posted on Jul, 29 2022 @ 02:14 PM
a reply to:
MatthewGraybeal13
Not entirely true, the CEO's (while often greedy) aren't to blame. It's the people themselves. We've grown to expect that basically no education or
valuable skills means we are entitled to a livable wage. That's just not the case. We're worth exactly what we put into ourselves. I'm all for a
basic minimal wage like we have now, but don't expect a job for kids in school to support a family of five. I realize not everyone has the access
(either time or monetary) to get schooling of some sort, but there are jobs out there that pays better that you can live off of with little or no
education. (They just require you to put in hard work, like entry level construction.)
I've worked horrible jobs, jobs that were well below my "paygrade" because I was in a tough situation. I could hardly put food on my table as is,
much less support anyone else. But I never once thought, "This is the tippers fault!". And in reality, tipping only gets you an extra grand a year,
which can help but in no way makes up for low wage.
While I do agree that we need to "look down on the Business Model". Some businesses have extremely shady practices that put their employees last.
That kind of lack of ethics need to go. You can't screw over your employee to make your shareholders happy. Any company that does that aren't worth
being a patron of.
But the lack of skills of an employee isn't my problem, and honestly I don't care. Go to school and get a diploma of some sort to increase your value
as an employee or find another line of (often tougher) work.
On another note, tipping has gone over the top. It's all about greed now. Have you noticed they now want you to tip cashiers now, someone who
literally punches up some buttons. Absolutely not. Not unless they were my server or someone who provided an actual service to me. I've seen
systems in place now that want you to tip an electronic device (!) that does everything automatically. Like the company providing it wants tips...
Like, seriously? (More common in Europe now than the U.S.)
Everything is about squeezing you for an extra few cents. Do a good job in a service industry and I'll tip you more than the 15%. Am I going to tip a
machine that I myself place an order into? No. Am I going to feel guilty for someone who is struggling because of their choices (or lack thereof)?
No.
/Rant.