I support no minimum wage.
Then you support companies who are willing to exploit desperate workers with sweatshop wages having a major competitive edge over ethical employers who pay their workers fairly, thus putting those decent companies out of business. You support removing the buying power of tens of millions of lower income workers and thus putting even more companies out of business. You support destroying the economy and turning it into a sweatshop-filled dystopia. Great plan.
"It is a serious national evil that any class of His Majesty's subjects should receive less than a living wage in return for their utmost exertions. It was formerly supposed that the working of the laws of supply and demand would naturally regulate or eliminate that evil [...and...] ultimately produce a fair price. Where... you have a powerful organisation on both sides... there you have a healthy bargaining.... But where you have what we call sweated trades, you have no organisation, no parity of bargaining, the good employer is undercut by the bad, and the bad employer is undercut by the worst... where those conditions prevail you have not a condition of progress, but a condition of progressive degeneration."
Winston Churchill MP, Trade Boards Bill, House of Commons (28 April 1909)
A supporter of slavery. No surprise.
That's an asinine interpretation of his sarcastic reply, especially considering it is your totally serious plan which most closely resembles the callousness of slavery.
$15 dollar minimum wage for entry level positions and unskilled labor is absurd. If you want to make more money then I believe you earn it by working for a better position, by getting a skill or education and putting in time. People expect too much to be given to them these days. Minimum wage was never (and has never) been intended to earn a living on.
How does someone get a better education if they can't afford it because tuition is too high or if they don't have time to go to school because they're working two full time jobs just to make ends meet?
How does one develop greater skills if businesses are unwilling to train them? Do you suppose that the same unethical companies who are unwilling to offer a decent minimum wage care enough to offer retraining and apprenticeship programs to those same disposable workers? When and how are you supposed to get that skills training for the reasons I mentioned in the paragraph above?
The very first official government minimum wage, in the form of an amendment to the English
Statute of Labourers in 1389, was intended to act as a living wage by tying wages to the price of food.
As a business owner and someone who worked very hard from the bottom up (and now pays far too much tax so people can be given free stuff); that is my opinion. You asked for opinions and you got mine. I would be interested in how many people posting here are the ones who are going to be paying for this crazy notion. I am sure there is a big difference in opinion between those paying the minimum wage and those receiving it. This country was built on the idea that the harder you work the more successful you become. Somehow that has been lost and now people think they are owed something; newsflash - you are not owed anything, you have to earn it!
You've never gotten a state or federal college loan or grant or a small business loan? Went to a state university? You've never gotten any form of state or federal assistance growing up? You've never benefited from public education, public infrastructure, emergency services, public libraries? Use the post office?
You're part of a society where everyone, including those so-called moochers you loathe so much, have contributed to the betterment of the whole according to their ability. No one did anything completely on their own without the help of others. You grew up within a framework that allowed you to start a business, and as part of that framework, you have an obligation to give back to others so they too can have a chance. You can't just selfishly say "Fuck you, I got mine."