moorhosj wrote:2018C3 wrote:78% of US workers survive paycheck to paycheck.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/zackfriedman/2019/01/11/live-paycheck-to-paycheck-government-shutdown/#170d999e4f10
Yea, the virus sucks, and kills people.
People need to grow up and start working, The death toll from this virus is a far lower percentage than the results of a complete economy collapse will entail, it is mind blowing to me why some can't comprehend this.
We are not living in some fairy land where everything is even and fair. This is the situation we are in.
Another false choice presented by someone telling us to "get back to work" or else everything will collapse. First of all, you have no idea what the death toll would be if everyone carried on as usual, please don't act like you do. Second, can you show me your calculations on "complete economic" collapse? I see plenty of parts of the economy open and working. I work for an enterprise software company with 100,000 employees, we never stopped working and haven't laid anyone off.
One of the great things about the land we live in is that we get to make the rules. If we want it to be more fair, we could absolutely pass legislation to do that. Brushing it aside in extreme times implies you don't actually care about the 78% of workers living paycheck to paycheck. If you did, you would want to help them right now; not force them back to work in dangerous conditions. New Deal legislation was passed during the Great Depression and was successful.
What are your thoughts on expanded healthcare access (public option), increased minimum wage and guaranteed sick leave? Those are three things that would absolutely help that 78% stand on firmer ground.
Right now, the US has printed trillions of dollars to cover debt payments. A huge percentage of our workforce is not creating anything of value. We look like Zimbabwe or Venezuela or countless other countries that have economically collapsed with runaway inflation, goods shortages, etc. The end results of those situations were catastrophic. Average lifespans literally shortened due to all of the secondary effects. Thinking "it can't happen here" is the type of thinking that got us into this mess to start with. Hell, it *has* happened here with the great depression. Some people look back at the great depression with rose colored glasses and think that public works projects will save us. They didn't back then. The depression lasted until we had a world war.
Its great that you are working but we simply can't tax you enough to cover everyone's unemployment, health care, etc.
I'm not on the "let's just open it up" bandwagon by any stretch but the "let's keep it closed until . . . something" side has its head in the sand.












