• @jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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    -94 months ago

    That’s all well and good that FDR said his goal was to have everyone have a living wage, but the minimum wage didn’t do that. A full time minimum wage worker in 1940 would have rent consume 50% food 35% which leaves 15% for clothes, medical, hygiene, & utilities. It was barely enough to survive on and many people had to forgo necessities.

    • @BobaFuttbucker@reddthat.com
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      84 months ago

      Goalpost moving in action. The quote in my previous comment was that it wasn’t intended to be a living wage. Just take the L, dude.

      Whether it was the intention or whether it was the effect are two separate threads of discussion.

      • @jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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        -54 months ago

        The evidence that minimum wage was intended to be a living wage is that FDR said it was. Have you started believing everything a politician says?

        There is no external evidence to support FDRs claim. Looking at the Fair Labor Standards Act contradicts his claim, $0.25 an hour is not enough, the act passed easily and $0.35 could have been set if they wanted to.

          • @jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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            -54 months ago

            Minimum wage never fulfilled its claimed goal. FDR had opportunities to make minimum wage a living wage but never did, the very next year minimum wage was raised to $0.30 per hour, still below a living wage.

            • @BobaFuttbucker@reddthat.com
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              74 months ago

              Minimum wage never fulfilled its claimed goal

              I’ll agree with you there.

              Politics are gonna politic, and there’s always going to be someone against something, even if I’d seems like a no-brainer.

              In the case of minimum wage though, that’s all the more reason to push to expand it, not just give up because FDR didn’t get it perfect the first time.

              • @jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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                -54 months ago

                Politics are gonna politic, and there’s always going to be someone against something, even if I’d seems like a no-brainer.

                If the intent was a living wage then why did FDR champion the $0.25 bill instead of the AFL backed $0.40 bill? He had veto proof majority for its passing. The politics was pretending minimum wage wage was intended to be a living wage.

                • @BobaFuttbucker@reddthat.com
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                  4 months ago

                  Because politics is just as much about cooperation as it is about passing legislation.

                  What you’re leaving out is the veto-proof majority he had was a result of compromises due to opposition from Southern States and previous attempts at similar bills being struck down by the Supreme Court.

                  https://www.dol.gov/general/aboutdol/history/flsa1938

                  $0.25 is more than half of the AFL backed $0.40 figure you gave, so considering he had to compromise to appeal to the minority AND Supreme Court it’s actually not a bad floor.

                  Once again, just because it wasn’t the ideal amount on day 1 doesn’t mean the original intent was a lie. What a dumb hill to die on.

                  https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compromise

                  • @jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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                    -44 months ago

                    Then why was he able to get it to $0.30 a year later or $0.40 in 1945?

                    You still have not provided any supporting evidence that the minimum wage was intended to be a living wage, all you have is some guy said it so it must be true.

    • @breadsmasher@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Source on all your statistics and values. I provided an original source from the FDR library of speeches. I went out of my way to give you an accurate source as possible.

      Now your turn. Don’t pull anecdotal numbers from your ass that you vaguely remember. Provide a real, verified source.

      You seem to think people had zero money when that was implemented. Do you think it’s better today? Minimum wage covers nothing. Rent on a house is over the amount minimum wage pays.

      edit

      You said “minimum wage was never intended to be a living wage”

      I said “never INTENDED - factually false”. He absolutely intended it.

      You now saying all that other stuff is irrelevant, moving of the goal posts.

      • @jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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        -34 months ago

        Source on all your statistics and values.

        Average rent 1940 $27 per month

        https://ipropertymanagement.com/research/average-rent-by-year

        Food costs

        https://www.thepeoplehistory.com/40sfood.html

        Meat $6 per month (1/2 lb per day) Eggs $1 per month (2 dozen) Bread $0.40 per month (3 loafs) Fruits $2 per month (1/2 lb per day) Vegitables $2 per month (1/2 lb per day) Milk $1.50 per month (2 gallons) Cereal $0.35 per month (2 boxes) Flour $0.05 per month (1 lb)

        Total $13.30

        You seem to think people had zero money when that was implemented.

        Where did I state that?

        Minimum wage covers nothing. Rent on a house is over the amount minimum wage pays.

        Never made the claim that it was.

        You said “minimum wage was never intended to be a living wage”

        I said “never INTENDED - factually false”. He absolutely intended it.

        Do not judge a bill based on what a politician says judge it on what it actually does. At the inception of the minimum wage it was below a living wage.

        You now saying all that other stuff is irrelevant, moving of the goal posts.

        I’m judging minimum wage based on results not the propaganda spewed out of a politicians upper oriface.

            • @breadsmasher@lemmy.world
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              44 months ago

              Sources are great.

              Read the rest of my post. Learn what the word “intended” means. Understand how “intended” doesn’t mean successfully implemented. Understand that by stating “it wasn’t intended” is false.

              Is english your first language? I can simplify it for you if the language is a challenge

              • @jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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                -44 months ago

                Only a fool determines intent based solely on what someone says, espically a politician. Blindly believing that FDR intended minimum wage to be a living wage because he said so but somehow couldn’t get a living wage passed is impressively naive. The National Industrial Recovery Act passed the House 329-80 & senate 60-26, he had the votes for 0.35 per hour but didn’t do it.

                  • @jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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                    -24 months ago

                    Are you debating what you believe you can read from someones mind?

                    Yeah, we both are. Your argument is that FDR said it so it must be true, mine is what he did contradicts what he said.

                    Remember the old adage actions speak louder than words. FDR had the support to implement a living wage but implemented minimum wage instead.

      • NeuromancerOPM
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        -344 months ago

        https://drexel.edu/hunger-free-center/research/briefs-and-reports/minimum-wage-is-not-enough/#:~:text=Though often considered the baseline,over the following 71 years.

        Though often considered the baseline of livable wages, it is important to note that even when it was first created, it did not represent a true living wage.

        So when it was created. It wasn’t a living wage. I’ll tell you another secret. Politicians say one thing and do another.

    • NeuromancerOPM
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      -344 months ago

      I think people forget until Reagan came into power, living in poverty was normal for many people. I think people don’t realize the difference between growing up in the 70’s and current times. In the 70’s we wore hand me downs, had old cars, didn’t eat out, rarely went to movies and my father was a union auto worker who made more than most. Poverty was just a way of life.

      Now everyone expects a huge home, new cars, new cell phone, new iPhone, etc

      It isn’t that wages are not adequate, the expectations have changed.