EDITEDIT: I have just noticed other people have replied to you! I'm sorry man, I'm going to read up on it. I'm going to leave my replies still, of course.
Like Dralix said not all jobs are equal nor should they be.
Did I claim this?
Do I think that minimum wage laws should apply to waitresses? YES Tipping is a bonus for a good job, it should not be automatic or considered as part of the person's wages in order to reduce their base pay.
Do I think that tips should be taxable income? NO
I don't like tipping as an integral part of salary. It makes no sense to me. It should not be necessary to tip in order to pay workers.
We agree here.
A company is profitable when it earns more than it has expenses. If the cost of labor is increased the product that is being provided now costs more. The customer will then buy less product which then drives the company out of business. If labor produces less value than it costs, the company will use less labor. Higher mandatory wages will reduce employment. The workers who keep their jobs will have more but the ones laid off will have nothing.
Look at Drewcifer's graph.
Scandinavia is a comparatively small country with a small influx of immigrants and large oil reserves that can pay for the whole party. What works there would not work in the US.
Scandinavia is not a country, and the oil reserve deal really only applies to Norway. Oil helps, but stating we're enjoying a party based on it is a gross oversimplification. Comparably, the US has a buttload of natural resources; Sweden and Norway can be argued to have raw materials, but Denmark really doesn't enjoy that luxury, we've got poor to mediocre farmland and even there we have to rely on highly skilled labor in order to make that worth our while.
EDIT: To clarify this: Denmark and Norway has oil reserves, but Danish oil can not be the sole explanation to Danish wealth, just as it can not be the sole explanation to Swedish wealth.
(The only reason I'm not including Finland is not due to Scandipolitiks, but because I really have no idea how it's going over there beyond their awesome educational system)
In my opinion delivering pizza is a pretty easy job. You take pizza from the store and drive to someone's address and carry it to their door. It doesn't pay well because anyone who can drive and find an address can do it. It is a job that someone who lives in their parents basement can smoke dope, play large amounts of online MMRPG, generally avoid reality and can prosper while doing so. it is not a job for an adult who wants to provide for a family.
Look into a job in building trades or general construction, what people would term a "dirty job". Those jobs are a lot harder, they use manual labor and often you are outside in the elements all day. They also pay more than minimum wage.
There is not room for everyone to get out of the pitiful trap of being a target for your responsibility/reality claims.
When I was running projects back in the US if someone without skills but a willingness to work came to me and said he was in a bad way trying to support a family I hired him as a general laborer. Sometimes it worked out well, they showed up worked hard and got paid. When they found a better job they moved on, it was good for both of us. Sometimes it did not work out that well, they showed up late or skipped work, they complained or shirked their duties. These people got fired in a day or so, there is no room for lazy. Some people are born smarter or stronger but lazy is a choice. Everybody can choose not to be lazy.
Not really true that laziness is a choice. As the roughest of examples, depression causes "laziness". Many things are attributed to laziness; the US discourse of mocking or blaming the poor for being poor; attributing poverty to laziness; that forces me to either denounce the argument or reinvestigate what "laziness" actually incorporates as a concept. Because suddently laziness can't possibly be a fault of choice when it empirically isn't a fundamental reason for poverty. Incidentally; if so many people apparently are lazy, it
does not help to muck around convinced of an individualist ideal of the hard, inventive, self-sufficient worker. It's you that claim that this pizza deliverer should just wake up and connect to the real world and not be lazy. Well, apparently laziness is part of the real world, mr. individualist. Wake up and find an institutional way to work around it. If humanity is fallacious, perhaps you shouldn't punish it for it; especially as it's perfectly possible to work around it while being wealthy.
That said, good for you to anecdotically show you're both tough and humanitarian, but I assure you I do not recognize it as an institutional element in the US business world. rather it seems to be the exception to the rule and it seems to be symptomatic of the apologetic attitude towards he horrible working culture in the US right now. Like how some people (not you) claim the glory of individualism celebrated through charity. They provide anecdotical evidence of one really heartwarming act of charity while ignoring the poverty still very institutionalized and present in the US - the poverty which could be solved with "immorally" relying on governmental redistritibution of wealth.
Your argument still seems to be mostly about you and not about the poor. I'm happy for what you did, but it does not provide as a solution.
I never have had a crappy job other than a short stint at a McDonalds. It was during wrestling season and the smell of the greasy food combined with cutting weight was a bad combination. I started as a construction laborer, from that I learned carpentry, rod busting and concrete finishing*. These skills funded college and led to engineering. A stronger work ethic will serve you better than being smarter.
This quote is still all about your hard labour making it to somewhere stable. Your argument is about yourself. It showcases how good you are by denoting the weakness of others.
edit: I understand I went slightly ad hominem myself to begin with, but it was not to force you to explain your position. I'm sorry. I did so because it is symptomatic of succesful hard-workers to indirectly brag and blame about poverty or lack thereof in order to legitimize their own rugged individualism; forgetting that unsuccesful hard-workers do not usually have the resources to call the system out on it; and if they do, they're often ignored.
(Also, huh? How can your construction labor not require proper education to begin with?)
Having a good life is hard work, nobody owes you anything.
Some adults will evidently be trapped in pizza delivery. And it's poor for you and for your economy. Saying they can just buckle up and move on is not a solution. It has never worked. And it will come back and bite the righteous in their asses because the righeous clung to their morals; "We deserve this" does not matter to the starving; especially if they're unrightfully doing so.
EDIT: My point disappeared in editing; it's not only arguably morally wrong only to truly reserve resources for the succesful; it's also economically ineffecient, will lead to poverty, and if history has taught us anything, empoverishing a population is not a recipe for stability...
If we are to talk righteousness and morals. No matter how glorious and pure and individualistic and morally sound your actions have been, it would not matter in a societal context which did not allow institutional protection of your assets; this institutional protection provided by the very people you are demonizing now. And through that protection, less gold to the pizza delivery man means more to you, no matter how infinitesemal the returns are, as you are part of the same economy. The world is not a Randian place. You are guaranteed education and safety which have served you way more than your rugged individualism will ever do.
NOW OFFICIALLY DONE EDITING
I'M SORRY FOR GOING SO PERSONAL OF COURSE. For don't get me wrong. I really sympathize your anecdote about your work ethics. I'd like more people like you; you do convince me that you're a great example. The problem is really only that most aren't as great, so it's not so good a base to build a society upon.