This union forcing management to do this is the best news I have heard in a long time.
It would be great if we lived in Star Trek. We don't, because they will not let us. The corporate BS "efficiency" will not benefit us. They will leave us to homelessness to die and then charge us with a crime for sleeping in the streets they forced us into. Yes, you. Everyone.
If these unions don't fight like this we are all screwed. Good faith, bad faith, and all that are all just words that mean nothing.
Management does not care. They will fire you in a second for any reason or no reason or a reason they made up and lied about.
The answer to the fact that we can't get a raise is not to deny everyone raises. The answer is to give everyone a raise without corporate greed raising prices and fake blaming "inflation." This corporate lie should be a crime and the boards of directors and C suite CEO and all that should face jail / prison time for it. I don't care what the alleged cost will be. Don't tell us things won't be affordable, because things aren't affordable right now. No it won't get worse than it is already going to be getting worse as it is. Eggs should never have been $8 per dozen. The 2008 real estate and economic collapse happened with no one in charge getting any prison for any of it, and just tons of examples. I want high level executives in prison for this, and I mean the ones actually making the decision, not some scapegoat. We don't care anymore. The average person can be "held accountable" for anything but the CEO just walks on water while making all the bad decisions?
We gave them tons of tax breaks to be "job creators." Now they're automating it away? Imprison them. Seize their passports. Chain them to walls. As they like to say "everyone is fungible." Replace them with someone who will be scared enough not to run everything into the ground for short term profit.
***I will vote for this law and so will a LOT of other people. That's why they won't let that on the ballot. We would pass it.****
I just don't care anymore. I've heard every BS lie to justify this corporate fraud (it is all fraud).
Enshitification https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enshittification/
Planned obsolesce https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planned_obsolescence
Ah, corporate: "Making bad products; fighting regulations so we can make them worse, pay you less, and charge you more."
What these unions did is a good start.
The world economy is balanced on a knife's edge from complete systemic collapse. The reason we don't live in Star Trek is not "because they will not let us", but because the technology does not exist, because it's impossible and violates the laws of physics.
"Giving everyone a raise" is a child's idea of economics. You can't eat money. Giving everyone a raise is what inflation is. The problem is not one of having enough money, it's one of having enough stuff to go around. Give everyone more money, and they'll still be using it to chase after the same amount of stuff, and it will still be true that not everyone can get a piece.
Your example of the 2008 real estate crisis is perfectly spot-on. For what "bad decisions" do you want "high level executives" to be "held accountable"? The ultimate cause of the crisis was a very large number of people being given mortgages they couldn't afford to pay back in the long term, resulting in spates of defaults and the consequent devaluing of bank assets backed by those loans; I absolutely agree that allowing those mortgages to be made was a terrible decision, but do you really understand the economic background that led to them? The loosening of credit restrictions was pushed all the way from the federal level, and it was founded in reasons of equity - to "make sure everyone has access to housing". The alternative was that a huge number of people would not get mortgages and would be homeless or forced to rent, while ordinary homeowners still needing to sell their houses would have banks and rental property management companies coming in to fill the gap - just as we've seen since 2008. There are certainly other ways the real estate market could be structured that might result in better or worse performance, but do you have any specific ideas about them or any knowledge about what they would entail?
I can't begin to describe to you the dire straits the real estate market is in right now. How can you build homes for everyone when - the world is running out of sand suitable for making concrete and so far every other alternative has failed to meet requirements? When the Chinese steel industry which provides the majority of the world's structural steel has been faltering for years? Until recently, gypsum plaster, a crucial building material required by virtually all US fire codes, was produced as a byproduct of coal-fired power plants - now the world has been phasing out coal-fired power plants for a few years, so the growing demand for gypsum has to fall on not-particularly-environmentally-friendly gypsum mines. Mining by human labor is incredibly grueling; automated mining is inordinately energy-intensive. The growth in demand for gypsum outstrips any reasonable possibly growth in supply. Eventually, mines will start running out of gypsum, too, and we will have to spend even more effort and energy to get more. How can we afford to build homes for America's growing population under these circumstances, given that all buildings also require constant maintenance which consumes even more energy and material, and construction materials also have to be diverted to so many other necessary tasks nationwide, like repairing crumbling infrastructure?
Producing the things humans want and need is hard, and requires the investment of energy and human labor. (Almost everyone in the first world, even many of the homeless, has a smartphone - made possible only by third-world slavery.) Around the world, our ability to produce enough is failing. This is not a situation where Star Trek fantasies and "just give everyone a raise" are useful solutions.
"Child's Idea of Economics?" That's one smart, intelligent, practical "kid" with all those degrees in economics:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Maynard_Keynes"He is known as the "father of macroeconomics" and he was director of the Bank of England.
Just stop it. Just stop insulting everyone and writing off any idea you don't instantly agree with as having 0 worth.
We remember your prior trolling. Keep right on doing that thing where you call people names like childish and the rest of the stuff. More and more people will just chose to block you so no one will see the stuff you somehow put in text. Tons of people have tried to help you, but go ahead and do whatever.
I don't even know where to begin on the problems with this:
1.) ""Giving everyone a raise" is a child's idea of economics. You can't eat money. Giving everyone a raise is what inflation is"Nope. See we have corporate greed, not inflation right now, and that's why it is so insanely higher than it has been in decades.
2.) "You can't eat Money"Grocery stores take the money and give you food.
3.) Same amount of stuff...... Yeah, you're trying to say giving people more money won't matter without more production of stuff, right? The reason more stuff isn't made, is because sales of the stuff are down. Doesn't matter what stuff it is. The corporate(s) in charge decide they aren't meeting whatever ridiculous sales targets they dreamed up. Then they cut budgets and suddenly we have less of things. That's how it really works.
But, the reason the sales are down is because nobody can afford to buy it (or corporate quality sabatoge like planned obsolescence).
4.) "For what "bad decisions" do you want "high level executives" to be "held accountable"? The ultimate cause of the crisis was a very large number of people being given mortgages they couldn't afford to pay back in the long term, resulting ...."Revisionist history?
No, "deregulation" caused this mess. Regulation good. Regulation prevented "a very large number of people being given mortgages they couldn't afford." You couldn't get a mortgage before they toned those down.
Business absolutely caused the 2008 financial crisis and anything else is not going to be debated by me. I lived through it.
5.) The loosening of credit restrictions was pushed all the way from the federal level, and it was founded in reasons of equity - to "make sure everyone has access to housing".Wow, you really bought that huh? Let's be clear, that was corporate cover for large banks and businesses who wanted to issue more loans to sell them off. That last part is critical, because they would sell off those bundled loans to someone else and buy insurance on those loans. This is stacking the deck, because they would buy insurance policies paying out if the loans failed, but they made sure to give loans to people who couldn't pay them back. They got insurance payouts if the loans defaulted. It was corporate rigged.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_default_swapSee this is why the insurance's insurance or a re-insurer went damn near belly up, you may have heard of AIG:
https://insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu/article/what-went-wrong-at-aig 6.) There are certainly other ways the real estate market could be structured that might result in better or worse performance, but do you have any specific ideas about them or any knowledge about what they would entail?Yeah, actually I do. They could have kept doing what they were doing before they messed everything up with mortgage backed securities and just built more houses/living places. There's no reason we needed these complicated financial instrument crap. We don't need wall street getting richer. There are ways to fund construction without mortgage backed crap instruments that failed because they were too risky, like literally the way they were built before those things.
7.) How can you build homes for everyone when - the world is running out of sand suitable for making concrete and so far every other alternative has failed to meet requirements? Are you talking about this ridiculous non story they're trying to make us believe?
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20191108-why-the-world-is-running-out-of-sandSo what's really going on is that there has not been innovation in concrete recently on a widespread basis, because some corporations want to sit back and keep sucking up profits like the vampires they are. There are absolutely other building materials we can use, but they just don't care. Christ, bamboo is pretty renewable, but even if you want to stick to just setting materials (that set like concrete does) the process is not impossible.
https://www.familyhandyman.com/list/concrete-alternatives/ Hempcrete and other stuff aside they could make bricks. It is absolutely not impossible, but it might mean they make slightly less corporate profits, so I guess we'll all be homeless to keep the supply artificially constrained because we can't have nice things.
"You can't even begin to explain?" Really? More like it's not true and please don't do the usual exclaiming that happens when someone disagrees with you, but I know better than to expect that. I'm just childish like noted English Economists....
The "just give everyone a raise" is called a stimulus, and we get it by taxing the rich who said they would give us jobs for tax cuts but didn't/are taking them back. It absolutely can be this way. The things they should be held in prison for include intentionally destroying entire industries to make themselves a quick buck "venture capitalism," where they buy up a fully functional business and strip it bare to cannibalize it for quick cash, leaving everyone else that had anything to do with it screwed.
I'm getting sick of the rich claiming the high ground and acting like they are humanity's saviors. The government has done a better job in the failure of capitalism, and the misguided laughs of capitalists are just sad when the proof is so clearly evident and undeniably easy to find in history. We can do it without them, easily.
Edit because I didn't see the prior posts when I made this: Another related thing - how would you ever prevent someone from bidding more for something they want, and so raise its price? That is, are you advocating fixed arbitrary price setting? That just doesn't work.
I have to agree with the previous poster: the fundamental issue society is facing is that demand is higher than supply. What is annoying is that the reasons for this are many: culture, weather, conflict, policy, disease. There is no magic bullet here.
What is clear, is that you can't directly increase supply by forcing companies to give more of their revenue to employees. This is the same thing as trickle-down; what you're hoping is that if you give employees money, some of them will start their own companies to increase supply over what would be otherwise. You could also try to tell people to get by with less - but then that will destroy jobs, because hey you're not buying the thing I need! So there's more systematic change needed - make it so people don't need perpetual income to have a house (which will totally upend the entrenched status quo based on property taxes; trying to reform that would be quite difficult, because you'd want to avoid loopholes that make the situation worse. Maybe AI can come up with a scheme, eh?)
So if you want to "fix" the system, you need policies that make it easier to create competition for all the companies that are exercising enshittification. Get rid of systematic issues which put too many middlemen between producers and consumers. Incentivize activities that actually produce goods and transformative services - not sales, entertainment, and advertising. Make it easier to enter various professions (basic health care does not need the kind of expense it has today; sure specialists and surgeons need a lot, but all the other stuff?)
If you want to take it out on CEOs, don't string them up - make them build houses. I mean sure you can do stuff like put the marginal tax rate at say 90% on any income over $1M, but that won't actually be anything other than a token gesture that has no material effect on anything.
This is why some US policies (actual or proposed) make no sense; deporting millions of workers is not going to fix inflation; sure it will reduce some tax burden, but the best that can do is reduce the deficit slightly. It will reduce demand somewhat, sure, but it's very likely it will reduce supply faster than it will reduce demand (in aggregate; in some areas it will reduce demand for some things enough that supply is again in balance), exacerbating the situation. Giving people $25k to make a home purchase is directionally not helpful. However, some policies are helpful - $50k tax credit to start a new business for example, or tax incentives to build lower-cost housing.
That's the thing with these recent union issues: they do nothing to address supply shortages in the places that really have supply shortages, often because they physically can't - such as things like the concrete sand, or food shortages, or any other raw material issue. Physics is a pain like that.
See you are more reasonable in this for rejecting "trickledown." It's demand creation, however.
I don't think we need competition. We need production and I don't think those are the same. You get rid of "enshitification" not by competition but by strict regulation and actual criminal laws. If a company intentionally designs a bad product, then that should be a criminal offense. The person who has the final say should be in serious trouble, not the engineer who was told to do it. The engineer was just following orders. I want the moron making the big money and the decisions arrested and imprisoned and displayed openly for the rest of the corporate problem makers to see and realize that will be them if they make bad products. They get a trial to prove they didn't do it. If they did, straight to prison.
If you want to take it out on CEOs, don't string them up - make them build houses. I mean sure you can do stuff like put the marginal tax rate at say 90% on any income over $1M, but that won't actually be anything other than a token gesture that has no material effect on anything.
Yes, reeducation through forced labor on the bad CEOs. I am entirely for this. Excellent idea. Bad CEO does not employ people/layoffs and ruins the company/industry: forced labor to build houses to serve those he screwed. Armed law enforcement with shotguns and batons to beat him if he doesn't meet his productivity quota. Not joking. Will vote for.
deportation
I agree deportation isn't really going to fix things. We need to have a stable population accounting for replacement rate (those born compared to those dying) and some growth on top of that. This whole area is a mess, because humans just currently do not have systems in place to have a stable population. So without us keeping our own numbers in check, we overpopulate and nature will be terrible in how she checks our numbers, war, famine, disease, pollution.
We need to get a hold on this so we as a species aren't just popping out kids we have no way to support. It's a mess and a tragedy. No one has a solution, but we either expand to habitats outside of earth, reach some stability or we implode.