bridges said:
I misspoke there - what I meant was, having enough money to live on.
Minimum wage is enough to live on. Just not very comfortably. You might see it as patronizing, but if you are a hard worker then you don't work for minimum wage unless you're just entering the work force. Everyone starts at the bottom.
Unless I'm mistaken, the minimum for a F/T employee is 10 days a year - not very much if you think about it, especially if you're accustomed to having three times that. And the more companies reduce their salaried positions in favour of terms and contracts, the more people don't have any paid vacation at all, or other spiffy benefits like drug plans, dental care & eyeglasses.
If you have 30 paid vacation days a year, then you're a government employee and I fully support cutting that back as its excessive in my eyes. No private sector job would give even close to that. 10 days paid vacation is fine. Its what I currently get, and when you take in to account all the stat days you get off, then it adds up to a lot more. If you don't get the benefits from your work, pay into an insurance plan then. Again, you are not my responsibility. You want my taxes, and as I already said I don't make a lot to begin with, to pay for your care so you can spend your own money on recreation (and I use this term loosely, I include anything that isn't a necessity, including internet connections, new cell phones, etc..) If you can't afford these things, there are many government funded groups that will help you write up a budget. As the old saying goes, poor planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part.
If you've worked as a Commissionaire your whole life (as opposed to being, say, ex-military), congratulations to you for saving your pennies. Either way, what I'm talking about is all the people working at McJobs or intermittent contracts or not working at all, because of layoffs and other circumstances beyond their control ... we may say they should work hard and rise above it, but then so many of us patronize the Tim Hortons of the world, imagine the hue and cry if there were nobody to hand us our double-double in the morning.
As I said earlier, unless you're just starting out or have made major mistakes in your life, you are not working for minimum wage if you're a hard worker. If there was a huge demand for people to serve us our coffee in the morning, the job would pay a lot more. Its called the free market. If no one was willing to work the job, they'd need to offer more money to lure people to the positions, which would in the end make coffee more expensive. But let's face it, even if coffee costed $4 for a large, people would still be lined up to get them.
That's the difference between our philosophies (yellow colour added by me). I think there must be a way to take care of each other in the greater sense to a certain basic extent, including people I don't know, and still prosper as a society. That may sound idealistic to some ... & yep, that's the whole point. :nod:
We do take care of each other in the greater sense. I fully support my taxes paying for good roads and infrastructure, a well funded police and fire departments and a fully operational armed forces. That way, you are reasonably safe, have the ability to travel to work and don't need to really worry about war coming to Canada. Everything you do within that blanket of security that is provided is your choice. Sometimes people get lucky and catch a great break and rise really far.. But most people get to where they are by how much effort they put in.
EDIT: Forgot to add free basic education to my list, which means everyone starts out on equal footing, more or less.