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Democrats Government

Hillary Clinton Takes Aim At 'Gig Economy' 432

SonicSpike writes with an excerpt from Marketwatch that says at least one major candidate in the 2016 electoral fight has made the "sharing economy" epitomized by Uber and Airbnb a campaign issue. In a major campaign speech in New York City, the former secretary of state didn't mention the ride-sharing service by name. But it was pretty clear what sort of companies she was talking about when she got to how some Americans earn money. "Many Americans are making extra money renting out a spare room, designing websites, selling products they design themselves at home, or even driving their own car," she said at the New School. But that sort of work comes with its own problems, she said. "This 'on demand' or so-called 'gig economy' ... is raising hard questions about workplace protections and what a good job will look like in the future," Clinton added.
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Hillary Clinton Takes Aim At 'Gig Economy'

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  • Uber is an illegal cab company and should just be shut down. If Uber puts the cab companies out of business it most certainly take away a lot of "real" jobs. Furthermore, we'll all be slaves to "surge pricing". And make no mistake, surge pricing is going to increase drunk driving fatalities.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Uber is an illegal cab company

      What makes it intrinsically illegal? Just because there is a law? I wonder how you feel about Illegal Aliens (er Undocumented residents). Gay Marriage was illegal just a few months ago in a wide number of places in the US.

      So you believe that business models deserve protection from competition by creating legal loops that do not do anything except protect economic interests?

      Strange world view.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by FranTaylor ( 164577 )

        that do not do anything except protect economic interests?

        Strange world view.

        yes, what a strange world view it is, to avoid racing to the bottom.

      • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:03AM (#50108727)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by FranTaylor ( 164577 )

          I don't want government restricting options available to me, or restricting those that would provide those options to me.

          we all want free money, and we don't want the government to stop us from getting it, surprise!

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              by FranTaylor ( 164577 )

              I want to pay market prices for everything I consume. No one suggested that anything or anyone should be free.

              then why don't you pay double for your gasoline? you are getting a 50% discount thanks to government subsidies

              and you should also be paying more for milk and other dairy products whose prices are artificially lowered by government actions

              • by danbert8 ( 1024253 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:49AM (#50109113)

                [Citation Needed] Considering close to 1/4 of the price of gas in most places in the US is ALREADY taxes, that would be a hard number to back up. Or are you comparing the price here to the even higher taxed fuel in other countries and calling that a "subsidy"?

                • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @01:15PM (#50110083) Journal

                  No, what he calls "subsidies" is actually programs that help people live. There are no "subsidies" for oil, they don't exist (at least directly). These are programs like "strategic oil reserve", and "Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program" (HEAP) are counted as ... you guessed it, "Subsidies".

                  And nowhere, do liberals ever talk about how much Government actually makes off Oil (Profits taxed, gasoline taxes etc), which amount to way more than what the oil companies get in profits.

                  IF anyone is getting "rich" off "big oil" it is government. And I can't wait till we are all on Renewable fuels that ARE subsidized, and the government loses a huge amount of their income.

                  And then you'll see liberals come out and want to tax "Solar Panels" and "biofuels" ....

              • That's really stupid. That's like asking someone, "If you support higher taxes, why don't you just pay it yourself [treas.gov]?" Such comments add nothing to the conversation.

                If you went to a gas station and said, "I want to pay extra for my gas" the attendant wouldn't even know what to do.
              • by cirby ( 2599 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:57AM (#50109181)

                I want to pay market prices for everything I consume. No one suggested that anything or anyone should be free.

                then why don't you pay double for your gasoline? you are getting a 50% discount thanks to government subsidies

                You do realize that's completely false, right?

                I know some nutcases like to pretend that the oil companies get untold billions in subsidies, but when you look at the actual numbers, it's just plain false. There's an "$18 billion" subsidy number tossed around, but that's because they include regular old tax deductions. You know, the kind (and amount) that every business gets. A lot of folks are annoyed that oil companies can deduct exploration costs, but that's no different than any business expense.

                The single largest "subsidy" due to direct government spending is the Strategic Petroleum Reserve - where the government buys oil - at market prices (no bonuses), and keeps it, until they can use if for things like lowering oil prices when it's politically expedient.

                Currently, the US consumes about 140 billion gallons of gasoline a year. Which would mean that, at current $3/gallon prices, we'd have to subsidize by about a half a TRILLION dollars a year. Someone would notice a check that large...

                No, government "subsidies" don't cut your gas prices by half - but government taxes increase them by a fairly large amount.

              • by chihowa ( 366380 )

                Well, he's paying for the government subsidies through taxes, so why would he pay that fraction again until the subsidies are discontinued? Since the subsidies are many steps above his interaction at the retail stores, by what mechanism would he even pay the extra money if he wanted to?

                In your mind, are those the only two options available to us? Have the government restrict the things that we can do for our own good or voluntarily pay extra to subsidized industries. Your argument doesn't make any sense.

              • by Jodka ( 520060 )

                then why don't you pay double for your gasoline? you are getting a 50% discount thanks to government subsidies

                There is no such thing as 50% government gasoline subsidy in the United States, nor any combination of indirect subsidies which reduce its price by 50%. You are making up a lie to support your position.

                and you should also be paying more for milk and other dairy products whose prices are artificially lowered by government actions

                It is the opposite. Prices of farm commodities are artificially raisied, not lowered by the government. These are FDR-era programs, often called "price supports". It was recently the subject a U.S Supreme Court case, Horne v. Dept. of Agriculture in which the court ruled against the government. It is also

        • by GlennC ( 96879 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:53AM (#50109147)

          Translation, "I want what I want as cheaply as possible, screw everyone else and damn the consequences."

        • So you like the "market prices" for Comcast and the like?
        • by RyuuzakiTetsuya ( 195424 ) <taiki@co x . net> on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @12:03PM (#50109241)

          you know what's a terrible way to live? Not being sure if you're going to die at work tomorrow because your boss, or your boss's boss decides to skimp on safety gear because it's cheaper.

          It's not your decision to work an incredibly hazardous job that's on the line or not, it's the decision for your employer not to give you decent protection from mishaps.

        • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

          As a society, we've gotten to the point where we tolerate zero risk in our daily lives. So much so that society wants government to decide what is good for us.

          This is a terrible way to live. I want options in my life and I want the free market to create them. I don't want government restricting options available to me, or restricting those that would provide those options to me.

          Your premise is that society wants this and you do not. Fine. Your options are (1) live with it and attempt to convince society t

        • Even though Clinton is wrong on this, you're fooling yourself if you think you can always get past your own immediate self interest to see how changes to the big picture come back around to affect you. I hate getting my car smogged. It's expensive, it's a pain, and it feels like my car couldn't possibly be doing that much damage. But I would hate going to back to the way it was when I was a kid, and my lungs would hurt on Summer afternoons from all the crap in the air.
        • by KermodeBear ( 738243 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @01:04PM (#50109941) Homepage

          The funny thing is that what she calls a "Gig Economy" is what America has been doing since its founding.

          You, a person, learn skills. You make things. You do things. You serve. People give you money, goods, or services in exchange. This country was built on the concept of the lone inventor making it on his own, the person who bought a horse and carriage to ferry people around, the family that built a boat to move cargo up and down the river as they pleased.

          What she is calling "new" is what we have been doing all along.

      • I'm sorry it was so hard to read the second and third sentences.

      • by magarity ( 164372 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:14AM (#50108831)

        What makes it intrinsically illegal? Just because there is a law?

        Well, yes, that is the definition of illegal; because a law says so. Perhaps you are confusing morality/immorality with legality/illegality?

        So you believe that business models deserve protection from competition by creating legal loops that do not do anything except protect economic interests? Strange world view.

        Where have you been since the 1890's? Millions of people in employee unions believe this quite firmly, to the point of violence and beyond.

      • by Qzukk ( 229616 )

        What makes it intrinsically illegal?

        What makes defeating Macrovision Copy Protection to copy your wedding tape from VHS to DVD intrinsically illegal?

        Just because there is a law?

        "Our great Republic is a government of laws, and not of men"

        Strange world view.

        So's anarchy.

        • Yes, because the choice is between Government enslavement and anarchy. There is no reasonable middle ground that we can debate over.

          Because if it is between the extremes of Government Laws over every last aspect of my life, and anarchy, I'll happily choose anarchy and be free. You can choose enslavement if you want, just don't expect me to join you.

      • What makes it intrinsically illegal? Just because there is a law?

        Uh, yeah. That's kind of how that works.

        I wonder how you feel about Illegal Aliens (er Undocumented residents).

        I feel that they are here... illegally?

        Gay Marriage was illegal just a few months ago in a wide number of places in the US.

        Yeah, there were laws against it, so it was illegal. Those laws were ruled unconstitutional, so those laws are void. Now gay marriage is legal.

        So you believe that business models deserve protection from competition by creating legal loops that do not do anything except protect economic interests?

        No, just that all businesses operate under the same set of rules and laws.

        Is there some part of this that is confusing to you?

    • Uber is an illegal cab company and should just be shut down.

      It is not clearly illegal in many places and even it it is illegal in places it is not clear that it should be illegal. If Uber is providing competition in the taxi industry then more power to them. If they are innovating in an industry that sorely needs it then I see no reason to prohibit that. It sounds to me like a lot of taxi companies have had a sweetheart deal for a long time and are pissed off that they are having to compete. Not seeing why I should be sympathetic.

      If Uber puts the cab companies out of business it most certainly take away a lot of "real" jobs.

      If the cab companies get put out

      • It is illegal. The drivers don't have taxi medallions.

        "If the cab companies get put out of business because they are inefficient and can't compete then they deserve to go out of business." No cab companies provide real jobs, Uber does not.

        What I said about drunk driving is obvious.

        • The United States consists of more than New York City and Chicago, you know. There is no taxi medallion system in my city, nor in Washington DC, Minneapolis, or Denver, just to pick a few names at random. All of Uber's services are perfectly legal where I live. I don't see how you have disproven his point.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Virtucon ( 127420 )

      Taxi drivers are mostly independent workers, leasing a cab [chron.com] and pay a percentage back to the company that owns the cab or the medallion they're driving under. The only difference between them an an Uber or Lyft driver is that there are more people and local governments sucking on the bottle. These people aren't being paid under the table, they take pride in what they do and they're entrepreneurial, choosing when they want to work, just like regular cab drivers.

      So from the standpoint of "illegal" the only

      • The only difference between them an an Uber or Lyft driver is that there are more people and local governments sucking on the bottle.

        your choice of metaphor says wonders about you

    • by njnnja ( 2833511 )

      I'm not sure I understand how "surge pricing" will increase drunk driving fatalities. I guess you are thinking that someone gets out of a bar to go home, and because surge pricing is too expensive, they drive home themselves instead of calling a cab/Uber (or instead of someone else setting one up for them). But the limitation on the availability of cabs is because there are more people looking for cabs than there are cabs on the street. Surge pricing brings more cabs out on the street, since supply curves s

    • If you're going to comment at least understand the arguments [washingtonpost.com] before throwing accusations out there. The majority of cab drivers are already independent contractors who lease the right to operate a cab from the medallion owner who in most cases is a large corporation or a billionaire who has never set foot in the front seat of a cab. The jobs aren't being lost they are simply transitioning [washingtonpost.com] from Yellow Cab to Uber where they can make up to 200% more annually. And if you think a drunk pays attention to the cos
  • In Other Words... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by KermodeBear ( 738243 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @10:49AM (#50108569) Homepage

    ...We need to figure out how to kill it with regulations so that my big corporate donors can sleep soundly at night.

    • by bigsexyjoe ( 581721 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @10:56AM (#50108641)

      http://www.chicagobusiness.com... [chicagobusiness.com]

      And the regulations already exist. Uber is completely illegal.

    • Re:In Other Words... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @10:59AM (#50108669) Journal

      .We need to figure out how to kill it with regulations so that my big corporate donors can sleep soundly at night.

      Think. Are big cab companies among Hillary Clinton's big corporate donors? I'd say she's a lot more likely to get money from Uber than from non-existent multi-national cab companies.

      I have no love for Hillary Clinton and will not vote for her, but it's reasonable to talk about what the American workplace is going to look like if the corporations have their way. Maybe you're OK with taking in peoples' wash and sewing for low pay, no benefits or sick days, and a friendly "fuck you" when you're too old to work, but most people are not.

      • All you are thinking about is Uber - and that is where you are making your mistake.

      • I'd say she's a lot more likely to get money from Uber than from non-existent multi-national cab companies.

        Apparently, she didn't get enough. Let's see if she says anything about the "gig economy" a few months from now, and cross-reference that with the updated list of donors.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Big companies love this idea anyway. Employment without all the annoying responsibilities that normally come with it. If your "employees" are actually self employed, merely using your "service" to get their gigs and take payment, then you don't need to pay many employment taxes, don't need to provide benefits or guarantees of work, and they are totally disposable.

        • It's really a very old idea, just with cellphones and GPS for ever finer granularity. Historically the granularity was more or less limited to 'day laborer', or paid by the piece, since more accurate timekeeping and information processing weren't available; but the basic concept of having a pool of disposable peons waiting to be temporarily employed as you need them is not new. Or particularly pleasant.
    • Just tell me one thing: what unregulated activity works well as is? No exploits, no abuse and no scamming...

      While I agree with your freedom reflexes, instead of whining about any attempt to tackle a problem please be the one to say the sane solution(s). Because there are simple solutions. Not solving correctly our problems is what gives them the task of screwing it up. So it's our fault, not theirs.
      • Re:In Other Words... (Score:5, Interesting)

        by KermodeBear ( 738243 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:19AM (#50108857) Homepage

        What regulated activity is without exploits, abuse, and scamming?

        If you're trying to make a point, that's a poor way to do it.

        I don't think there is anything wrong with a service like (the ever-so-popular example) Uber, or renting our a room, or renting out time on something you own, or providing a service on an on-demand basis. Is some regulation necessary? Probably. I imagine that some kind of insurance coverage would be a good idea, for example.

        I just happen to know where Hillary comes from politically: Heavy handed government control and cronyism. I don't trust her, and I don't understand how anyone else can (except the insane who support her only because of her genitalia).

        • by Attila Dimedici ( 1036002 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:29AM (#50108931)

          I just happen to know where Hillary comes from politically: Heavy handed government control and cronyism. I don't trust her, and I don't understand how anyone else can (except the insane who support her only because of her genitalia).

          Don't forget those who support her because they profit from her brand of heavy handed government control and cronyism.

    • Funny, I was going to say "....we need to figure out how we can tax the shit out of it" but yours works too.

    • I think it's more accurate to say it's labour unions telling her this is a major talking point for this campaign. A further rise in workers willing to take personal responsibility for delivering value to customers for money will further weaken unions. Many workers reject having another layer of politicians acting as their "representatives" in negotiating with their employers or corporate customers (W-2 or 1099). I'm quite capable of selling my human capital without another apparatchik parasite taking their
  • by operagost ( 62405 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @10:50AM (#50108581) Homepage Journal
    It was setting up a Secretary of State of a very powerful nation with her own private email server so that she could get around the government's pesky email archiving.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    You can rest assured that the solution requires more laws, more government, more money, and less freedom.

  • by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @10:53AM (#50108615)
    Once corporations have been allowed to erode almost every labor law put into place, watch people become hopelessly dependent on them on a meal by meal basis. We will be exactly like Chinese workers at Foxconn, who consider it to be a wonderful opportunity because the alternative is starvation.
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:19AM (#50108855)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • I'm OK with workplace safety laws. I'm not OK with laws that prop up obsolete businesses.

        Republicans tell us that safe workplaces are obsolete!

      • Laws protecting an outdated business model are far different that laws that protect individual laborers.

        I'm OK with workplace safety laws. I'm not OK with laws that prop up obsolete businesses.

        The problem isn't laws that prop up obsolete businesses, it's folks that regard any business that isn't shiny and new and app and mobile friendly as obsolete. And damn the workers so long as the self absorbed class get theirs.

        It's telling that you don't seem to support laws that protect employees from predatory emplo

  • When did Slashdot become a proxy for shill political endorsements? So what if a candidate makes a talking point about this. Uber has lobbyists and now is winning over candidates. Sorry, this is not news.
  • Rand Paul Posted:

    "It's ironic someone who has been driven around in a limo for the past 30 years is giving ride sharing advice.

    Hillary Clinton just chided the sharing-economy which is boosted by services such as Lyft, Uber, and Airbnb. We must advocate for innovation and disruption and need to support increased choice which leads to lower prices for all Americans."

  • If I want to do piece work, whether web sites or chauffeuring someone around, it's none of her friggin' business.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by FranTaylor ( 164577 )

      If I want to do piece work, whether web sites or chauffeuring someone around, it's none of her friggin' business.

      Have you read the constitution? It says the government can regulate your commercial activities.

      • Literacy (Score:3, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        No, it doesn't. that's a supreme court assault on freedom. The constitution says the feds can regulate "interstate commerce". The Supremes decided that means they can tell you that may not grow corn in your garden but that you must buy health insurance. Neither of those are in the constitution.

      • by deck ( 201035 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:51AM (#50109127)

        The Constitution of the United States (not your personal constitution, not the unwritten constitutional law of Great Britain, etc.) limits the Federal government to the regulation of Interstate Commerce. It should not have the scope to regulate business that does not cross the boundaries of the many States. For example, if I sell produce raised in the garden on my land to my neighbors or at a stand on the road I live on or even to a local store, I am not engaging in interstate commerce as my reach does not cross State lines. Now the State or the County or the City/Town/Village that I live in may regulate my business; but that is not encompassed by the U.S. Constitution. I know there are people who believe that we don't live in such an environment but in a totally top down government like those in many other parts of the world. And there are those who are wishing it were that way and even those who are fighting to make it top down. But it isn't so yet. Hillary Clinton is one of the latter. She and the Democrat Party would like nothing more than turning the States into mere departments of the Federal Government wherein the big cities of the East and West coasts could suck the money, life and freedom from the rest of the country. They desire the world of the Hunger Games.

        'Nuf said.

  • Apparently the path to wealth for the common man is to pay him less

  • when we pay everyone the lowest amount possible

  • by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:07AM (#50108769)

    Not long before you were born there was a system of employment called 'piece work'. If you work in a sweat shop or on a farm or in a factory, you got paid according to what you produced. Usually this meant that you worked your butt off and still got paid less than hourly workers. This has been frowned upon until recently.

    People raising a family, paying a mortgage, saving for retirement or children's education need a reliable income. Corporations don't want to get weighed down with that burden--they want people that they can call when needed and dump when the need passes.

    Corporations have been winning for a long time now and this 'gig economy' is the next step.

    • Piece work (Score:5, Insightful)

      by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:52AM (#50109143)

      Not long before you were born there was a system of employment called 'piece work'. If you work in a sweat shop or on a farm or in a factory, you got paid according to what you produced. Usually this meant that you worked your butt off and still got paid less than hourly workers. This has been frowned upon until recently.

      Piece work is still around and in many cases it is a very appropriate way to pay for services rendered. If I'm an employer and I've got two employees and one is twice as productive as the other, why should they receive equal pay? What is the less productive person doing that makes them worth just as much despite doing less work? If the piece work rate is too low that is a different issue but there is nothing inherently wrong with compensating on a piece work basis.

      Furthermore piece work is used in many place you aren't really thinking about it. Doctors get paid per-procedure which is basically piece work. (it's why they have to hustle through so many patients) Truckers often get paid per delivery or per mile which is basically piece work. Lots of professions get compensated on a piece work basis that have nothing to do with making widgets and there is nothing wrong with that. Piece work incentivizes efficient deliver of services.

      The problem with piece work is that it can also incentivize shoddy quality if there aren't controls in place to keep quality high. Sometimes that is not easy to do which is why piece work isn't used in some place where it might otherwise make sense.

      People raising a family, paying a mortgage, saving for retirement or children's education need a reliable income.

      A reliable income can be assured through having valuable skills and working hard. If you lack a valuable skill and/or are not willing to work hard then a reliable income will be hard to come by. People are not and should not be entitled to a reliable income merely for existing - they need to earn it. Your choice to have a family or buy a house isn't my problem. Work hard and develop some skills that others value and chances are you'll do fine.

      Corporations don't want to get weighed down with that burden--they want people that they can call when needed and dump when the need passes.

      So corporations are supposed to pay people to sit idle and do nothing? How many people do you employ so that they can sit on their ass and collect a paycheck for no work? I'm guessing you've never run a company. I do run a manufacturing company. Paying people to do nothing (read work inefficiently) is pretty much the best way I know of to put a company into bankruptcy. No company should be required to employ someone when there is no work for them to perform or if they are providing sub-standard performance.

      • Re:Piece work (Score:5, Interesting)

        by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @12:25PM (#50109445)

        That's an interesting reply to my original '1%' post. You've taken the employer perspective as many other employers would.

        But you say: " I'm guessing you've never run a company. I do run a manufacturing company. Paying people to do nothing (read work inefficiently) is pretty much the best way I know of to put a company into bankruptcy." - and that's quite wrong.

        I ran my own construction company and helped run another. There is plenty of room in construction work for people to drag their feet, to slack off and take advantage of their employer. In our companies, we took a personal interest in our employees (typically around 30) and their families. During the inevitable slow periods we tried everything imaginable to keep everyone on payroll. We bid jobs below cost at times just to keep them active. The benefit was (as you suggested) quality work, but even more we learned that their loyalty paid of in monetary and other ways.

        There have been companies that cared about employees, and employees who respond with loyalty. There was an entire nation (Japan) with this attitude. This is out of fashion lately but can be found to some extent at companies like Starbucks and Costco and many smaller companies. OTOH there are profitable companies like Walmart whose employees depend on welfare to survive.

        You may choose how to run your company. I'd prefer to make slightly fewer millions knowing that my employees can thrive.

  • by bigsexyjoe ( 581721 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:08AM (#50108779)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    We don't need to shovel more money into Goldman Sachs.

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:09AM (#50108787)

    (Hillary's) view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it.

  • by barlevg ( 2111272 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:25AM (#50108903)
    Isn't this more in line with Jeb Bush saying what we need is more stable, 40-hour-a-week jobs, as opposed to part-time work and unreliable "gigs?" I don't see this as calling for regulation of Uber et. al but rather trying to boost economic sectors that provide stable employment. But maybe I'm wrong!
  • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by ewhenn ( 647989 ) on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @11:35AM (#50109001)
    The term 'gig economy" is just a euphemism for day laborer. We did this back before unions when there would be lines of people waiting to work, if you got hurt or sick they tossed you out with the rest of the rubbish and hired another replaceable and worthless person to take your place. Is this really what we want to go back to?
  • The term 'gig economy" is just a euphemism for day laborer. We did this back before unions when there would be lines of people waiting to work, if you got hurt or sick they tossed you out with the rest of the rubbish and hired another replaceable and worthless person to take your place. Is this really what we want to go back
  • She seems to be pointing out that they exist, but not really taking much of a stance on whether she thinks that is good or not. In other words, she's just being a politician.
  • when government regulation lowers prices

    they only complain when government regulation raises prices

    do you hear people complaining about how they pay too little for milk or wheat or butter or gasoline?

    without government supports they would be paying a lot more

    where are the complaints?

  • by Prien715 ( 251944 ) <agnosticpope@gmail. c o m> on Tuesday July 14, 2015 @01:29PM (#50110295) Journal

    A worker works for who pays them. Hillary's current gig is financed by Goldman, Citigroup, and Chase. [opensecrets.org] She'll say whatever she likes to get elected, and serve the people she works for. Biting the hand that feeds you is bad for business.

    You could always vote for someone who takes money almost exclusively from unions and individuals [opensecrets.org] and talked about corporate greed and struggling workers before it was "cool", but hey, how can you get elected without at least 3 major banks funding you?

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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