Your math is a bit off... let’s assume the CEO of McDonald’s makes $150mm, and agrees to work for free. McDonald’s has 420,000 employees, so spreading his salary out to everyone else would be a $357/year raise, or about .17/hr for full time workers.
Your math is a bit off... let’s assume the CEO of McDonald’s makes $150mm, and agrees to work for free. McDonald’s has 420,000 employees, so spreading his salary out to everyone else would be a $357/year raise, or about .17/hr for full time workers.
Get a job in retail. Do a good job. Get promoted. Make money. Not that hard.
I would suggest that if you don’t earn enough money to have kids that you not have kids. Be a responsible adult and don’t bite off more than you can chew.
Well no. It is different. I could be sitting on my couch, open up the uber app, and see if anyone nearby needs a ride (and I earn a little cash). After that trip, I head back home and finish watching better call Saul.
2 years ago I was a retail store manager. I would regularly post assistant manager jobs paying $50k/year, and supervisor jobs paying $17/hr. And more often than not, I would see between 0-2 applicants. I’m not saying there are thousands of high paying jobs in every city up for grabs, but I do find it interesting that…
Nah... you seem to forget that the person in this article CHOOSES the lifestyle he has. He can stop working with uber any time he wants to. He can go out and find a better paying job and improve his situation if he chooses to.
Amen
1. How do you determine what a livable wage is?
So... do some research before choosing a career you found out about in a craigslist ad? I ride uber twice a week to and from my local airport. It’s 12 miles away, and I pay between $12-$13 each trip. If I was going to consider uber for income I would simply look at the facts. At $1/mile (before Uber’s cut), I’d need…
Raising the minimum wage is not the answer to anything.
Well... if uber put limits on how long people could drive then they wouldn’t be independed contractors anymore. So... your argument is a bit jumbled.
There are plenty of jobs out there if you choose to look and do the necessary work. The guy in this article chose to quit his full time job to drive for uber. It was his bad decision that put him in this position.
Well, it does require a background check. But otherwise I’m with you.
Those rose colored glasses look great on you.
Well, I’m not young, and I’m certainly not white. So there’s that.
And why does the ethnic identity of the actor need to match that of the person they’re portraying? That’s absolute nonsense. The anger over this casting choice isn’t about ethnic identity, it’s about color. Nothing more.
Yeah, I didn’t think I invented him. Not really the point. But how do you think the General public would react if he was cast as a black character?
So you would be okay with this guy playing Michael Jackson?
Not sure what you’re getting at with the one drop rule comment. If it’s okay for a mixed race person (who is both white and black) to play a white character, then why would it not be okay for a white person to play a black (or mixed race) character? This door swings both ways.
See also: Anthony Hopkins played a light skinned black man. No outrage, nothing. Why the different reaction?