After surprisingly low new employment numbers came out for the month of April, commentators on the right blamed part of the problem on American workers who refuse to take low wage jobs. Why not pressure employers to pay what the market demand?
Refusing to Work for Low Wages Is a Serious Moral Failing
Ted Rall
Ted Rall is a syndicated political cartoonist for Andrews McMeel Syndication and WhoWhatWhy.org and Counterpoint. He is a contributor to Centerclip and co-host of "The Final Countdown" talk show on Radio Sputnik. He is a graphic novelist and author of many books of art and prose, and an occasional war correspondent. He is, recently, the author of the graphic novel "2024: Revisited."
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This “virtue”-signaling is a corollary to the grand, pervasive, propaganda claim of the hyper-rich: “our our bottomless avarice and socio-pathological need for power and control over others IS, precisely, human nature, therefore WE simply can’t help it … but employees MUST must find a way to overcome this human nature.”
Note that eight unpolished turds, claiming to be “Democratic” senators, recently blocked a $15/minimum wage amendment to a recent “stimulus bill.”
Don’t worry. Give it a little longer. Once that rent eviction moratorium expires, people will be knifing each other for $12/hr jobs. Gotta keep making those minimum credit card payments while you beg the Feds to extend your loan deferment yet again.
The wheels are starting to come off. And frankly, I don’t see how the Pelosis and Fensteins of the democratic party are going to trick enough people into holding their noses and voting for the lesser of two evils in 2022. I strongly suspect Trump will wait until after that election. The dems will lose control of the Senate and House of Representatives, and after two full years of total Republican obstruction, fueled in part by Trump’s mid-November 2022 announcement that he’s running for 2024, it’ll be a cakewalk. I can hardly wait to see Rachel Maddow clownishly mugging at the camera about it. That’s REAL journalism there.
CEOs are incentivized with million dollar stock options but the people who actually create the value, who can’t afford the Affordable Care health insurance, and who are facing evictions are supposed to be incentivized by their own personal desperation.
And it’s not that the meager pay offered will forestall their impending disasters.
Little Piggies song about the Bigger Piggies:
“In their sties with all their backing
They don’t care what goes on around
In their eyes there’s something lacking
What they need’s a damn good whacking”