07-27-2016, 04:11 PM
Businesses that can afford to pay higher minimum wages support them to drive out the competition of the mom and pop stores who cannot.
How, then, does this work when a (large) business (like Walmart) pays so little that their workers qualify for public benefits? It's still a "subsidy". Places with a higher minimum wage are seeing this play out: workers don't want more hours because they lose those public benefits.
The bigger a business gets, the more government regulation it wants
...the more government regulation it wants to write for itself[.
She is anti GMO.
How ironic that the other Ruggles is implicitly pro-GMO, since all marijuana is hybridized.
How, then, does this work when a (large) business (like Walmart) pays so little that their workers qualify for public benefits? It's still a "subsidy". Places with a higher minimum wage are seeing this play out: workers don't want more hours because they lose those public benefits.
The bigger a business gets, the more government regulation it wants
...the more government regulation it wants to write for itself[.
She is anti GMO.
How ironic that the other Ruggles is implicitly pro-GMO, since all marijuana is hybridized.