Speaker to Animals wrote:GrumpyCatFace wrote:Speaker to Animals wrote:
Labor glut.
Uh huh. So you believe that skilled wages rely entirely on an artificial restriction of the labor pool?
And no problem at all with executives making hundreds of times more than workers, or a leisure class developing far above, effectively squashing the lower- and middle-classes into one?
You're being ridiculous. Stop with the virtue signaling and try to honestly debate it if you are so passionate about it.
(1) The real income of the middle class has been on the decline since the 1980s. This has everything to do with immigration policy. We opened the doors in the 1960s to rampant immigration from the developing world. Then we offshored manufacturing and half the services sector in the late 1990s. On top of that, we invented this kind of indentured slave program called the H1B visa which flooded high-paying labor sectors with cheap labor that is not allowed to complain or even look for work at another employer.
I can certainly agree that H1B programs are bad for skilled workers. However, that's got nothing to do with Border Control, now does it?
If you don't understand that supply and demand also work with respect to salaries and wages, then I don't know what else to tell you. Flood the market with more workers than you have jobs, and incomes fall.
Again, you've changed topics - there are no MBA and PhD job candidates hiking across the fucking desert.
(2) Whether or not a CEO makes hundreds of times more than workers is irrelevant. It's absolutely irrelevant. The only thing that matters is what is happening to those middle and working class jobs, and the quality of life in general. People who fixate on income inequality like you do apparently would rather everybody be poorer just so that the wealthy are not much richer.
This is where you really go off the rails. Paying the top brass
proportionally many times more than they used to make vs. the rest of your workforce is NOT a lower wage for the workforce? How does math work for you? A company makes X dollars, and pays much more than it should to the top - that is zero-sum. How is that confusing?
Furthermore, I'd argue that there at least exists more evidence that income inequality leads to a better quality of life for all than otherwise. Every successful civilization in history had a high degree of wealth inequality. If you want wealth equality, then go live with the Mashco-Piro people in the Amazon rain forest.
Welcome to la-la-land. If the Rich can't have more, then everybody will starve. You're going to tell me about Trickle-Down next, aren't you?