#MemesNotDreams

bad-meme

 

A well intentioned friend of mine posted this on his facebook recently, and my response to him grew and grew to the point I felt compelled to immortalize it in this, my museum of bloviation.

Needless to say, and yet said, I disagree with the meme or I wouldn’t be posting, because it’s a silly person indeed that posts just to agree, that’s what the “wow” reaction is for.

First off:  since the wage at the beginning of this example is 1.23 and then it is raised to 18.45 (which the poster did to make his weird income tax math work out well, but more on that later), this meme is discussing an *18x* or 1800% hike in minimum wage. Which, you know, no one is asking for.

This is propaganda that makes a figure superficially similar to the dollar amount the min wage movement is asking for look less reasonable than it its. It makes a a figure in the teens (the real figure being asked for) by comparing it to a wage level from the 1800s or so. Now, that ask may still be too high – the fight for fifteen movement wants a figure that is about a doubling, or a one hundred percent increase, most places. But that’s sort of understood to be an opening price in a bargaining legislative process – ask to move from 7.25 to 15.00 and maybe you’ll actually get 10, or 11.

So let’s recast the meme in real terms:

you make 58.00 a day (7.25 * 8), and after withholding (we’ll go ahead and use the meme’s figure of .23, it’s closer to .17 at minimum wage, but one fight at a time) you are left with 45.
Milk costs 45$ (for some reason milk costs a day’s wages in thesememelandia but whatever).

Now, what is that 45 dollars, really? Obviously, the dairy is not a non profit. So of that price, part is profit and part is wholesale cost. Usually, the wholesale cost of a food product is 50-70 percent. This is determined by supply and demand combined with competition and a static business need to make at least enough money to pay for the next batch of milk.

So the retailer’s cost is probably 30 dollars, ballpark.

Now of that cost, a full fifty percent again is probably cost from a wholesaler (the actual farmer, in this case)

So the milkman‘s initial investment in the milk is 15 dollars spent.

He then adds a bottle for 4, and buys an ad in the paper for 4, and then invests about thirty-five minutes of labor in filling the bottle, labeling it, and delivering it, and fillingt his truck up with gas, etc. Ad some change for the label and gas and we’ve got the other 15.

So out of his whole cost to put the milk on your porch, 15 is wholesale cost, and about 11 is misc. production overhead, only (35 minutes * min wage) is labor. (about 4 dollars)

Then he’s back to the approx. cost to market we had above of 30. He marks it up to 45 and keeps 15.

That means of the retail cost of the milk, *Only 9 percent is stuck costs for labor* and *only 3 percent* is markup on that labor.

So they pass a higher minimum wage, and the dairy examines their business model, and decides the market can tolerate more cost, so they elect to simply mark the milk up more to cover their labor (not run on a smaller margin or forge new volume deals with their shipper or bundle milk with a loss leader like the McDouble, but whatever. We’ll also assume they don’t choke or glut the market and don’t elect to make a massive price hike and use propaganda to lay it all at the feet of labor). That’s not a simple decision, but one fight at a time.

So if you double the dairy’s wage cost, his employee now makes 14.50 an hour and the milk now costs 45 + 4 + 15%(4) more an hour. That’s assuming every employee in the 35 minutes of labor was actually making minimum wage already, but, say it with me now, *one fight at a time.*

So now instead of making 45 dollars a day and spending 45 of it on milk, the milkman *makes 90 and pays 49.60* We’ll even say since the farmer and the guy at the gas station had to pay the same raise, it goes up to to, say, 55.00

90-55 still leaves way more money than 45-45.

Now two people, the farm worker and the dairy worker, can actually afford to drink the milk they carry to other people’s houses all day.  Their kids have strong bones, and they are less prone to bolshevik revolution!

On top of that, in the real world, 7.25 an hour puts a person on welfare in many cases and 14.50 does not.

So it is VERY fitting that the cost to house and feed that employee be born by the shoppers at their employer, and not by the public at large as when the minimum wage lags behind prices and inflation, as it has now for 20 some years.

“But what about the tax thing?” I hear you asking.

Well, US taxes don’t work like that.

If my income is 100 and my tax bracket is 10% on income 0-100, I pay 10$ tax.

Now if I were to make 120 dollars and put myself in the 20 percent tax bracket, the ordinary person, who understandably hates math, if quizzed on the street, would say I owe 24 dollars.

But I *absolutely do not*

If the next tax bracket is 20% and I make 120$ the next year, I do NOT pay 24 dollars.

I pay 10% for the first hundred, which is 10 dollars.

I pay 20% on the 20 that “sticks into” the second bracket, which is 4 dollars. So my total tax bill is 14.

Now, in the US, if you do a 1040 EZ, this is all built into the tax table, you don’t do it by hand, so a LOT of people don’t understand it, but:

They NEVER claw anything back out of the lower brackets. You only pay tax at the bracket rate for the part of your income that is in THAT bracket.

Think of your income like an iceburg. 10k is at the bottom, in the dark, 8 k is in the sunlit water, and 4k sticks out. You pay the bottom bracket rate for the part in the dark, the middle bracket rate for the part in the light, and the top bracket rate on what sticks out.

You almost literally *Never, ever* lose money “going to a higher tax bracket” except the day you go over the IRS poverty line and start having to pay taxes at all (Which in the US is about 8.9k a year – that’s 8.9, not 98. we make people who make less than one thousand dollars a month pay an income tax that cripples them, because people like Mitt Romney and Donald trump want to avoid single percentage point tax rate raises).

Of course, the employers involved do pay more payroll tax (the real cost to employ someone is stated pay rate plus taxation and benefits).I could have accounted for that and it would have made the change a little higher. Conversely, though, some of the labor involved is already not making minimum wage (management, accounting, trucking, etc aren’t min. wage jobs in real life). I could have accounted for that and then the actual price change at retail would have been even lower, so given that the post that already has too much math in it to ever go viral in our bamboozeled world, I decided those two factors could just wash each other.

OK, enough of this argument

Red Derp

Every time I see this, it’s tired. Let’s ignore for the time being the “It happens every time” fish story frosting (i’ve had fast food employees get my orders right THOUSANDS of times, wrong probably less than a percent of that), and look at what this person is actually saying, which is that wages are about what you “deserve.”
 
That’s funny, because I always see this kind of meme put out by right wing folks who tend to believe in capitalism as a first principle. Anyone can tell you that capitalism isn’t about “Deserve” – it’s about supply and demand, and to a lesser degree, the transparency of informatics that allows you to evaluate them.
 
A perceived moral entitlement for the type of work you do? That’s a socialist value. A pure capitalist would expect to be paid based on the market and nothing else. That should cause these people some cognitive dissonance, but doesn’t. 
 

But that’s fodder for another discussion.

Moving on:

 
Look, it’s not a special law for fast food workers! She would get the 15 as well. At least. Since she’s 3.75 over minimum now, the worst deal she would get from the legislation would be a 40% raise…and most likely her wage would continue to float above minimum wage.
 
If you are struggling to live on 11 an hour, would you rather have a) a 40 percent raise, and likely more or b) The bullshit “fake pay” of getting to tell yourself you make more than a guy at mcdonalds? You can’t spend ego. You can spend money. So I would think a capitalist would stand in solidarity.
 
She’s literally so invested in a negative narrative of how wronged she is that she’ll turn down money for position in a hierarchy.
 
I mean, think about that. Really think about that. It is literally more important to this person to be perceived as better and to pull down on other workers than it is to actually make more money and have a better life. She doesn’t want 15 an hour if someone else gets it, too?! Her status as “above minimum wage” is more important too her than money that she can fold up and use?
 
And honestly, the problem with our medical infrastructure is we let CNAs, EMTs, etc be exploited for having a calling. They don’t make enough money, but it would be easier to change that if they weren’t all deeply anti-union and anti-wage protection because of red state politics that see them vote for the interests of their bosses over themselves.
 
It’s very simple: If a company can’t afford to pay a full time employee a rate conversant with food and rent, than they can’t really afford to have an employee.
 
I know the last time I rode in an ambulance, they charged me PLENTY – I can’t really fathom that that 1200 dollar, half hour ambulance ride would need to cost much more if the two guys operating it made $7.5 each for that time instead of 5.50, but I know the extra few hundred a week would be huge for them at home. Of all the money I paid for that ambulance ride, I’d be THRILLED to have just handed the EMTs 20 out of my pocket, on the spot, hell, if they got the whole 1200, I’d feel better about paying it.
 

When a McDonald’s employee is on WIC and living in subsidized housing, I am paying their wages FOR mcdonalds, in order to maintain the illusion of a cheaper hamburger. Screw that. McDonalds can raise their prices and the people who eat there, the customer, can pay for the employee.

That’s not even socialism! That’s GETTING RID of socialism. That’s telling a capitalist to pay his own way.

That’s putting the cost where it should be. 

 
It’s time to drop this model of both insisting people “need” to work to be virtuous, and insisting the bottom tier of work exist as a social cattleprod and punishment. If work is virtuous, than work should be virtuous and not a shameful punishment. 

Yes, Virginia, the wall is bullshit.

Isn’t it weird that if walls are a good idea, literally no country for 2000ish years has ever walled their whole border?
 
That sort of sends up a red flag to me.
 
 
Trump says the wall will cost 8 billion.
 
The GAO’s actual accounting for the cost to build the existing fence is about 2.9 million a mile. The 670 miles of existing fence are in areas serviced by roads. The un-serviced outliers trump wants to wall could cost as much as 5 times that a mile. For fencing.
 
Now, as an east coast contractor, thriving in private industry and all, maybe Donald feels that underbidding and running over is SOP but I think just on the numbers, the wall stinks like boondoggle.
 
the washington post talked to an estimator who put it at more like 25 billion to build, not counting the cost to design, to acquire or condemn private land (which any real conservative would be fighting), and then surveil, maintain, arm and staff it upon completion.
 
Here, an engineer goes into detail about the practicalities of walling the border:
 
http://www.nationalmemo.com/an-engineer-explains-why-trumps-wall-is-so-implausible/
 
Trump himself compared it favorably to the Great Wall, seemingly ignorant of the schoolboy history that the great wall took 4 centuries of slave labor in a monarchy with near total taxation.
 
It was literally more practical for the Chinese to wait for the mongol empire to crumble on its own than to count on a complete great wall, which ultimately failed totally at its purpose of protecting china’s western border, *in a time before airplanes, explosives, and heavy equipment*

This issue – this conversation – is actually 100 percent not about civil engineering or economics for trump and his supporters. It is nothing more or less than a method of signalling virtue and searching for it in others:

“Will you believe dumb things even if impractical?”
“Yes, I will!”
“Great, take a pamphlet. Follow me on twitter”

Live From the Kingdom of Fear

This is an interesting piece from 538

I’ve actually always hated the “jobs” buzzword. People don’t want a job, they want a lifestyle. They would prefer it be through engaging work of choice, but they often settle. When I was growing up, this difference was framed as “Job” vs “career” and if you sought a mere “job” you were a settler yourself.

As productivity increases (generally speaking a good thing) less employment is required to meet demand. There are just less manufacturing jobs, per dollar of global GDP, than there once were.

But the same automation and productivity gains are present in the service industry, or soon will be, and pretending otherwise is a 20 year punt.

We need to start doing big thinking about what a post scarcity, developed country “should” look like, and even the nordic model still sort of positions the developed world as the “front office” of a company of nations in a way that is an odd new imperialism.

It can’t be all service, entertainment, and IT for automation. When neal stephenson said the only things america still excelled at in his dark future were “Music, Movies, microcode, and high-speed pizza delivery” it was satire and presented as a state to be avoided

Pork and the New Gentleman

At some point, I realized my weight was effecting my life.

There’s a huge denial cortex in the brain of every fat person.
“I’m healthy so it doesn’t matter”
“I’m happy now so it doesn’t matter”
“Who has time”

The list goes on and on. It’s bullshit.

Being fat sucks. Being a little fat sucks less than being a lot fat, but it still sucks.

It’s a literal, actual first world problem. It seems trivial but isn’t.

About a year ago and half ago, I realized that it was really, really something I wanted to change, and change for life.

I started slow, with learning, and with measurement of my current state with the best tools I had to hand.

A year later, I have lost and kept off 40 some pounds. Which still leaves me fat, by the standards of any reasonable person.

I am full of thought on this. Full. And it FOR SURE changes the main focuses of this blog. It challenges my work, my cards, my comedy, my writing. It will impact how much I get to enjoy things which, subconsciously, I have chosen as pursuits because they can be late life second careers…second careers aren’t much good if you’re fucking dead. Fact.

So this is, in part, going to become my space for that.

Tartuffe Nation

I try to only “get political” about twice a year, but Dan Savage made a great point the other day: The far right has made being christian about gay rights, because it’s easy grace if you’re straight. Not stealing, not being greedy, not hurting people you love – those require ACTUAL good behavior from american Christians. being against gays costs them nothing, so it’s the perfect spirituality for a materialistic world. We’re tearing ourselves apart and ignoring matters that are truly the within the scope of what government should address for a cheap, faux-christian lifehack from neo-conservatives like Falwell, who live in mansions Christ would have given to beggars.

That’s why they’re comfortable pushing for laws against gay marriage but not, say, letting your neighbor starve or adultery… or worshiping graven idols, of which surely the bull and bear of wall street, the things to and for whom most Americans, this one included, spend most of our days worshiping and toiling, surely are two of the greatest.

My Late Valentine’s Day Post

I’m going to take a risk here and point out a pattern:

Step one: Break up with an SO
Step two: Become EXTREMELY defensive and hostile
Step three: Hook up with whoever around you pushes through the defense
step four: Fling yourself deeply into this relationship; define your identity through it.
Step five: Be shocked when that person turns out to be a jerk
Step six: go back to step one

Date gamely. Date like a gambler. Bet what you can lose, and win and lose “like a man.” (whatever your gender) Don’t go bridge-torching ape-shit when things end. Be grateful you weren’t stuck with the wrong person for a longer time. Don’t blame the next person for the last person. The wheel has no memory,

On the Road

It’s been a month of constant travel and work – Denver, to Dallas, to Wichita, to Wyoming, to Utah!

Now I’m droning away in the Beehive state, looking for an apartment.

Thinking about upgrading the ole’ Subaru legacy – SLC is a drivers’ town in a much realer sense than say, LA, which is actually a parker’s town. The highways here are a bit crowded, but only a bit, and they’re wide, with high speed limits. Treating myself to something with slightly longer legs would be nice. Ideally, since I love my legacy, the GT trim of the same car would be perfect.

Looks like the only poker I will have logged in the month of Jan will be the couple hours I donked away at the Hard Rock Tulsa, which is a nice little card room…only downside is the the slots in the casino are unusually fucking obnoxious, sounding like an old 50s phone.

Reminded me of this

In terms of resistances overcome, fears met, etc., I’m pretty sure this month will go down in personal history as I gritted my teeth and did standup for the first time.

We’ll see where that leads in the future.