[QUOTE="bigfoot2045"]
[QUOTE="MrGeezer"] Regardless, the way things are set up not everyone can get a good job. It's like a dozen bums fighting over a ham sandwich. You can blame the losers for not fighting hard enough, but the fact is that there just plain wasn't enough food to go around. Regardless of whose fault it is that they're stuck earning minimum wage, this sort of stuff is going to end up being a big problem. If you've got a bunch of people only qualified to do one kind of work, and it's practically impossible for them to make a living off of that work, then that's gonna end up being a big problem.WhiteKnight77
In your analogy you forgot the part where there's a guy with a cart full of ham sandwiches standing there laughing at them. Megacorps can afford to pay their employees a living wage. They don't because they're greedy scumbags.
Are you willing to pay $10 for a simple cheeseburger? How about $20 a gallon for gas? All those low paying jobs help keep prices down. It is not about greedy corporations, but what a customer is willing to pay for something be it a hamburger, getting your car washed, or an ear of corn at the grocery store. Places like McDonald's are small businesses, franchises owned by a local owner, not some big conglomerate of uncaring corporations. Ask the local owner how much he profits from his business for the year before stating that they can afford it. Home Depot is a large corporation that would have to raise the price of a toilet seat to $50 and that $.50 PVC fitting would rise to $5 just to remain profitable (though home improvement does take some knowledge so to give customers the right advice on how to do something). They would struggle to remain in business if they had to increase pay for their workers across the board as no one would want to buy anything from them.
You do realize that farmers and oil workers make craploads of money, right? Guys working on offshore rigs often bring in six figure salaries, and farmers get huge government subsidies.
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