I was reading an article, one of the protestors under age 25 was whining about a starting job at
9$ an hour and thought it was unfIf air. 9$ an hour may not be a great wage but it is an entry level position and it's a job. I don't see what the gripe was, of course if you want to start at $100k a year I guess that is a problem.
OK, so $9/hr is what $18,000 a year? What sort of home can you live in, in the USA on that? Where exactly.
Well I'm sure they could get by on that if they had to. Where are they living with no job? Of coarse they would have to eliminate all the goodies that people think they can't live without. Like a shiny new car, cell phone, computer with internet service, cable service with a big screen tv, etc... People in other countries get by on much less. Not that I'm complaining, but I started a job out of high school making 2.50/hr and got married while making that wage. I was also very happy to have that job. This was 35 years ago, but it was a low income job at that time. People can live on low income. Its just that many think they have to have everything to do so.
I guess its so much easer to not take a $9 per hour job, go join a local OWS crowd, and bitch about not having a job.
Well, I see you're missing my point. I'm not particularly on the Occupy or the Tea Bag side. Sure, if all you can get is a $9 job, take it. In the past I made as much as $55/hr. Earlier this year I applied for a $9.75 job. Legitimate work is legitimate work. This isn't about snobbery. It's about equity.
My point is, what in the world kind of standard of living can one really have in the USA anywhere safe for that?
Back when minimum was $2.50/hr. the housing cost to income relationship wasn't so obtuse. (I think my first minimum wage job was around $1.55/hr myself.) Homes went from being a one income proposition to a two income proposition, so we essentially mortgaged the lives of the ladies away in the interim.
My point is, there's got to be a better way to manage things than a constant treadmill to try and keep up.
Well, I see you're missing my point. I'm not particularly on the Occupy or the Tea Bag side. Sure, if all you can get is a $9 job, take it. In the past I made as much as $55/hr. Earlier this year I applied for a $9.75 job. Legitimate work is legitimate work. This isn't about snobbery. It's about equity.
My point is, what in the world kind of standard of living can one really have in the USA anywhere safe for that?
Back when minimum was $2.50/hr. the housing cost to income relationship wasn't so obtuse. (I think my first minimum wage job was around $1.55/hr myself.) Homes went from being a one income proposition to a two income proposition, so we essentially mortgaged the lives of the ladies away in the interim.
My point is, there's got to be a better way to manage things than a constant treadmill to try and keep up.
'tween us I spent 12 years on top of a full time job getting a degree to try to jump the class gap. So if you're trying to call me lazy... you try loosing sleep for a decade. Of course that was decades ago. I was younger.
Since then I've seen the continual gutting of our own economic system. NAFTA, GATT, downsizing, offshoring, etc. If I had to mark the day it really accelerated, it was Oct. 19, 1987. I can still recall the headcount reduction plans being floated in Nov. of the same year.
If I had kids, I'd tell them to get the highest level degree that lets them be an independant professional. E.g. say, Medicine. You can hang your own shingle, or work for "Big Med".
For decades the bar has been being pushed upwards, or perhaps the carrot moved out.
Seems to me life should be about more than being a mouse in a wheel, running until dead, shouldn't it?
Perhaps especially, when the same guys that tanked the economy, still got bailouts and bonuses. And *that's* where any arguments about "personal responsibilty" and "toughing it out" etc. really fall apart.
Do a little research on what the pipeline is into a place like Goldman (Hint: Harvard, Yale, NYU MBA) or CEO-ship (Hint #2: McKinsey or Boston Consulting... that hire from... yup Harvard, Yale, NYU, MBA's...LOL!)... it's very much an insider's club, no? And they are essentially playing poker with everyone else's life.
Now, if you could actually "go off grid" and homestead like in the Westward Expansion or some such, then you might have something, but you can't There's nowhere in the US I'm aware of you can do that today. You'd have to buy the land in the first place, LOL!