Fast Food Strikes
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gerb131Teachers and drive thru workers 2 of the most underpaid and probably under laid positions in the world.
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thavoice
Speaking of drive thru workers...Who was the genius on the huddle that asked a girl in the wendys drive through line out on a date, whom had just one arm, and was turned down?gerb131;1493015 wrote:Teachers and drive thru workers 2 of the most underpaid and probably under laid positions in the world. -
QuakerOatsDetroit MCDONALD'S Forced To Close After Employee Walk Out...
GREASE MY CHECK: Protests Expand to 50 Cities...
Demand $15-per-hour minimum wage...
'I'm not going to stay quiet'...
Right out of the Community-Activist-in-Chief's playbook.
'Rules for Radicals' coming to a neighborhhod near you.
Change we can believe in ........ -
Iliketurtles
Jesus that was so long ago. I've always thought it was 3Ball but I really can't remember.thavoice;1493016 wrote:Speaking of drive thru workers...Who was the genius on the huddle that asked a girl in the wendys drive through line out on a date, whom had just one arm, and was turned down? -
queencitybuckeyeThey have every right to strike for better pay, the restaurants have the rights to replace them, or wait them out. Somehow, I suspect the strikers' "war chest" is about seven minutes from running out.
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Manhattan BuckeyeThe interesting thing is that this affects a few percentage points of the population, the vast majority aren't sympathetic to their demands, and they think they have any type of power - yet these "protests" gets national attention. It is an entry level job for that reason, it is entry level. If we all had a living wage doing nothing more than interacting with customers, we'd all do it. The point of employment at these places is to get experience, develop a work ethic and leverage that to a better job. No one should aspire to be a 30 year McDonalds employee because it pays a "living wage". Idiocy.
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queencitybuckeye
I get and agree with the sentiment of what you're saying. Just need to point out that the company in question has tens of thousands of six-figure jobs.Manhattan Buckeye;1493150 wrote:No one should aspire to be a 30 year McDonalds employee because it pays a "living wage". Idiocy. -
WebFire
You knew exactly what he meant. :rolleyes:queencitybuckeye;1493169 wrote:I get and agree with the sentiment of what you're saying. Just need to point out that the company in question has tens of thousands of six-figure jobs. -
TedSheckler
Those aren't the people that are striking. No one striking is aspiring to do anything other than flipping a burger. They want a handout. The people that aspire for the six-figure McD's jobs aren't flipping burgers very long.queencitybuckeye;1493169 wrote:I get and agree with the sentiment of what you're saying. Just need to point out that the company in question has tens of thousands of six-figure jobs. -
queencitybuckeye
I did. I was just pointing out that instead of protesting, an entry-level employee might be better served in doing their job in a way that distinguishes him/herself from co-workers. There's just shitloads of opportunity at companies like these if you make it happen.WebFire;1493176 wrote:You knew exactly what he meant. :rolleyes: -
queencitybuckeye
I agree with this in general. It bothers me when people take the easy road of claiming it's a dead-end job, when it just is not the case.TedSheckler;1493178 wrote:Those aren't the people that are striking. No one striking is aspiring to do anything other than flipping a burger. They want a handout. The people that aspire for the six-figure McD's jobs aren't flipping burgers very long. -
Manhattan Buckeye
I doubt there are 10,000 McDonald's employees that make 6 figures. Especially given so many of their restaurants are franchised where the ultimate owner isn't an employee.queencitybuckeye;1493169 wrote:I get and agree with the sentiment of what you're saying. Just need to point out that the company in question has tens of thousands of six-figure jobs. -
Pick6The American dream baby
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QuakerOatsqueencitybuckeye;1493169 wrote:I get and agree with the sentiment of what you're saying. Just need to point out that the company in question has tens of thousands of six-figure jobs.
Tens of thousands is a stretch, but no doubt that thousands of entry level McDonald's workers learned basic job skills and a work ethic that caused them to later advance up the pay scale with better opportunities ahead; many have become managers or franchise owners and are making well into 6 figures.
The problem with all these whiners today is that they don't want to work, or put the time in that is necessary to build up the work experience that is necessary to be rewarded by the job market down the road with better pay. It's just me, me, me, now, now, now! They are not unlike the activist/agitator in the WH. They have absolutely no clue about economics 101, or what it takes to run a business. Occupy McDonald's, baby!
What a bunch of moronic losers we are raising. -
queencitybuckeye
It isn't. I didn't throw out a random number.QuakerOats;1493203 wrote:Tens of thousands is a stretch, -
I Wear Pants
You'd work at Mcdonalds for $15 an hour?Manhattan Buckeye;1493150 wrote:The interesting thing is that this affects a few percentage points of the population, the vast majority aren't sympathetic to their demands, and they think they have any type of power - yet these "protests" gets national attention. It is an entry level job for that reason, it is entry level. If we all had a living wage doing nothing more than interacting with customers, we'd all do it. The point of employment at these places is to get experience, develop a work ethic and leverage that to a better job. No one should aspire to be a 30 year McDonalds employee because it pays a "living wage". Idiocy. -
Manhattan BuckeyeI've worked worse, for $5.00/hour. The point is the labor involved is no where near that level of compensation. No one should be guaranteed a living....a lot of European countries have tried this...all it leads to is massive unemployment and sucking off of the government (read: taxpayer or bondholders) teat.
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queencitybuckeye
I'd work there for the current minimum. But in a year, I'd be running one of the restaurants. In three, a district, in five a region. It's amazing how different an entry level job looks when one looks at it as an opportunity, and behaves based on that view.I Wear Pants;1493213 wrote:You'd work at Mcdonalds for $15 an hour? -
rmolin73
This!queencitybuckeye;1493217 wrote:I'd work there for the current minimum. But in a year, I'd be running one of the restaurants. In three, a district, in five a region. It's amazing how different an entry level job looks when one looks at it as an opportunity, and behaves based on that view. -
Belly35If your dream to be a McDonlds worker ..You should be poor
If your dream to be a thief …………………… You should be shot
If your dream to be uneducated ………… You should look for a McDonlds to rob -
Rotinaj
This actually made me lol. Thank you sir.queencitybuckeye;1493217 wrote:I'd work there for the current minimum. But in a year, I'd be running one of the restaurants. In three, a district, in five a region. It's amazing how different an entry level job looks when one looks at it as an opportunity, and behaves based on that view. -
rmolin73
Lol this brings the lulz.Belly35;1493222 wrote:If your dream to be a McDonlds worker ..You should be poor
If your dream to be a thief …………………… You should be shot
If your dream to be uneducated ………… You should look of a McDonlds to rob -
I Wear Pants
Bullshit. You're not going from minimum wage to what's very likely a mid six figure salary in 5 years or less.queencitybuckeye;1493217 wrote:I'd work there for the current minimum. But in a year, I'd be running one of the restaurants. In three, a district, in five a region. It's amazing how different an entry level job looks when one looks at it as an opportunity, and behaves based on that view.
And the bolded part I was responding to said that he would gladly work for $15 an hour. Not more than that. -
Manhattan Buckeye
The key is franchising, and even that ain't easy. We (by we I mean my in-laws and us) own about a 10% stake in a local Dunkin Donuts franchise. On the one hand, there is income flowing through and we don't deal with managerial crap, on the other hand it cost a lot up front for just a super minority position, and we have to deal with the actual manager.Rotinaj;1493225 wrote:This actually made me lol. Thank you sir.
There is no such thing as easy money. -
I Wear Pants
And it's hard to purchase a stake when you have no money to do so because you make $7.85/hr.Manhattan Buckeye;1493243 wrote:The key is franchising, and even that ain't easy. We (by we I mean my in-laws and us) own about a 10% stake in a local Dunkin Donuts franchise. On the one hand, there is income flowing through and we don't deal with managerial crap, on the other hand it cost a lot up front for just a super minority position, and we have to deal with the actual manager.
There is no such thing as easy money.
Now, I'm not saying that people don't do that because you see people who have done just that over their career and end up owning a store or something. But that's over the course of many years and not 5 like queencitybuckeye makes it seem.
You might go from being an inside worker to being a team leader/shift manager to being a store manager or assistant manager in the course of five years but you're very, very unlikely to go from that inside worker to a regional manager/executive.
Also, Dunkin is pretty tasty.