Worker Rights: The Cause To Unite All Americans

The fast food industry seems to have been hit the hardest by the employee shortage.

Yet, the service you get now is worse than ever. Even the quality of the food they sell is lacking as well.

And I have also noticed the increase in prices across the entire fast food market.

I do not eat fast food anymore. Never again! I got tired of getting someone else orders, and the rude people with no manners, that you have to deal with.

Cheap Wages = Expensive slop + bad service!

You don't even get what you pay for anymore.

It's either fine dining take-out for me- or I just do my own home cooking!

roasted chicken theigh on a bed of napa cabbage?
 
and things are just going to get worse for the working man/woman as stagflation starts driving companies out of business and unemployment starts spiking up.

when people's disposable income drops as it is doing right now and will only get worse, demand for like-to-have items will fall off. You can already see it in items like the Peloton exercise equipment.
 
and things are just going to get worse for the working man/woman as stagflation starts driving companies out of business and unemployment starts spiking up.

when people's disposable income drops as it is doing right now and will only get worse, demand for like-to-have items will fall off. You can already see it in items like the Peloton exercise equipment.

used car sales are through the roof.

and you know how much people like a new car.
 
It's telling that both left-wing and right-wing media are attacking the nascent worker reformation movement in the United States. CBS, CNN, and Fox have all done hit-pieces on the movement. The people who make $700/hour have convinced those who make $25/hr that the people making $7.25/hr are the problem, when the real problem is that the working class is being exploited and oppressed to make the rich richer.

It's not that people "don't want to work." It's that people can no longer afford to work shit-paying jobs. People are sick of being treated like a cheap resource and are finally standing up for their worth. The capitalists preach that value is determined by supply and demand, but they seem to think that this doesn't apply to labor, so rather than offer competitive salaries and benefits to attract labor, they whine and post passive aggressive signs on their business doors about how "nobody wants to work," when the fact is people do want to work, just not for peanuts.

The working class in the United States is tired of class oppression. We want what workers in other developed nations have, including:

- Paid maternity/paternity leave
- living wages
- termination with cause and with notice
- the right to not be called into work on one's day off under threat of termination
- guaranteed PTO/vacation time
- guaranteed sick pay

Is it too much to ask to not be treated like expendable cattle? If Jeff Bezos can take leisure voyages into space, is it too much to ask that his largest wealth-building resource--his employees--be able to afford a roof and groceries, or even, god forbid, the luxury of spare cash to put into a retirement account?

Or maybe you think I'm a crazed lunatic, and that the "solution" to the current labor shortage is to do what Wisconsin legislators are proposing by having kids work until 11pm (because apparently it's better to bring back child labor than to distribute some of the wealth from the wealthy class so that adult workers can have a living wage and exist with dignity).

YOU WIN THE INTERNET TODAY!
AMERICA WAS BUILT ON SLAVE LABOR
 
Solving simple poverty by correcting for capitalism's natural rate of unemployment via existing legal and physical infrastructure is more cost effective than adding that layer of bureaucracy to help organize labor.
 
Solving simple poverty by correcting for capitalism's natural rate of unemployment via existing legal and physical infrastructure is more cost effective than adding that layer of bureaucracy to help organize labor.

are new unions another layer of bureaucracy?

IS ubi another layer of bureaucracy.

Is raising minimum wage a new layer of bureaucracy?


You're actually a status quo zealot fascist sellout.
 
I think you're a kid that drank the Commie kool-aid and hasn't really been out in the work force much.

Marx was always talking about "the workers" but never worked a day in his life. I can't see taking the advice of a couch-crasher that never worked ary a day in his life and had no real-world experience.

The things you're asking for really aren't too much, and people used to get all those things. In order to get that back, illegal immigration and outsourcing of jobs has to be cut almost completely out.

Illegal labor depresses wages badly PLUS they suck up poverty benefits that are supposed to be for Americans.

:truestory:
 
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