How is hope factual? Hope, of course, being defined as believing in the off chance that something good will happen, especially when the odds are not in your favor?
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Congressional GOP Are Scum!
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Warren Buffett recently made headlines by saying America is more likely to turn into a "sharecroppers' society" than an "ownership society." But I think the right term is a "debt peonage" society - after the system, prevalent in the post-Civil War South, in which debtors were forced to work for their creditors. The bankruptcy bill won't get us back to those bad old days all by itself, but it's a significant step in that direction.
Buffet was talking about the trade deficit and the budget deficit which is financed by foreign money when he made the quote. Krugman took that quote completely out of context. Still, I like his article and we do need a higher minimium wage; the Republicans proposed a $1.10 while Democrats called for a $2.20 raise to restore it's historical average level. The Senate Republicans killed both.
This new bankruptcy bill is the second in three years which has badly striped citizens of their right to a fresh start. I'm ashamed that my country protects the wealthy but not the working man and I'm normally a pretty free market guy.Last edited by Dinner; March 9, 2005, 03:42.Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Actually, I care. I do assign value judgements to motives... and altruism trumps self-interest here. 'Tis better to make charitable donations because you want to, and it's heinous to make charitable donations because it benefits you more.
Again, this is just another example of our differing outlooks. I see it in the real sense, and you see it from an emotional point of view.
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OMR, maybe we should be taking this discussion of Optimism/Pessimism into another thread or PMs, since it doesn't have much to do with whether or not Congresspeople are scum or not. Which they are, be they Democrat or Republican.
While I respect your belief, I hardly think the poor person getting food/clothes from the rich guy who wants to save on his taxes cares much WHY he or she is eating or being clothed at that moment.
Whatever the beneficiaries feel is immaterial to me, an outside observer. They will assign a different value judgement to the gift they've received than I would give.
Again, this is just another example of our differing outlooks. I see it in the real sense, and you see it from an emotional point of view.
I fail to see how you're looking at it in a real sense: after all, I'm fully prepared to admit that my value judgement is completely worthless, since the matter of a donation, charitable or not, is between the donator and the recipient. I'm not a part of it, so even if I do feel that the donation is not truly "charitable", there's not much I can do about it.B♭3
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Small effect accompanies small increase. But a big effect on the people who lose their jobs...
It should be noted there was a study comparing fast food hiring in Eastern PA and New Jersey, when NJ increased it's minimum wage and Eastern PA did not, and found faster hiring growth in NJ. There are serious questions about that studie's validity.
If we'd like to fix this problem, perhaps we should lower the minimum wage, but rigidly enforce it- no more casual off the books hiring.
We could allow businesses to set whatever they like for wages, which WOULD increase the number of jobs being offered as DanS and elementary economics point out; people would be guarenteed basic workplace rights; and people trying to support families off currently sub-minimum wage jobs could be sure they didn't starve to death. Might be a strain on our welfare budget, but we're cheating it right now by not paying those people, so meh.
Although, politically as it stands a decrease in the minimum wage probably would not be packaged in with other means of helping the poor.
Ok, and there are many others in between poor and rich who are not entrepeneurs. I understand the need for all niches in the economy. I am just arguing that no one is trapped forever in a niche. Not for a lifetime.
We also have a system that financially rewards charity donations. Who cares of the motive in which it is given, as long as it helps people.
If you decide to pop out babies before you can afford them,
We make it so that it doesn't make sense *opportunistically* to get off of welfare to work a 40 hr job making the same amount of money."I'm moving to the Left" - Lancer
"I imagine the neighbors on your right are estatic." - Slowwhand
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You want to fix the minimum wage hike problem? It's incredibly simple:
Right now, iirc, the base salary of a congressman is ~$155,000/year. A person working full time at minimum wage, by contrast, makes $10,712/year. In other words, the current minimum wage is about 7% of the salary of a congressman.
Okay: fix it there, so that congress can't give itself a raise without raising the minimum wage. The minimum wage will be a living wage in no time."I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin
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Snowie's got a point about illegal immigration. Right now a lot of companies have it the best of both worlds. They get all the immigrants they need, but since they're illegal they can screw them over to a much greater degree than they could with citizens or legal immigrants.
What the American government needs to do is come down hard hard hard on the companies that hire illegal immigrants, that's the only way to stop the problem, you're never going to get enough border patrolmen to stop all the people who really really want to get across if there's plenty of jobs available.
At the same time US immigration laws have gotten really insane. Its become ridiculously difficult to get a student or tourist visa let alone a green card. When I tried to get my fiance into the states to meet the parents I was told that I'd have to go to the states and apply THERE for a fiance visa and then wait three months. Then we talked to an immigration lawyer about getting a tourist visa and she said she wouldn't touch my fiance unless she'd held down a job that paid well above Korea's per capita GDP for two years or had a ****-load of money in her bank account (there was a checklist of these things, and they all had to do with money). We eneded up going to Canada.
The US economy loses billions and billions a year by putting up these kind of ridiculous hurdles in the face of people who want to come into the country legally. American higher education has been having a lot of problems with their international students having a hard time getting student visas, which is really going to hurt us in the long term. Also there's a MASSIVE business in Canada and Australia (mostly) in which Koreans (and I assume lots of other people) go over for a few months to polish up their English. These people really should be going to the States with the current weak american dollar, but they're not because of American immigration policy which is losing the American economy ****-loads of money. Its ridiculous that the American government is causing all kinds of problems for these kind of people when they're not doing more to crack down on companies hiring illegal immigrants.Stop Quoting Ben
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That's correct, and so it's a judgement we have to make if the living standards increased by a minimum wage is worth a number of people spending a longer time unemployed.
That said, a negative income tax (think the Earned Income Tax Credit on steroids) would be a much better better idea than having minimum wage laws. It'd do a whole lot to chip away at the black economy and make employers have less reason to hire illegal immigrants.Stop Quoting Ben
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Its not that simple. You can't treat labor like any other commodity, it doesn't obey the standard laws of supply and demand the way that say bananas do."I'm moving to the Left" - Lancer
"I imagine the neighbors on your right are estatic." - Slowwhand
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That's correct, and so it's a judgement we have to make if the living standards increased by a minimum wage is worth a number of people spending a longer time unemployed.
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Originally posted by Shi Huangdi
Well to extent it is. If labor becomes more expensive, then theory predicts less incentive to higher workers. The question is how much theory is correct, on this the empirical evidence is mixed.Stop Quoting Ben
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Originally posted by Boshko
The theory is crap. Its more complicated then that. You can create a supply and demand curves with labor like you can with inanimate commodities.
If workers become less expensive, isn't it now easier to hire more of them? If the wage rate goes up, isn't there now more incentive to being working then there was previously?"I'm moving to the Left" - Lancer
"I imagine the neighbors on your right are estatic." - Slowwhand
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And do you think that theory is crap when dealing with capital as well? Of course real life is complicated. The theory is a simplification in order to allow study.“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
- John 13:34-35 (NRSV)
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