From: k_flynn on
Rudy Canoza wrote:
> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
> > Rudy Canoza wrote:
> >> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
> >>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
> >>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
> >>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
> >>>>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
> >>>>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
> >>>>>>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
> >>>>>>>>> On May 18, 12:29 am, Rudy Canoza <rudy-can...(a)excite.com> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>> k_fl...(a)lycos.com wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>> On May 17, 11:00 am, Rudy Canoza <rudy-can...(a)excite.com> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>>> "We're going to take things away from you on behalf of
> >>>>>>>>>>>> the common good."
> >>>>>>>>>>>> -- Hillary Clinton, 2004
> >>>>>>>>>>> You do realize this quote is about letting Bush's tax cuts for the
> >>>>>>>>>>> rich expire?
> >>>>>>>>>> So?
> >>>>>>>>> So putting a quote in its actual context is what we like to call
> >>>>>>>>> "truthful."
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>> She wasn't talking about "taking" things away from society as a whole.
> >>>>>>>> Yes, she was and is.
> >>>>>>> Nope. You're lying. Look it up.
> >>>>>> I'm not lying, punk.
> >>>>> Yes. You are.
> >>>> Nope. Not lying, thieving freeloading punk.
> >>> Yes you are,
> >> Nope. I know everything about the quote...
> >
> > Then you really should stop lying about
>
> Haven't lied, gentlemanly highly skilled professional who has made me look so foolish.

You have a very slow learning curve.

Your lie was apparent on its face and in your own admissions.

From: Rudy Canoza on
k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
>>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>>>>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
>>>>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>>>>>>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
>>>>>>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, thieving freeloading mooch, wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>> On May 18, 12:29 am, Rudy Canoza <rudy-can...(a)excite.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>> k_fl...(a)lycos.com wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>> On May 17, 11:00 am, Rudy Canoza <rudy-can...(a)excite.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> "We're going to take things away from you on behalf of
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> the common good."
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> -- Hillary Clinton, 2004
>>>>>>>>>>>>> You do realize this quote is about letting Bush's tax cuts for the
>>>>>>>>>>>>> rich expire?
>>>>>>>>>>>> So?
>>>>>>>>>>> So putting a quote in its actual context is what we like to call
>>>>>>>>>>> "truthful."
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> She wasn't talking about "taking" things away from society as a whole.
>>>>>>>>>> Yes, she was and is.
>>>>>>>>> Nope. You're lying. Look it up.
>>>>>>>> I'm not lying, punk.
>>>>>>> Yes. You are.
>>>>>> Nope. Not lying, thieving freeloading punk.
>>>>> Yes you are,
>>>> Nope. I know everything about the quote...
>>> Then you really should stop lying about
>> Haven't lied, gentlemanly highly skilled professional who has made me look so foolish.
>
> You have a very slow learning curve.

Nope - I'm a lightning fast study.


> Your lie

None.

You ran out of steam pretty quickly, punk.
From: k_flynn on
Rudy Canoza wrote:
> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, gentlemanly highly skilled professional, wrote:
> > Rudy Canoza wrote:
> >> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, gentlemanly highly skilled professional, wrote:
> >>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
> >>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, gentlemanly highly skilled professional, wrote:
> >>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
> >>>>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, gentlemanly highly skilled professional, wrote:
> >>>>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
> >>>>>>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, gentlemanly highly skilled professional, wrote:
> >>>>>>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>> k_flynn(a)lycos.com, gentlemanly highly skilled professional, wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>> On May 18, 12:29 am, Rudy Canoza <rudy-can...(a)excite.com> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>>> k_fl...(a)lycos.com wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> On May 17, 11:00 am, Rudy Canoza <rudy-can...(a)excite.com> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> "We're going to take things away from you on behalf of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> the common good."
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> -- Hillary Clinton, 2004
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> You do realize this quote is about letting Bush's tax cuts for the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> rich expire?
> >>>>>>>>>>>> So?
> >>>>>>>>>>> So putting a quote in its actual context is what we like to call
> >>>>>>>>>>> "truthful."
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>> She wasn't talking about "taking" things away from society as a whole.
> >>>>>>>>>> Yes, she was and is.
> >>>>>>>>> Nope. You're lying. Look it up.
> >>>>>>>> I'm not lying, punk.
> >>>>>>> Yes. You are.
> >>>>>> Nope. Not lying, thieving freeloading punk.
> >>>>> Yes you are,
> >>>> Nope. I know everything about the quote...
> >>> Then you really should stop lying about
> >> Haven't lied, gentlemanly highly skilled professional who has made me look so foolish.
> >
> > You have a very slow learning curve.
>
> Nope - I'm a lightning fast study.

Hardly. You wouldn't be repeating a known bald-faced lie to which you
admit the underlying truth in such a public forum otherwise. Fast
studies would have apologized to me and moved on by now,

>
> > Your lie was apparent on its face and in your own admissions.
>
> None.

Well, except for the one about Hillary where you ignore what the
context of her remark and reshape it into a lie to fit your own
political agenda.

> You ran out of steam pretty quickly, punk.

I ran out of steam? Uh-uh. I'm here and calling you on your bald-faced
proven lie, you freeloading janitor you.

From: Jeffrey Turner on
Rudy Canoza wrote:

> Jeffrey Turner wrote:
>
>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>>
>>> Jeffrey Turner wrote:
>>>
>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Jeffrey Turner wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Jeffrey Turner wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Eeyore wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> "Fred G. Mackey" wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Eeyore wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> There should be no minimum wage at all. It destroys
>>>>>>>>>>>>> employment and hurts poor people.
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> LMAO !
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> Yes, they'd be so much better off on $3 an hour !
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> That would be better than being unenmployed.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Could *you* live on it ?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> The choice isn't between $3.00 an hour (or whatever wage the
>>>>>>>>> person can
>>>>>>>>> get) and some artificially pegged higher wage; the choice is
>>>>>>>>> between
>>>>>>>>> $3.00 an hour and ZERO dollars an hour. If the work a person
>>>>>>>>> does only
>>>>>>>>> brings in $3.00 an hour in revenue, the employer isn't going to
>>>>>>>>> pay
>>>>>>>>> $7.50 an hour, thereby losing $4.50 an hour (actually, much
>>>>>>>>> more after
>>>>>>>>> payroll taxes) for every hour the doofus works; the doofus will
>>>>>>>>> be fired.
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Advocates of minimum wage laws just don't get it: they destroy
>>>>>>>>> employment. If you really don't think they do, then why don't you
>>>>>>>>> advocate a $50 an hour minimum wage?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> It destroys sub-poverty employment.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> It destroys employment, period. It keeps people who might earn
>>>>>>> some income from earning any income at all.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Of course you've got figures to back that up? I didn't think so.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Let's see, the minimum wage went from $1.00 to $1.15 on September 3,
>>>>>> 1961. Unemployment rate,
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Bad try, sophomore. You can't look at the overall unemployment
>>>>> rate, sophomore - you have to look at the unemployment rate among
>>>>> people subject to the minimum wage. The unemployment rate among
>>>>> people subject to the minimum wage goes up.
>>>>> http://www.cato.org/pubs/regulation/reg18n1c.html
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> That stuff may baffle the rubes, but I'm wise.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> No, jeffy, you're not. What you are is an ideologue, an ideologue
>>> lacking any wisdom.
>>
>>
>> Oh, the irony.
>
> You had to look up the word to know how to spell it, jeffy.
>
>
>>> The FACT, jeffy, is that looking at overall unemployment data, when what
>>> we're interested in is the unemployment rate of people affected by the
>>> minimum wage, is disingenuous at best, probably deliberately deceptive
>>> on your part, and in all cases evidence of your lack of wisdom.
>>
>>
>> I've already attacked that "argument."
>
>
> No, you haven't, jeffy. You did some handwaving; that's all. It wasn't
> an "attack" at all.

Considering they "extrapolate" from one recession that included an
increase in the minimum wage, I don't see it as a strong argument.

>>>> Funny how the boss's
>>>> son-in-law never gets paid only what his work is worth.
>>>
>>>
>>> Prove it, sophomoric ideologue.
>>
>>
>> Another Libertoonian refugee from reality,
>
>
> Evasion noted.

Prove that the boss's son-in-law earns every penny and works his way
up? Next you'll be asking me to prove that the sun rises in the east.

>>>> But to say that
>>>> the minimum wage increases unemployment is short-sighted at best.
>>>
>>>
>>> It's not what anyone said, sophomoric ideologue jeffy. What was said is
>>> that the minimum wage increases unemployment among people who were
>>> earning at or slightly above the old minimum. It does.
>>
>>
>> Without any evidence, except during an economic downturn.
>
> Evidence presented, jeffy. The increase in unemployment was greater
> among those affected by the min. wage increase than it was among the
> general workforce.

I gave three examples of unemployment not increasing after an increase
in the minimum wage. You presented *one* example of people being laid
off during an economic downturn.

Impact of Recessions

In general, recessions affect low-skilled low-wage workers more severely
than high-skilled high-wage workers.
[...]
Aside from gender differences, studies confirm that younger workers with
low wages, low skills, and less education face much higher job loss
rates than older, more educated workers. Specifi cally, workers without
a high school diploma had job loss rates about twice that of workers
with a college degree or more in all years between 1981 and 1995.13

13. Farber, H.S. The changing face of job loss in the United States,
1981-1995. Brookings papers on economic activity. Washington, DC:
Brookings Institution Press, 1997. See also Smith, D.M., and Woodbury,
S.A. Low-wage labor markets: The business cycle and regional
differences. In The low-wage labor market: Challenges and opportunities
for self-sufficiency. Nightingale, D.S., and Kaye, K., eds. Washington,
DC: Urban Institute, 1999.

http://www.futureofchildren.org/usr_doc/fixnightingale.pdf

>>>> As more money enters the local economy, there's more demand and more
>>>> jobs will be created.
>>>
>>>
>>> More money DOES NOT enter the "local" (???) economy, jeffy. How can
>>> more money enter the local economy, when people are losing their jobs?
>>> If three people were earning the old minimum, jeffy, and two of them are
>>> fired as a result of the increase, money is going to LEAVE the "local"
>>> [sic] economy, jeffy.
>>
>>
>> And if pink unicorns fly over your house,
>
> Typical snarky sophomoric sarcasm from a defeated ideologue. You very
> quickly abandoned your pretense of seriousness when confronted with
> facts and sound theory, jeffy.

What facts? And your theory doesn't match experience.

>>> You're in far over your head, sophomoric ideologue jeffy. You do not
>>> have any vision at all.
>>>
>>>> As for their ONE set of data, for 1990/91, there was an overall
>>>> economic
>>>> downturn during which unemployment rose from 5.4% in April, 1990 to
>>>> 6.7%
>>>> in April, 1991 and eventually 7.7% in July, 1992. Not that that was
>>>> caused by the raising of the minimum wage. Unemployment had been in
>>>> the
>>>> 5.2 to 5.4% range since April, 1989 - and except for one month at 5.0
>>>> and two at 5.6%, since April, 1988.
>>>
>>>
>>> What Welch and Murphy show, jeffy, is that unemployment went up MORE
>>> among young people who would have been earning the minimum wage.
>>
>>
>> And this is unusual?
>
> It is due to the minimum wage, jeffy - the very thing that is supposed
> to help them. It makes them worse off, jeffy. Your strident insistence
> on sticking with a policy tool that has perverse effects demonstrates
> you, and Hillary, do *not* have superior vision, jeffy.

Since you've got nothing but assertions, we can take your "theory" from
where it comes.

>>>>>>>>>>> But, of course, many jobs pay more than minimum wage anyway.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> That's not why it exists though is it ?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> It exists to help labor unions. It reduces the competition
>>>>>>>>> faced by unionized employees.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> You want to be an exploited worker? But even states with "right to
>>>>>>>> [exploitation]" laws have minimum wages.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> You really are incoherent. Right to work - there is no such
>>>>>>> thing as "exploitation", in the emotionally laden sense you mean
>>>>>>> - doesn't get rid of labor unions.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> A little more [snip foam]
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Evasion noted.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> So where are your numbers comparing union membership in "right to
>>>> exploitation"
>>>
>>>
>>> No such thing as "exploitation", sophomoric ideologue jeffy. Throw
>>> again.
>>
>>
>> Continued evasion
>
> None on my part, jeffy. There is no such thing as "exploitation", as
> you use the term in an emotional sense.

There's no such thing as exploitation? You've got no knowledge of
history or of economics.

>>>>>>> Low-wage/low-skill labor is a substitute for
>>>>>>> higher-wage/higher-skill unionized labor. Relative prices are
>>>>>>> what matter, as anyone who has studied economics - not you -
>>>>>>> knows. By raising the price of low-wage/unskilled labor relative
>>>>>>> to unionized labor, it makes the unionized labor look more
>>>>>>> attractive. If a business can hire one $22/hour union thug, or
>>>>>>> four $5/hour non-unionized high school dropouts who are as
>>>>>>> productive as the union thug, the employer will hire the four
>>>>>>> dropouts and save $2.00 per hour. But if the minimum wage laws
>>>>>>> require him to pay $7.50 for the dropouts when their labor only
>>>>>>> is worth $5.00, he'll fire all four of the dropouts and hire the
>>>>>>> union thug.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Amazing. And if he could hire 8-year-olds?
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Continued evasion noted.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> 100 jobs paying $22 an hour will create demand that will drive all
>>>> sorts
>>>> of economic development.
>>>
>>>
>>> There won't BE any 100 jobs at $22 an hour for people whose net output
>>> is only worth $6 an hour, jeffy. There will be ZERO jobs at that wage
>>> for people like that, jeffy.
>>
>>
>> Where's the cosmic wage and salary list?
>
>
> Evasion noted.

Excuse me, but worker productivity has been growing steadily over the
last several decades. So you must have some secret criteria for whose
work is "only worth $6 an hour."

>>>> 400 jobs paying $5 an hour won't do much.
>>>
>>>
>>> It will do a hell of a lot more than the ZERO jobs at the untenable high
>>> wage, jeffy.
>>
>>
>> Yeah, sure, it's been tried.
>
>
> It has been implicitly tried every time the min. wage goes up and
> low-skill/low-wage employment goes down, jeffy.

Then you should have no trouble producing the data to show it.

>>> jeffy, why do you think someone is better off having a supposed "right"
>>> to earn a so-called "living wage" of, say, $15 an hour, but no job,
>>> versus having a job at $5 an hour? How is zero income better than a
>>> positive income, jeffy?
>>
>>
>> Experience shows us that that's how you grow an economy.
>
> No, jeffy. Experience shows exactly the opposite. Experience shows that
> the economy grows when government meddling in it is reduced.

You mean based on Reagan's trillion plus dollars in accumulated debt?

>>> You really have no vision at all, jeffy, except of a wish to exercise
>>> power you are not mentally or morally qualified to exercise.
>>
>>
>> Come back after you've studied some economic history.
>
> YOU try studying it, jeffy - from economists, not the ignorant
> sociologists and assorted other poets who have indoctrinated you.

I've shown enough examples and numbers. The irony is that you think
you have any understanding.

--Jeff

--
We know now that Government by
organized money is just as dangerous
as Government by organized mob.
--Franklin D. Roosevelt
From: Jeffrey Turner on
Rudy Canoza wrote:

> Jeffrey Turner wrote:
>
>> Bill Bonde ( 'Hi ho' ) wrote:
>>
>>> Jeffrey Turner wrote:
>>>
>>>> Bill Bonde ( 'Hi ho' ) wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Jeffrey Turner wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Rudy Canoza wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Jeffrey Turner wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Bill Bonde ( 'Hi ho' ) wrote:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Eeyore wrote:
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> "Fred G. Mackey" wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> But, of course, many jobs pay more than minimum wage anyway.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> That's not why it exists though is it ?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> Why minimum wage exists? No one can explain why that exists
>>>>>>>>> except due
>>>>>>>>> to some misguided altruism at other's expense.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Just because YOU can't understand the explanation, Bill...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The explanation is organized labor.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Well, organized labor explains wide American prosperity and the
>>>>>> growth
>>>>>> of the middle class, anyway. But you'd prefer something
>>>>>> Malthusian, I
>>>>>> suppose?
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> It's an infringement on the employer and employee relationship. It is
>>>>> also monopolistic when it is across entire industries. You wouldn't
>>>>> let
>>>>> a company control everything without oversight but you'd let a union.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Not entirely, but your system didn't have a very good track record. An
>>>> infringement of the employer's ability to exploit the employee isn't a
>>>> bad thing.
>>>
>>>
>>> What does "exploit" mean? For some definitions of that, there is
>>> "exploitation" even if you pay someone $30 an hour, say if the CEO makes
>>> millions. Don't Communists think that if you don't get the entire value
>>> of your labour, you are being exploited?
>>
>>
>> There may or may not be.
>
>
> There is no such thing as "exploitation". Your use of the word relies
> on some undefined and undefinable notion of "fairness", so you're just
> begging the question again. You do that a lot.
>
>
>> Some reinvestment is always necessary. But
>> profits and sacrifices should be shared
>
>
> Who says they should be? According to whose formula? Ah, yes, of course
> - according to the formula of the self-anointed visionaries! The
> tyrants, that is.

Does it get tiring lugging all that ignorance around?

>> and everyone should have some
>> say in how things are done
>
> Who says they should? Based on what?

Only the bossman should, based on the divine right of money.

>> based on their own expertise.
>
> Gobbledygook

Nah, I wasn't quoting you.

--Jeff

--
We know now that Government by
organized money is just as dangerous
as Government by organized mob.
--Franklin D. Roosevelt