Stas Bush wrote:Another reminder on why I decided against the US when considering where to emigrate. That is not normal.
It can be avoided by choosing the right province to live in, but yes. Especially since these state governments, which routinely bar local subdivisions from passing "liberal" laws in the interests of uniformity, will
scream about local rights and privileges if the federal government passes such laws and enforces them upon the states.
Stas Bush wrote:Why ban cities from making their own minimum wage laws or adjusting these figures? Some nations have by-sector or territorial minimum wages instead of nationwide; it's not exactly something to be feared.
Because these provincial governments really are basically under the direct control of corporate interests that desire cheap labor. And due to the way local politics works they do not fear the consequences of revealing this to observers like you and I.
Napoleon the Clown wrote:Melchior wrote:I wonder which kind of business finds it more lucrative to encourage sick workers to avoid taking leave and work with reduced capabilities while infecting their colleagues; surely even republican managers must see the problem there, do they force people to take unpaid leave?
I've gotta wonder about what places you've worked to have any faith in a company to make decisions that are good in the long run. You must be the luckiest person in the world to not have experienced a business being run in a way that's doing more harm than good.
It isn't a question of lucrative, they just think that if employs can take time off for being sick people will abuse it and it will cut into profits. I've got enough experience to tell you that most companies are run less adeptly than the US federal government, which is infamous for being horrifically inefficient and slow.
Honestly, the problem here is that very few people can think in terms of "enlightened self-interest" unless they are forced to do so by a legal code that penalizes you for acting otherwise. Once the law creates the proper incentives, you get enlightened thinking: people who understand that you have to give something to get something,
because the law makes cheating risky. They may even be able to generalize, once that is in place- say, letting an employee take a day off due to a stressful personal situation
by analogy to sick leave.
But if you do not require people to develop that part of their brain, if you bombard them with propaganda saying that poor people are all lazy cheats who abuse their sick leave, if you tell them that they can and should fire whomever they please whenever they please on a whim, if there is no accountability or responsibility...
Yes, they wind up making very stupid decisions about how to manage labor.