Message from @1776
Discord ID: 769175305071624193
yes burry then or purn plastic better for enviorment guys
when will the new vid come..
You know whats funny, these envirobmentalists believe we can cut oil out of our lives by 100%
They keenly forget or dont know that most of their green energy stuff is built using plastics........which is a derivative of oil
This is a cautionary tale: a Must Watch.
@Hivemind actually you? Bro, love your stuff if so lol ❤️
ty little hollow
People like you are shaping my 16 year old mind on the way I view the world. Honestly, thank you.
Keep doing your thing, love your vids
I hope that i am posting this in the right area, but I wanted to post this from the debate, and my feelings about this: (part 1)
"There is no evidence that when you raise the minimum wage businesses go out of business" Joe Biden --- SAY WHAT???!!!!! I normally don't comment on this stuff, but this is BS. If a business was to raise the minimum wage, 2 things will happen: #1: Prices of your products will go up to help support the increase in minimum wage #2: Employees will be let go, or hours cut, to help off-set the wage increase. As a former shift supervisor, I had to watch the "Labor Costs". If the labor was higher then a certain percentage, I had to send people home. I then had less staff on hand for when a "rush" came in. This increased fatigue on the employees and management staff. Let's give an example of "Price Increase". 2002 a McDonald's Big Mac cost $2.39. Today (10-22-2020) that same burger costs $4.39. That's an increase of $2.00. What was Minimum wage in 2002? $5.15 per hour. What's the minimum wage today? $7.25. You would need to sell 1.6666 Big Macs an hour to cover 1 Employee. If you have 1 counter, 1 D.T., 1 Cook totaling 3 people at $7.25/hr -> $21.75/hr in labor you would need to sell 5 Big Macs in that 1 hour. Let's now make those 3 people make $15.00/hr - $45.00/hr in Labor. Big Mac still costs $4.39, you would need to sell 10.34482 Big Macs in that hour.
(part 2)
Yes McDonalds has more than the Big Mac, but it's the "Iconic" Burger, so that's why it's used. This isn't accounting for Shift Supervisors or Managers, this is just Employees. Lets add a Shift Manager, and say they make $10.00 right now, and subtract the counter person. This brings the Labor costs to $24.50. McD's would need to sell 5.6321 Big Macs. OK, so same labor, and keep the same spacing of shift supervisor to employee wage (Difference of $2.75), to the $15.00 Minimum Wage. Labor Costs would be $47.75, meaning that McD's would need to sell 10.97701 Big Macs per hour. This isn't counting the lights and power to run the equipment and registers. This isn't counting the price of product. This is just Labor. I can give proof of concept in real time right now. $4.39 is the price where I live. In Los Angeles, California the price of a Big Mac is $5.89. Minimum Wage in Los Angeles is $13.00/hr. Same Burger, same stuff to make it, but $1.50 more in Los Angeles than where I am. So tell me that I am wrong when I state facts #1 and #2. Show me proof that I am wrong. Yes, I would like to see a wage increase, but not to where it's going to kill small businesses and cause companies to not hire as many employees. Yes I used McDonalds, but they are a national brand, so it was easy to compare prices between different areas.
Link to the video clip: https://youtu.be/GwhDeprmFxo
I've got to get that food, even though my college dorm closet can barely fit anything else.
@Hivemind hol' up you're Liberal Hivemind aren't you?
Is anyone else excited to see how the media spins this Bobulinski thing?
He's being influenced by Russians obviously
@little hollow for sure, 100%
If theres no evidence, then why dont we make the minimum wage $50 an hour and make everyone instantly rich
Small incremental wage increases may not put people "out of business" but it does pass the cost on to the consumer and contribute directly to inflation.
But doubling the minimum wage to 15 would can a massive spike in unemployment because theres not that much agility in the labor market
The best thing for wages is a labor shortage and low unemployment as evidenced by 2019
Because it affected all industries incrementally instead of picking winners and losers
Inflation just goes away over night
lol
There shouldn't be a minimum wage. It should be an individuals business to decide what they want to pay certain positions.
yeah 15$ is so 2016, it should definitely be higher sinced daah its been 4 years already, but lets cap it at 30$ an hour so the city liberals won't loose their jobs
A pegged minimum wage ($15) would cause inflation across the board. Not to mention businesses would fire most of their workers to pay their remaining workers in the short run. Or worse, replace their entire workforce with robots for the long run to keep the prices of their products at competitive levels.
the jobs would move to asia
or mexico
did you know that corporate tax in sweden is way lower than in the US?
Now I do
lol