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originally posted by: Gryphon66
a reply to: GeauxHomeYoureDrunk
I'm curious, do you have actual sources you could share that outline who and where all these workers are that refuse to go back to work when an employer calls them back? Is it state-specific, is it clustered in certain industries, etc?
I'm not asking here for "we all know it's happening" I'd like to see what specific data you're referring to when you say things like companies "are in compliance with CDC recs and can't get employees off the sofa"?
Thanks.
State and local health departments follow CDC and OSHA guidelines.
originally posted by: GeauxHomeYoureDrunk
a reply to: Gryphon66
You are correct- you did not deserve that and I apologize.
It hasn't been a great day and I shouldn't take that out on you.
I am neither a leftist or a right winger, I am a centrist.
I would say that roughly between 10-20% of people I know for certain. A whole lot of my friends and family are in construction trades, if that helps. I have not talked to every single person that I know so the actual percentage could be higher. Also these are people in Kentucky, Texas and Louisiana.
I am not included people whom I do not know but have overheard talking about it.
It would also be unfair not to mention that of the people I know for certain are doing it are some (maybe 1/4 to 1/3) who milk their unemployment for all they can even previous to Covid-19 and would not go back to work until they had exhausted their unemployment benefits.
What gets in my craw is so many people who are making more on unemployment than they do working want to moan and groan about how much they make at their jobs but do nothing to try to better their situations. Many seem to think that if someone makes more money than them it is only because they've never known hardship. They can't seem to grasp that the majority of people who are better off financially got there through busting their asses and sacrificing for YEARS to get where they are now. The sense of entitlement is disheartening.
originally posted by: stormson
a reply to: GeauxHomeYoureDrunk
so when big companies milk the system its all good, no punishment.
when the poor do it, its the bane of society.
$15 per hour is $600 a week. no wonder they are trying to milk the system is they make so little to begin with.