@JustRightJustRight wrote: ↑Wed Jul 22, 2020 2:59 pmNonsense. If teenagers can work flipping burgers for “a living wage”, what’s the incentive for them to graduate high school? Without that FREE education, they are doomed to staying in that dead-end job. Instead, encourage the teens to make the best of their taxpayer-funded education. Not all kids will go on to college, but let’s see more options like Woodruff Career & Technical Center. Programs like those offered there are more likely to break the cycle of poverty.
I think you are missing the forest for the trees. The incentive, or objective, should be to not be a drain on society. Both from the employer's perspective and the employee. Being productive, and working and not choosing to sit at home and live off government assistance should be the goal. You shouldn't penalize productivity due to the type of job. Working is good. Sitting at home and living off public assistance, bad.
How can I say this and it not sound horrible... I'll just say it, believe it or not, there are some people who are incapable of higher education or functioning at higher-levels for higher-functioning jobs. The whole "get an education:" over-looks the fact that some people just aren't cut out for it. It isn't like they missed a math class or two and can make it up at a community college.
I've worked job fairs before, locally, trust me, some people are not capable of it.