Bomb#20
Contributor
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2004
- Messages
- 9,477
- Location
- California
- Gender
- It's a free country.
- Basic Beliefs
- Rationalism
It's not a scary question. It's a rhetorical question. You are play-acting at being a persistent questioner faced with persistent evasion. But in fact neither ksen nor you is actually trying to get a serious answer to a serious question. At least ksen is up front about it -- he came right out and said his preferred policy shouldn't be up for argument. His notion of a civilized society is evidently the same as Fred Phelps's: a theocracy where everybody has to live according to his religion's groundless beliefs. You, on the other hand, are disguising your choice to engage in preaching rather than discussion with "Have you stopped beating your wife?" rhetoric.Wrong. Ksen asked the question first. Instead of an answer, he got more questions. Asking questions in response to a question is not answering the question. And you have yet make a declarative statement on the query at hand. Let's try it again.Why should businesses be able to get away with paying below a living wage?
Good question.
Maybe eventually someone will answer it with an answer and not questions designed to avoid it.
Why should businesses be required to pay a living wage? I think the onus here is on those of you demanding they must.
So you also have no answer.
Apparently it is you who have no answer.
Why should businesses be able to get away with paying below a living wage?
I demand nothing. If you had no answer, you could have posted nothing. You chose to engage, just not with the actually question asked, Must be a scary question.You demand something and give no justification for it. And then you say it is I who have no answer. And that after I have given an answer in a previous post.
Your question assumes facts not in evidence. There can be no answer to "Why should businesses be able to get away with paying below a living wage?" because "get away with" by definition refers to something one shouldn't get to do. The whole point of including that in the question is to put your desired conclusion in as a presupposition. Further, calling what you want "a living wage" even though you know full well that people do in point of fact manage to stay alive on the current minimum wage, just not as well as you wish they would, is an additional attempt to short-circuit the discussion and prejudge the conclusion. If Fred Phelps asked you "Why should homosexuals be able to get away with performing unnatural acts on one another?", would you take that as a serious request for explanation and discussion?
At this point you could come back with a straight question, and say "

So to forestall that, here's a straight answer to the straight question you probably won't ask. Businesses should be allowed to pay below $15 because businesses are composed of people, and people should be allowed to pay below $15, and people don't automatically lose their rights just because somebody categorizes them as "a business".
People should be allowed to pay below $15 for exactly the same reason that homosexuals should be allowed to have sex with one another: because people should be allowed to do anything they want that isn't immoral and isn't likely to hurt anyone, because freedom is a good thing and imposing arbitrary restrictions on a person at the behest of somebody else's religious dogma is a bad thing.
Paying below $15 isn't immoral because actions, like people, are innocent until proven guilty, and in all the endless discussions of this topic here, nobody has yet exhibited any actual reason to think it's immoral to pay below $15. Just as with sodomy, all anybody has offered in support of the theory that it's immoral are logic errors and religious dogma.
Paying below $15 isn't likely to hurt anyone because "hurt" is measured relative to doing nothing, not relative to doing whatever arbitrary different thing you pull out of your ass. A person is better off if you pay him $15 than if you pay him $0; therefore it isn't hurting him.