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wabrams
Guest
What is your experience with economics and the labor market?
Isn’t it the law of supply and demand. A large supply of labor would make labor cheap, right?
Still waiting on an answer.Answer my question, please.
What is your experience with economics and the labor market?
Isn’t it the law of supply and demand. A large supply of labor would make labor cheap, right?
Still waiting on an answer.Answer my question, please.
More than yours… reading things on www.epi.org and other think tanks, and reading about the Swedish and Danish labor markets.Still waiting on an answer.
I think a good way to explain my response is to present it as though I was an alien coming to earth for the first time, and I landed in Sweden…I like how Sweden deals with the poor and unemployed.
namyth.com/SocialismWORKS!/index.php?sw=Sweden
I really love that, the nanny state protects them from homelessness.
Here’s how the poor live in Sweden.
lanekenworthy.net/2008/05/26/sweden-image-and-reality/
And let’s not forget the benefits of being relatively well-off too. I also do not see what is so bad about putting people away like they do in Sweden. If those people weren’t put away, they would drive down wages by being in the labor force and they would be in service jobs. They would not be hedge fund managers or cancer researchers so there is little opportunity cost by putting those people away.
Here’s how Sweden deals with its unemployed.
stefanmikarlsson.blogspot.com/2006/05/denmarks-overrated-flexicurity.html
stefanmikarlsson.blogspot.com/2005/11/does-sweden-defy-economic-logic.html
So what do you think of Sweden’s way of dealing with the poor?
Why would you say that Sweden?I think a good way to explain my response is to present it as though I was an alien coming to earth for the first time, and I landed in Sweden…
I would naturally assume that the “homeless” people are the elite ruling class, and that the rest of the country are their slaves.
Then I would leave, because I wouldn’t want to associate with a civilization that hasn’t developed beyond slavery.
How is yours more than mine? What you read and what you apply and have done are 2 totally different things. What is your work experience, age? These things shape the discussion.More than yours… reading things on www.epi.org and other think tanks, and reading about the Swedish and Danish labor markets.
No. they are ways for old people to claim some sort of moral high ground.What is your work experience, age? These things shape the discussion.
No, it is a very valid question. The reality is, Ribo has zero experience with the job market. He’s very young, a college student, and has no concept of how the world works except what he reads in books. When you get out and pay your own bills for a few years, I’m more than happy to entertain ideas coupled with research and practical experience.No. they are ways for old people to claim some sort of moral high ground.
Now, old man. Get back to the conversation at hand.![]()
I started my own lawn business at 17; worked from 18 to 22 in retail sales over 30 hours a week to support myself while I did my bachelors degree, taking a full time load at school every semester. At 22 I graduated and went into the finance business. At 28 i went back to school full time to go into healthcare and will graduate in May 2009, all the while working part time. So I think I know what I am talking about.This from a 29 year old who’s still a student…
It is remarkable when you have to work for living to support yourself while going to school full time. It makes one learn the value of money, budgeting, hard work, and hardships which can lead to fruitfuless. You don’t learn those by being an unemployed, full time college student.Working part time as a sales assistant in a store while studying is not remarkable. What area of finance? Did you employ poeple, run a business? No?
Parents helped out a little, mainly paid my car insurance and some grocery money. Could have partied a little bit less and used the money to pay for those. I did take out loans to pay tuition and books, but I lived off campus my entire college career, hence why I worked so much.29, employed in a university ordering books for the libraries and doing related accounts work. Nothing to write home about I know. Also worked 25+ hours a week when studying from 21-24. It’s doable, and I bet your patents helped you out, or you at least took out a loan for the course costs.
It’s not an ad hominem attack. I don’t see any ligitimacy in the ideas of those of haven’t ever financially supported themselves.Let’s get back to the topic of talking about Sweden and Denmark instead of using ad hominems against each other. Let’s talk about my idea of putting people away in a nice place like the hikikomori in Japan or many of poor in Sweden if they are unable to make it in the world with hard work. (This is voluntary as the hikikomori in Japan realize that they would fail in the job market so they decided to live in their parent’s homes and not come out.)
I see many working poor who have miserable lives by working multiple dead end jobs with little security, few benefits, and low wages. I do not see how teaching them resposibility will raise their wages so they could improve their quality of life. Encouraging them to be hikikomori will definitely improve their quality of life as their insecurity would be removed.It’s not an ad hominem attack. I don’t see any ligitimacy in the ideas of those of haven’t ever financially supported themselves.
How would you know? Teaching them responsibility and job skills can raise their wages.I see many working poor who have miserable lives by working multiple dead end jobs with little security, few benefits, and low wages. I do not see how teaching them resposibility will raise their wages so they could improve their quality of life. Encouraging them to be hikikomori will definitely improve their quality of life as their insecurity would be removed.
One proposal to limit the damage is to discourage them from having children. I think encouraging people to become like hikikomori would accomplish this. One does not require coercion such as sterilization for this to happen.
OK, this is what happens when you don’t do your research. Hikikomori syndrome is not some voluntary life choice, it is a mental disorder. And it is most certainly not an appropriate model for your ridiculous “hide the homeless behind the shed” program.Let’s get back to the topic of talking about Sweden and Denmark instead of using ad hominems against each other. Let’s talk about my idea of putting people away in a nice place like the hikikomori in Japan or many of poor in Sweden if they are unable to make it in the world with hard work. (This is voluntary as the hikikomori in Japan realize that they would fail in the job market so they decided to live in their parent’s homes and not come out.)
Having experience is a lot like having common sense…No. they are ways for old people to claim some sort of moral high ground.
Now, old man. Get back to the conversation at hand.![]()