Which is to say you never had any real responsibility. I was a student paying rent off my part-time employment paycheque once. If you think it's comparable to living like an adult, you're living in a fantasy world.tharkûn wrote:How does that change what I said. Did you have a wife and kids and a mortgage bill due at the end of the month?
Rent yes, mortgage no, I couldn't afford that. Wife and kids no, by intention I am not going to have a family until I can provide for one. I had every single bill a single member of the workforce has.
Whatever. When I was a student, I paid for my education and worked more hours than that. Again, this has nothing to do with being a member of the workforce with responsibilities.Let's see 5 night shifts a week (5-11) is 30 hours, every other weekend (9-6, 10-6) works out to 38.5 hours a week ... no you are right not quite full time (gee funny how they worked that out isn't it). Hell I'd rather have worked every weekend and gotten more cash ahead, but government rules meant that if they let me, they'd have to reclassify me as fulltime ... which means that regulations meant to protect me, screwed me.
Paying rent is not responsibility, dumb-ass. No one can come and take anything away from you which you've worked for over 10 years if you miss a rent payment. In fact, renters are protected by an assload of legal regulations. Nice to espouse the removal of legal regulations when they don't affect you; would you also support the abolition of all landlord/tenant regulations? After all, if your landlord decides to throw you out in the street one day in the middle of a snowstorm with no warning and toss your belongings onto the lawn, you must not have been paying enough rent, right? So no complaints, and no need for laws, right?Because I got none of the money until I inherited it a few months ago. Up until this July I had a negative net worth from student loans. Before I had to pay for all the basic necessities of life. If 1.5 hours a week doesn't give me "real world experience" sorry it don't mean much.
It's not hard to believe at all. Executives would agree with you. The point was that you spoke about how fulltime workers should negotiate in the labour market yet you have no experience living in that world. Do you think you can casually gamble with your job by regularly facing down your employers when they try to push you over a barrel even though you could lose your house if you gamble wrong? And what do you do during an economic downturn, when your job is most precarious, your chances of finding a replacement are most slim, and your employers are most eager to cut their costs? I mention your abysmal lack of experience with the real world because it is relevant to your abysmal inability to understand labour relations.I'm not a trust fund and never have been. I worked my through like so many others. Why is so hard to beleive that some one could have experience and not support government mandated overtime?
Nothing "entitles" anyone to more compensation. The question is how much misery is doled out in this world, and your ideal society would create quite a bit of it. The unemployed person ends up on the dole; quite unhappy. But if corporations can move their employees around as easily as you propose, they will push everyone down to a ridiculously low wage. The effect will be less money going to the workforce overall than the conventional situation where most people have certain minimum benefits guaranteed and regulations making it difficult to dump employees at will.In economic downturns the value of your labor goes down. If somebody else is willing to do your job for the compensation you receive now, what entitles you to more compensation and them nothing?
You missed the part where I explained that it's not as hard to break unions as you think. I have worked in shops where the owner swore that he would simply close it down and start a new one if the shop ever unionized, and I know he wasn't bluffing. You, on the other hand, speak purely from theory.By choice. If overtime is so vitally important they have the option to unionize over it. Did I miss Bush turning out federal troops to go strike breaking or something?80% of the workforce is not unionized, dumb-ass.
Again, you speak from pure theory, with no regard whatsoever for realistic conditions. Management knows that the disruption to your life of a job search is massive, and they use that knowledge to pay you just enough to keep you around, while trying to force you to work hours which will destroy your home life.Personally I think if I want to work a longer workweek at the same compensation I should be allowed to. If I want to work 45 hours a week as a part time employee I should be allowed to. It's my labor to sell at a price I feel is fair.
Unpaid overtime allows corporations to demand ridiculous hours of their employees with no effect on their bottom line. Ridiculous hours have a corrosive effect not only on the employees themselves, but on their families and ultimately on the whole of society. You argue that it is not a government matter; I say that it is, inasmuch as anything which fucks up society as much as absent fathers can be.
Don't be ridiculous. Time and a half is a far better system than criminalizing it, since many companies undergo emergencies and crises which occasionally do legitimately require overtime. If it's important enough to the company to demand the overtime, it's important enough to pay for it. Yet again, you offer a solution pulled out of the theoretical air, betraying an astounding inability to think in the real world.In any event there is no reason the penalty for longer workweeks must be time and half. The government could get the same results by having a special tax for companies which exceed the workweek, make it a criminal offense, or revoke the corporate charters. Some penalty must exist, but it need not be time and half.
I don't give a fuck what unions want. Individual employees themselves want shorter workweeks, but they also want to be compensated when they're forced to work overtime.Unions didn't WANT their members working overtime. They wanted MORE MEMBERS.
Obviously, because you have as little experience in management as you do in labour. Hiring and training new workers is not something you can do to solve a labour shortage when you need to make a rush delivery on a last-minute order, dumb-ass. Ever heard of transient demand? Fuck, the number of ridiculously unrealistic tenets in your position could pile up and bury a house.All of the union strikes over the length of the workweek had one solution (so far as I read) ... hire more workers. I fail to see why unions which can lever all manner of other concessions couldn't get this particular one.