

This is why the places in the world—even just in this country—with the best minimum wage and the best social safety nets also have the lowest unemployment, and why unemployment grows or stays stable the more we “tighten belts”. This is just how the world works. This is how the world has always worked. If conservatives would give up their fairy tale fantasyland logic and join the rest of us in the real world, we could have the economy on its feet in no time.

And you are living in a fantasy land. You are. What jobs? What jobs are these people supposed to get? If they had no job, you would tell them “McDonald’s is always hiring.” and act like that’s an answer. Well, they’re working at McDonald’s. And they had to beat ten applicants to get those jobs, because only in your magical fantasy land does “always hiring” mean “has enough job openings to magically accommodate everybody who applies”. Your logic literally requires magic to work.

What are you doing with your life? What are you doing that is so noble and great an endeavor that you can tell people who bust their backs to do a job you probably couldn’t do and definitely wouldn’t want to that they’re lazy for working for $7.25. Would you take $7.25 an hour to do what they do? No? Then they’re being underpaid. The invisible hand of the free market is apparently taking a vacation.

Let me tell you how things work in the real world. In the real world *everyone has to* make a living wage. Has to. If businesses aren’t paying living wages, then they should inevitably go under since no one could afford to work for them. Fortunately or unfortunately, the economy… like an ecology… is all interconnected. So instead of these businesses suffering alone for what should be a fatal decision on their part, they drag everyone else down with them in a slow death spiral that poisons the whole economy.

See, if these business owners aren’t paying their employees a living wage but they’re not going out of business, then their incompetence or greed (pick one, or both) is being subsidized by everyone else. Their incompetence or greed is being paid for by everyone who pays ABOVE a minimum wage so that their employees can afford to eat out and shop and see movies, and by everybody who pays the taxes that go to the public assistance programs that allow their employees to keep scraping by.

Of course, the employees themselves are bearing the brunt of the death spiral, because they’re trapped between an immovable object—a job that against all real-world logic expects full time employees to accept wages that won’t get them through the week—and an inexorable force—the fact that human beings have basic needs that require more money than they’re getting to meet.

Since we actually do live in the real world, it’s inevitable that a system that is unsustainable will fall apart, and this one will… it will reach a breaking point where we’ll either have to acknowledge the problem and fix it, or… well, it will just break. It would be better to fix it sooner rather than later, especially since there are actual people being literally worked to death while smug jerks like you who don’t understand how the world works and who wouldn’t be able to do what they do lecture them about how their plight is somehow their fault.

This is one of the best breakdowns of the economics of minimum wage I’ve ever seen.

I know people who would love to go to college but can’t afford it.

Their parents are poor, they have no rich family, they weren’t given a savings account or an inheritance or allowance or anything like that. They start at zero out of high school, if they’re lucky. Application fees. Tuition. Books. Supplies. Rent. Food. Transportation costs. Where does that money come from? 

Apply for financial aid, you say. Well, that all changes from state to state, university to university, but I can tell you that you have to meet certain criteria to be awarded. They take your tax info and your parents’ tax info from the previous year and see if you qualify. Even if your parents don’t give you a dime, they make an estimate based on how much they make on how much they think they’ll contribute to your education and that counts against you. And even if you’re awarded full financial aid, like for FAFSA? It only maybe covers tuition. Maybe.

Student loans! you cry. At least at my university, those were tiered. The more credits you had under your belt, the more you were able to take out. So just starting out you could take out a loan that was barely enough to supplement your financial aid and maybe scrape by. I still had to get a part-time job. 

Speaking of which, yes, work. It’s hard to be taking school full time (12+ credits/semester at my university, which is what you had to take in order to qualify for full financial aid, IF you and your parents were poor enough), what with the homework and labs, time in class, messed up schedules, etc. Even getting a job on campus was tough because we weren’t allowed to work more than 20 hours a week. We survived eating ramen. We lived in cramped little apartments together. Stress, stress, stress. Yes, focus on school like that for 4 years eating crap food and working a crap job that pays almost nothing because you’re still trying to get through school to get the better job.

And then you get your degree and, as the 2nd commenter said… you still can’t get a job. Not unless you have a bunch of work history and connections and a ton of luck.

I know people with bachelors and masters degrees who literally cannot get jobs for no reason other than that there are none available. 

And even if there are, your first job fresh out of college isn’t going to pay well. Especially in cities near colleges/universities, because they know those students are desperate for work and they take advantage of that, paying far lower than they ought to. So people with thousands and thousands of dollars in student loan debt go work at tech support or fast food or whatever and continue to scrape by. Barely. Sort of. Not really.

It’s all just terrible. And we wonder why so many people have crazy anxiety and depression these days. Why we’re all so unhealthy. 

Incidentally, did you know that $7.25 will buy you one gallon of milk, one loaf of decent bread, and one can of soup… before taxes/insurance.  

It’ll also buy one, maybe two gallons of gas, depending on where you live and the kind of car you drive. To fill up my 14 gallon commuter car, which I have to do weekly, would take a full day of work at minimum wage to pay for. 

It’s enough for 1 round trip ticket on the bus (again, depending on where you live). 

Don’t even get me started on health insurance. 

$7.25 really gets you so little.