No.

  • Grace
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    2 years ago

    The potential for exploitation is too high, absolutely not

    Oh HA I didn’t read properly and you answered the question already. Agreed!

    WTF Quora

  • @MerchantsOfMisery@lemmy.ml
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    102 years ago

    Hell no. Allowing that is just supporting the ass-backwards notion that intellectually disabled people are less deserved of rights-- rights that are inalienable.

  • @AgreeableLandscape@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    I can’t help but feel that the Nazis asked a similar question, only they were deciding whether they should go to a death camp.

    If you find yourself discussing something similar to what the Nazis discussed, maybe take a step back and reconsider your worldview.

    • @MerchantsOfMisery@lemmy.ml
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      22 years ago

      Your comment reminds me of the scene in Seinfeld’s “The Limo” episode where George is talking about how attractive the neo-Nazi who thinks he’s the Aryan leader is. And Jerry has to remind him…

      "she’s a NAZI George… A NAZI!"

    • AmiceseOP
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      2 years ago

      I don’t get these people sometimes. :/

  • @yxzi@lemmy.ml
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    72 years ago

    Minimum should be the absolute minimum, going lower defeats the purpose of having a minimum in the first place

  • aedalla
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    2 years ago

    I completely agree that they should be paid equally.

    I also have to say that when my sister was working for goodwill industries she was the happiest and most well adjusted that she ever was while living at home.

    Goodwill was definitely underpaying her since they’re famous for it. But at the same time they were providing the optimal working environment that she needed. The supervisors were all trained to mediate all of the myriad behavioral and social difficulties that came with her intellectual disability, including when she straight up started cussing out her coworkers on several occasions.

    The cussing out her coworkers by the way, meant she was doing pretty damn good. I usually didn’t get that much warning as a kid. She used to just start hitting and throwing things in our house. I spent my childhood getting glass thrown at me by her. She gave me a permanent back injury as a child.

    And they employed her successfully for years. She liked going there. She had friends there. She would talk about what they had her do that day and the skills she used and how she had to think to get those tasks done. Then with the (admittedly miniscule) money she made she was able to pay for a care aid to come and take her to the movies every Friday instead of. Y’know. HITTING US AND THROWING THINGS AT US. And when she was at home she was much calmer and more self-confident in a way that didn’t involve hitting people.

    So something about the current system certainly needs to change significantly. It’s 100% not right and I hate thinking about the fact that they literally devalue human beings.

    And a company that does all that gave me a sister that didn’t beat me twice a month for about two years.

    I have some very confusing feelings about that.

    There needs to be some kind of public service that provides that for people like my sister. I will fully admit that capitalism is not doing it in a humane way.

    • @MerchantsOfMisery@lemmy.ml
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      22 years ago

      I spent some time yesterday trying to verify this claim and can’t find anything. I asked a friend of mine who is a historian if she could verify this claim and she was not able to. She pointed me to a paper called “Agrarian Collectives during the Spanish Revolution and Civil War” by Michael Seidman but it too did not have any information about people in anarchist Spain making 50% less income than people without.

      Do you have a source or direction you can point me to for this claim?

  • @Echedenyan@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    My view in the current state of the world is that you should get your salary from your maximum performance (healthy one).

    Imagine that it takes 4 hours to you to draw an illustration in each journey, in the sense you can draw 2 each day as maximum.

    Other person, meanwhile, can only make 1 in the whole journey as maximum because they are slower.

    In conclusion, both you and them would get the same salary as you are both working at your maximum performance.

    People who are not able to work, should be maintained directly by the state as result of contributions from people working.

  • @Ghast@lemmy.ml
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    12 years ago

    I once worked for a guy with Downs syndrome, who also had a part-time job. He came from a working-class family, and clearly felt proud of the fact that he worked.

    I don’t know if he received minimum wage, but if it’s not worth a company’s time to pay the standard rate, then one way to make up the difference is government subsidisation.

    On the other hand, you’re subtracting a job which someone else might need, and they (unlike someone with a disability that gives fully-paid benefits) are expected to work. So while a country has a system which requires some people to work to live, this causes problems.

    I don’t think many countries have the kind of sensible laws and procedure to do this safely, but ideally, people who have the ability to contribute should get some avenue, and they should get paid whatever the job is worth to them.

  • @Godless_Nematode@lemmy.ml
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    -152 years ago

    A good percentage of waitpersons in the country are working below minimim wage so there is precedent for this type of carve-out to labor laws. Prisons are chock full of exploited workers with no labor rights. If the intellectually challenged are to be treated equally then they should have every right to be grossly exploited like the rest of them.

        • @MerchantsOfMisery@lemmy.ml
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          82 years ago

          What the hell are you talking about? I’m in favor of everyone getting access to livable wages, do you not understand that? And why on earth would you think being grossly exploited is a “right”? I urge you to look into what rights are because my god, you’re so embarrassingly lost and worse, so confidently wrong.

          • @Godless_Nematode@lemmy.ml
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            -72 years ago

            So, you refuse to enter restaurants that do not pay their staff a living wage? If you do go to restaurants, then you believe that less than minimum wage is acceptable “in some cases” and are being hypocritical. If you accept goods and services created with prison labor then you accept wage exception and are being hypocritical. As a society, if we accept one exception, then we accept all exceptions. https://blog.globaltel.com/companies-use-prison-labor/

            • @MerchantsOfMisery@lemmy.ml
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              2 years ago

              So, you refuse to enter restaurants that do not pay their staff a living wage

              Yes, I do. I haven’t been to a restaurant in years and if I’m in a pool of people buying something like pizza, I tip 25% cash even though I’m broke as fuck. I intentionally avoiding buying non-essential consumables specifically because I don’t want to use what little money I have to support exploitation. It’s a huge reason why I strongly believe in buying products that will last as long as possible-- to avoid having to re-buy and re-support capitalism.

              What about my comments lead you to believe I accept goods and services created with prison labor? What you’re saying makes zero sense-- you just keep putting words in my mouth and then being like "BUWHADDABOUT THAT HUH?! HUH?!"

              Seeing that I’ve answered your question, why haven’t you been able to answer my question? Why do you think being grossly exploited is a "right"? Use your brain-- playing devil’s advocate and being a contrarian is only useful if you raise valid points, not if you misunderstand basic definitions like what a right is and isn’t.

              • @Godless_Nematode@lemmy.ml
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                -42 years ago

                If you go to McDonalds or Starbucks, you are using goods created with prison labor.

                Not doing something because you are dead as broke is not a principle. One person leaving a large tip is still playing into a system designed to exploit workers, mostly women.

                If you leave the door open to allow one group to be disadvantaged, you leave it open for all.

    • comfy
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      32 years ago

      Precedent isn’t a good justification for policy. Especially in the USA, which is an outlier in most of these issues.