newyorkguy
Penultimate Amazing
For example, in fast food you have a limited menu and customers are expected to know what they want...
There is another problem here that American society is only beginning to address.
Maybe if post offices were replaced with Staples, first-class mail might be 42 cents instead of the current 49 cents. Who knows. That might save us some money in the short term. How about long term?
This isn't free. We're "saving ourselves" money in this instance by downgrading employees from relatively well-paid postal employees to lower paying jobs, often part-time positions usually with no benefits. That's the current business model. Cut costs to the bone and offer lesser service but for a lower price to the consumer.
Only most of those employees in those low-paying jobs than qualify for things like subsidized housing, subsidized health care and food stamps. Who pays for that? Aren't costs merely being transferred from the private sector to the taxpayer?
When I grew up in the 1950s and 1960s I was taught in school that American workers were among the highest paid (and not incidentally, among the most productive) workers in the world. That was supposed to be why American society was a vibrant society. People made adequate money to support a family, to buy a house, a new car, to go on vacations. That meant the average American worker had a lot to protect. They were motivated and responsible. [ETA-They also pumped a lot of money back into the American economy.]
If we continue to expand the number of poorly paid workers, employees who don't earn enough money to adequately care for themselves much less raise a family, creating an underclass with much lower expectations than previous generations, what does that do to our society long term? I think we're already seeing what it does.
Last edited: