Point Creep
Well-known member
In gallatin county there is more work for anybody willing to work than I’ve ever seen. Yet places can’t find help. Both my kids are making 20-25 hr. Fast food restaurants can’t find help at those wages. Crazy times.
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Really?? Your ignorance amazes me!
Too funny welfare ranchers and outfitters, complaining about average joes on welfare. Wow.
Its everywhere. Ive been working 60 to 72 hr weeks plus 2 hrs drive time everyday. They starting people at $23 hr and still nobody applys.
Disturbing times!In gallatin county there is more work for anybody willing to work than I’ve ever seen. Yet places can’t find help. Both my kids are making 20-25 hr. Fast food restaurants can’t find help at those wages. Crazy times.
He ain’t lying. EVERYwhere is hiring for more money at no experience than I’ve ever seen.In gallatin county there is more work for anybody willing to work than I’ve ever seen. Yet places can’t find help. Both my kids are making 20-25 hr. Fast food restaurants can’t find help at those wages. Crazy times.
ThisA business not being able to get employees because they’re underpaying compared to their competition is one thing.
a business not being able to get employees because their tax dollars are being redistributed to pay able bodied people not to work is another.
I have more jobs and work than I have time for. I can’t fathom how others don’t have the same problem.
I agree that the world doesn’t owe employers a ready supply of workers. But how does a worker go from no skill/experience to a higher wage without entry level experience and pay?What's a good wage? I would say it is a wage that attracts the level of productivity a business needs. For many years, employers have enjoyed a labor pool that left quite a few talented and industrious people under employed. I think that day has passed.
I do not understand how any employer can expect to hire a dependable, productive employee at a wage that won't support the employee with decent housing, a decent car and a modest amount of discretionary income that would support an interest outside of work.
If the wage doesn't support that, the only person with any interest in the job, will be some one living day to day. They will take and leave jobs the same way. Or a dependable person in a tough spot, they might use that sort of job as a bridge, while they continue to look for a better job. They will leave soon enough as well.
I do not feel sorry for low wage employers in their present plight in attracting workers. Just as the world does not owe anyone a living, it does not owe employers a ready supply of workers willing to work for low wages.
The problem is that it will probably hit the “woke” areas after rural and agricultural regions.The direction this country is headed in right now we may see the day people will be willing to go to work for a load of bread. It happened before, and it can happen again.
It wouldn’t hurt my feelings to see some of the “woke” crowd receive an awakening.
Boom time?As Greenhorn mentioned, a motivated person in Gallatin County has as much opportunity to work as he can desire. The cost of housing doesn’t make it feasible to move here simply for high wages, but for someone who already owns a home or has a stable rent situation it’s boom time.
Then you can't really expect them to worry about the price of cattle, hay, drought, whatever. Maybe, like you, they will say too bad, so sad, he needed an awakening.The direction this country is headed in right now we may see the day people will be willing to go to work for a load of bread. It happened before, and it can happen again.
It wouldn’t hurt my feelings to see some of the “woke” crowd receive an awakening.
The cattle industry has yet to receive theirs. Four companies process 85-90% of all the cattle, and set the price. The individual rancher has little say in it other than to sell or keep and feed. While their customers got larger and more powerful, the ranchers complained about APR, democrats, taxes, and regulation. Encouraged by the people they vote for to incorrectly place that blame. All is well as long as you distracted from what is really going on. The largest ranches continue to grow so they have pull in pricing.The direction this country is headed in right now we may see the day people will be willing to go to work for a load of bread. It happened before, and it can happen again.
It wouldn’t hurt my feelings to see some of the “woke” crowd receive an awakening.
I am able to understand of your post, you are correct in that the packers control production and consumption with price fixing, their profits are off the charts. They have paid off Congress and have a free pass on their monopoly.The cattle industry has yet to receive theirs. Four companies process 85-90% of all the cattle, and set the price. The individual rancher has little say in it other than to sell or keep and feed. While their customers got larger and more powerful, the ranchers complained about APR, democrats, taxes, and regulation. Encouraged by the people they vote for to incorrectly place that blame. All is well as long as you distracted from what is really going on. The largest ranches continue to grow so they have pull in pricing.
you can fight change all you want, but it will happen anyway. Read about the native
What I am able to understand of your post, you are correct in that the packers control production and consumption with price fixing, their profits are off the charts. They have paid off Congress and have a free pass on their monopoly.The cattle industry has yet to receive theirs. Four companies process 85-90% of all the cattle, and set the price. The individual rancher has little say in it other than to sell or keep and feed. While their customers got larger and more powerful, the ranchers complained about APR, democrats, taxes, and regulation. Encouraged by the people they vote for to incorrectly place that blame. All is well as long as you distracted from what is really going on. The largest ranches continue to grow so they have pull in pricing.
you can fight change all you want, but it will happen anyway. Read about the native
I hope we get a monthly stipend when we’re rounded up and run out of business.
Wow. mtmuleyDo you reflexively put your hand out?
Maybe take your earlier advice, learn a skill and get a job. Maybe a low wage one to start.
Americans are real good at finding others to blame. You keep finding enemies while the corporations keep changing the rules behind your back, and sometimes right in front of you.Liberals are like a cancer to the farm/ranch community, so correct we have little use for them.
Again........pure ignorance! I have no words for this. This discussion about Biden handouts and lack of work ethic has been outstanding and then there’s this. Can’t say I’m shocked I guess.Do you reflexively put your hand out?
Maybe take your earlier advice, learn a skill and get a job. Maybe a low wage one to start.
Any idea as to who will be paying the piper for the trillions of dollars printed? The hole our government is digging is a bad thing. When the recession/depression comes it will be bad.Somewhere between the extreme edges of comparison is the truth.
I have no doubts that all the stimulus money has contributed to some workers choosing to stay home rather than work. Not everyone works with a mentality of advancing themselves financially and materially over the long term.
My family is part of a turkey growing cooperative. Their processing plants are running at @ 60% of pre-COVID employees in spite of raises and monthly bonuses for workers who don’t miss work days. They aren’t losing workers to businesses paying more than they are.
Other businesses in the area are having the same struggle to retain low skilled workers.
The simple answer isn’t as simple as “pay a liveable wage…” What number is that?
Will consumers pay enough for the product a company produces to support increases or will they buy less and in the end workers get layed off because demand decreases?
There’s always going to be tension between production and consumption. Introducing trillions of “magic money” into that equation isn’t sustainable or helpful for stabilizing markets and labor demands.