I am in no way disparaging mcd workers but these folks CHOOSE their professions.
You say it as if some of them actually have a choice in the matter or the means to actually afford college from which to achieve a better career.
I am in no way disparaging mcd workers but these folks CHOOSE their professions.
You say it as if some of them actually have a choice in the matter or the means to actually afford college from which to achieve a better career.
"It is ridiculous that compensation committed even today set compensation as function of share price and not relative out performance of share price."Pretty fair conclusions drawn. Though we all knew that no? The problem most have with a large number of the rich and wealthy nowadays is not the Elon Musk types which every society needs and which every society is more than happy to compensate richly for their innovative spirit and risk taking. It is the countless mediocre CEOs and managers that still get paid tens if not hundreds of millions in compensation for abysmal quality of work. It is ridiculous that compensation committed even today set compensation as function of share price and not relative out performance of share price.
if I was writing my PH.D thesis on prostitution or were to become a sex tour guide I would come to you,volly, as an expert not from hearsay or book reading, but as someone with extensive life experience, second to none.To each his own...whatever floats your boat mate. If I could not get it up anymore with a real woman and if I was not married I would definitely pay you for a consulting gig to advise on the best sex dolls in the market.
That's a pretty big net you've cast, Surf!, covering all the way from minimum wage workers to millionaires. Would you agree that a minimum wage worker might find it easy to overspend their income; might find it impossible not to?I am in no way disparaging mcd workers but these folks CHOOSE their professions.
The reason they can't pay their bills is not MCD's fault but rather their own fault for overspending relative to their income.
This issue isn't relegated to minimum wage workers. I know several people who earn over a million per year or around $340 per hour who can't pay their bills and are always struggling.
surf

That's a pretty big net you've cast, Surf!, covering all the way from minimum wage workers to millionaires. Would you agree that a minimum wage worker might find it easy to overspend their income; might find it impossible not to?![]()
I do hear those stories, usually without much specifics. Should we base our general views on anecdotes, or what is true in general?It all depends how frugal, willing and intelligent they are in seeking alternatives to excess capital.
You hear stories about millionaire janitors and stuff like that-- so its indeed possible to survive and not overspend on min wage.
surf
I do hear those stories, usually without much specifics. Should we base our general views on anecdotes, or what is true in general?
In my hometown, not far from where I live, a woman, Oceola McCarty, lived and made "a living" taking in laundry and ironing. Families who had lived here for more than a generation took their holiday table cloths to her to be washed and ironed. She charged 50 cents a shirt to launder and iron it immaculately when local cleaners were charging 1.50 to do a less good job. In her small house, where I had been many times, she had a galvanized pipe running down the center of her small living room. On this she hung the clothes ready to be picked up. She also had one easy chair of approximately 1940s vintage. The room was devoid of any other furnishings. From the front door you could get a glimpse of her work area which was in an adjoining room; an ironing board and a washing machine with some noticeable rust on it. She did not use a dryer.
Over her working lifetime, which began as a young girl, as she followed the profession of her grandmother before her, Oceloa McCarty dutifully walked to town every week and made a deposit into her bank savings account. By the time of her retirement in her eighties, she had managed to save over $100,000 in her checking account. (Google Oceola McCarty; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oseola_McCarty )
Is this the kind of life we should use to justify a minimum wage today that is over 30% lower -- in constant dollars of course -- than the minimum in 1965?
Is Oceola's exemplary life more than we have a reasonable right to expect?