I will ignore the strawman that you built and continue from this point that actually adds to our discussion.
Strawman? You were the one who wanted to institute a living welfare system. A system that rewards those who
choose to do nothing.
Truth is you don't. You don't think that someone working 40 hours deserves to be paid enough to live, eat and sleep in shelter. In the minimum wage discussion you mentioned how a burger flipper isn't working hard enough to live, which is stupid.
Incorrect. I believe that a person should be paid accordingly to economic principles. Such as: 1) Level of skill involved, 2) Availability of job, 3) Rarity of profession, 4) Effort involved in obtaining said skills, 5) The drive to create a situation that betters oneself and others around them, and 6) Riskiness of both profession and employment.
A burger flipper is 1) a no skill job, 2) that is available almost everywhere, 3) that involves people gathering together in a community, 4) which requires no skill prior or during employment, 5) that generally doesn't care about the betterment of society, and 6) is a relatively safe job, as long as you cook the food accordingly to instructions.
In other words, they are easily replaceable, anyone can do it as long as they understand coherent instructions, and can be found anywhere where there's a community around them.
You cannot expect these people who put very little effort into their lives
by making a career out of flipping burgers their entire lives. It should only be 1) a stepping stone for a better life (like high school or part-time college type jobs), or 2) a supplemental job for a family (aka one spouse who is the main breadwinner, while the other spouse works at a burger joint to gain a little bit more value in the family).
You shouldn't be able to support your family
only on minimum wage. Otherwise, everyone would be working minimum wage jobs and nobody would work in higher-skilled or higher-wage jobs. There would be no
incentive to do so.
Let me say this as clearly as I can:
I NEVER SAID THAT AT ALL. That is a myth that proponents of minimum wage state that the
opponents say. AKA you are putting words in my mouth.
Now who's strawmanning again?
People receiving medicaid and EITC are more likely to be working than not working, their wages simply aren't high enough or the cost of living is to expensive.
...do you even know what EITC is? Or how easy it is to defraud the federal government? You do know that
EITC tax fraud was about $15.6
billion
in 2013. That's the
latest report issued by the Treasury department.
I never said that people who uses Medicaid or file the EITC aren't working (again, strawmanning another argument), I'm saying that there is a
huge waste of money being put out by (at least) EITC.
Don't get me started on Medicare/Medicaid fraud.
Furthermore you just automatically assume that a "livable welfare" is full-blown socialism?
Not exactly. "Livable welfare" is a huge step
towards that direction, and is very dangerous for the
exact same reasons socialism will fail as both a political and economical society.
You also assume that minimum wage is full-blown socialism? The ideas may be "socialistic" but their design and purpose is to live and thrive in a capitalistic society.
No, I don't, nor did I ever stated as such (again, you are strawmanning this argument! That's 3 strawmans in a single post so far, what are you doing, building a strawman army?). Minimum wage is basically an enforced price floor that the government issues. When there's a regulation that issues price floors,
things tend to not work as well as intended, and a lot of deficiencies in the market takes place. Things don't work as well, and if you continue to try to "fix" it by issuing more regulations on the price floor, it just exacerbates the problem even further. You don't try to fix a leak by turning on the water on full-blast...
What is the point of the "American Dream" if some Families can't even find a foot to stand on? Why is providing the homeless shelter, food and water a bad thing? Do you really think they are just going to be like "Yeah, I'm ok with sleeping in this crappy shelter and eating subpar food". No they want to get a job, they want to be in the condition that they can be. Furthermore you need to consider how substantial such a thing would be for the mental health of our country.
A) What's preventing those families from bettering themselves? In your words only, please.
B) A lot of the homeless problem is done because we closed asylums, which lead to a lot of displaced mentally ill people with nowhere to go. There are other issues associated with homelessness, but don't assume that there's a silver bullet to solve this issue. It actually requires a lot of things to take place in order to see a drop of the homeless population, and
increasing minimum wage rates will
probably increase said homeless population.
The road to Hell is paved with good intentions.
Fact of the matter is, all of what you are saying is nothing more than propaganda and lies that are spread by the republicans to push their narrative.
Sure, and also by economists, lawyers, accountants, businessmen, politicians, and historical facts. But hey, if it goes against your thinking, it's got to be propaganda, right?
Republicans benefit from these people being unable to participate in society, as it ensures that they will get voted in office and make decisions that benefit the pockets of the rich. These people aren't lazy and they won't just be losers if they receive some standard of living from government assistance.
Wait. Are you saying that this is a Republican-only trait? Should I remind you that the welfare system propped by the democrats actually designed to
trap people in poverty than it is to get them out of it? Remember, that's the very program you think that would
keep people out of poverty.
You can't be against minimum wage laws, against welfare and against free education and still say you care for the goodwill of man.
I'm against raising the minimum wage because it's inefficient and does nothing to help people earn real wages. I'm against our current system of welfare because it traps people in poverty instead of helping them out of it. I'm certainly
for free education, but not free colleges, because not everyone can earn a degree, and by forcing free universities, you are basically diluting the value of those of us who actually
earned our degrees.
I for one would
love to see more people in the professional class, as we have a huge deficiency of lawyers, doctors, accountants, businessmen,
real managers, architects, scientists, teachers, administrators, and other professional careers. Instead, a lot of our college graduates are going into the IT field, art, and communications. Ever ask why those people cannot find a job in their field?