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”