Another blow to the working classes.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/24/...9726b7IMCYLotGTGp0jn4Xa_8F8fNH4_gtumbC5WeNT0k
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/24/...9726b7IMCYLotGTGp0jn4Xa_8F8fNH4_gtumbC5WeNT0k
Another blow to the working classes.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/24/...9726b7IMCYLotGTGp0jn4Xa_8F8fNH4_gtumbC5WeNT0k
They are just lazy, don't believe in god enough and want to play all day instead of work.
So part of income inequality means I should fund peoples vacations just because I own a business? Yet I don't get to take vacations.I wonder how our counterparts in the other industrialized, developed countries with their 6-8 weeks paid "holiday" per year feel about us not crowding their favorite getaway spots?
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/39-million-americans-cant-afford-a-summer-vacation-174406215.html
In more news on our fragile middle class...
...merciful deletia...
So part of income inequality means I should fund peoples vacations just because I own a business? Yet I don't get to take vacations.
So Tim are you an employee or business owner? Just out of curiosity, as I want to understand your frame of mind.
That article and related ruling has nothing to do with the proletariat receiving a blow. The employees agreed to arbitration, then tried to avoid arbitration. The legal council representing the employee didn’t do his job and instead had dollar signs in his eyes. The class council makes tons of money on class actions but the actual plaintiffs make pennies compared to filing individual settlements.
......But we have gutted our labor force by the mantra that everyone has to go to college and everyone "deserves" a high-paying desk job. Now we don't even have a labor force with technical skills to get our factories going again even if policy makers incentivize corporations to do so.
I'm late to the party, but wealthy people don't have to have inherited their wealth., That is a lie the Communists use to rile up the proleteriat.
Re: the plumber with 25 trucks: This morning we are going to wrap another service truck for our area's largest pest control company. They started around the same time I started doing signs, just a young married couple. We designed their logo and lettered their first truck topper. Over their first year, they expanded. We were lettering a truck topper every 2 months or so. Now, 20 years later, they operate about 20 pest control trucks, two blown cellulose insulation trucks, three spray foam insulation rigs, a dock spider control boat, two animal control trucks, and now are adding lawn and tree pest control. They built it from the ground up.
And, for the generally recognized richest companies in the country? Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, facebook, twitter, and so on. How much inherited wealth is contained in those companies? And what about wealthy rappers or music stars or Youtube stars or movie stars?
The problem now, which is being titled as a problem of wealth inequality isn't really the inequality. It's the gutting of the middle class by globalizing all the decent jobs to China, Mexico, and other countries. The ultra rich were still ultra rich, but when a person with a factory job could end up pulling down $75,000 in pay and benefits, nobody complained. Now all that's left is fast food jobs--and those are being decimated by the calls for minimum wage increases.
Not all people are capable of doing "high paying tech jobs" or other non-labor jobs. And there aren't enough of those to go around anyway. But we have gutted our labor force by the mantra that everyone has to go to college and everyone "deserves" a high-paying desk job. Now we don't even have a labor force with technical skills to get our factories going again even if policy makers incentivize corporations to do so.
The point of the arguments others and myself are making is that these trends and economic transformations under way are aligning with some very troubling factors for our long term social stability. We ignore them at our own peril. Huge public debt, fewer workers making decent wages, large numbers of retirees, artificial intelligence, automation, massive climate change costs, ever increasing healthcare costs, continued tax breaks for the super rich, etc. All exact a toll on social stability.
Maybe you should read this when the internet goes out for two days... I didn't because I dont have time to read when I'm on here from dawn until evening as you say.. Least I'm not on here late night posting 5 times having a conversation with myself.
Now that's a really credible source. Aren't you the one always bragging about how carefully you scrutinize the media you choose to base your opinions on?
You are the biggest hypocrite I have ever seen. Rail against the elitist 1% and turn right around and parrot their propaganda. Do you really think we were born yesterday?
Now that's a really credible source. Aren't you the one always bragging about how carefully you scrutinize the media you choose to base your opinions on?