The host of Dirty Jobs said that when asked about the debate of the raising the minimum wage in April 2021.

  • dannoffs@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    Friendly reminder that Mike Row is literally a paid propagandist for the Koch family.

    • snooggums@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I really enjoyed dirty jobs because it appeared to be promoting recognition for the working class. Should have caught on when obvious safety considerations were downplayed for laughs, bit my optimism got the better of me.

      Just think if they used the same devious approach to improve things instead of tearing them down. Maybe the approach wouldn’t work the other way around.

  • Royalish@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Mike Rowe is a flaming pile of dog doodoo. Didn’t he and Discovery do a special on how fossil fuels aren’t bad for the environment?

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    1 year ago

    It doesn’t really matter how “skilled” or “unskilled” a job is, what matters is how essential the job is and the availability of people willing to do the job. As we’re seeing in many industries, people are striking to get higher wages, and companies are finding out just how much they need these “unskilled” laborers. A federal minimum wage is just accepting the reality that no matter how unskilled a job is, many are rather essential to the function of industry and society, and it’s skipping the part where the workers have to strike to prove it to the corporations.

  • Mutelogic@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    artificially high wage

    The wages are currently artificially low. Everyone who is sane wants them brought up to the correct level.

    How did he go from ‘Dirty Jobs’ to this…

    • snooggums@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Dirty Jobs was actually celebrating how people were still working those jobs for crap pay and ignoring safety regulations for the benefit of companies while pretending to celebrate the workers. If you go back with the mindset of “how would a company try to make its terrible treatment of workers look good” it is a lot more apparent.

      I loved dirty jobs at the time before finding out.

  • Yardy Sardley@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I know we’ve been over this before, but “unskilled” jobs are necessary, Mike. The people who do them deserve to live too, my guy. The poverty wages aren’t the only thing motivating people to avoid those jobs, and that should be firsthand knowledge for you, pal.

    And it’s not like it takes a lot of skill to look down your nose at people for 10 seasons of television. With all due respect, kindly fuck off.

  • Hogger85b@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    People who work full time jobs and still need to up benefits like food stamps etc means it is a benefit to the employer as it subsides them making more profits by employing people below sustaining their life. Minimum wage ensures the company pays for that labour.

  • AuthorInkwell@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The moment I hear someone try to call ANY job “unskilled labor”, I have to fight the urge to shove the tools into their hands and say, “Okay, YOU do it, then, since it’s so simple.”

    • mrichey@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Well paid actor, union member, college educated, opera singer Mike Rowe is a Koch shill!!

  • NineMileTower@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    “I worry that the path to a skilled trade can be compromised when you offer an artificially high wage for, I hate the expression, but an unskilled job. So to me, the brightest line needs to be drawn between skilled and unskilled work. We need to encourage more people to learn a skill that’s actually in demand,” he said.

    How about they both make more?

    $15 is an “artificially high wage”. How disconnected are you, you dunce? That’s $30k a year, while the cheapest apartment anywhere is over $1000 a month. That leaves you $1,500 a month for food, car, utilities, basic needs. And that ain’t shit.

    Mike Rowe has a micro penis.

    • Horsey@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It really is sad to see these arguments not include after tax amounts. 30k/year after taxes is closer to 45K/year. That’s 21.63/hour. I have a 4 year degree in biology/chemistry and I’m making 20/hour. You’ve displayed your own argument massively for the sake of all the poor people making under that.

      • NineMileTower@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        You may have to pay upfront, yes, and that would hurt. However, more than likely, at this income you would get a lot of it back.

      • NineMileTower@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It depends, but such a low income and what is spent on rent, taxes are likely to be pretty low. That definitely doesn’t help though

  • masquenox@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Is there a particular reason this scumbag’s “opinion” is worth posting here?

  • Chimaeratorian@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    This is a response to Mike Rowe and other like-minded individuals (not OP):

    Unskilled labor does not exist.

    • tinwhiskers@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      At risk of running against the obvious tide here, if you take the word “skilled” literally then of course everyone becomes skilled in whatever job they do. However, here “skilled” is used not literally, but in the sense of the industry term that means the job generally requires formal training and/or qualification before employment.

      Edit: Not to say I don’t think it’s not a demeaning term (possibly intentionally so). It’s a sucky word but let’s not allow ourselves to become overly indignant by misconstrueing the sense of the term used.

    • HubertManne@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      There was a post I saw of some twitter thing where I guy was complaining burger flippers wanted wages like him deliver packages and they don’t deserve that kind of skilled wage??? Burger flippers are on a ladder that leads to chef. Not sure where package delivery leads. Really if a person goes for skilled or unskilled the real thing to me is no one should really make more than 10 times someone else. Especially when the highest paid are not necessarily very skilled anyway.

  • jcarax@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Everybody, absolutely, without a doubt deserves to live a good, fulfilling life working the standard 40 hours a week. I’d say 32 hours a week is a far better goal, and with AI, maybe less.

    But, local businesses have been under assault by chains for decades. Many of those chains have grown to be absolutely massive. They also tend to peddle us absolute junk that needs to be replaced regularly, instead of lasting decades to lifetimes with some amount of repairability. We’re fed manufactured garbage. We’re pillaging our earth to support this corporate greed.

    These local businesses can hardly sustain at this point. The honest ones are mostly gone, serious compromises to downright predatory practices are required for something relatively local to thrive. Or it needs to meet some strong niche demand that’s not addressed at all by the big corporations, and you’ll bet that they will once they see there’s good profit to be made.

    Raising minimum wage is going to kill off even more of the self sustainability and local-sourced livelihood that we’ve largely lost over the last 100 years. Things weren’t perfect in the past, far from it, but the future is full on dystopian. Raising the minimum wage isn’t enough, we need to drive the greed out of our governments and our board rooms, and truly support and nurture local businesses and cooperatives so that markets they can serve can’t reasonably support huge soulless corporations.

    We need to go back to giving a shit about each other, instead of chasing convenience and an easy buck. Only then can we reasonably keep minimum wages in lockstep with (a hopefully more manageable) inflation, and not destroy our local economies in the process, so that we can live in a world actually worth living in.