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mitty14u2

(1,015 posts)
Thu Jan 9, 2014, 11:42 PM Jan 2014

The “middle class” myth: Here’s why wages are really so low today

Let me tell you the story of an “unskilled” worker in America who lived better than most of today’s college graduates. In the winter of 1965, Rob Stanley graduated from Chicago Vocational High School, on the city’s Far South Side. Pay rent, his father told him, or get out of the house. So Stanley walked over to Interlake Steel, where he was immediately hired to shovel taconite into the blast furnace on the midnight shift. It was the crummiest job in the mill, mindless grunt work, but it paid $2.32 an hour — enough for an apartment and a car. That was enough for Stanley, whose main ambition was playing football with the local sandlot all-stars, the Bonivirs.

Stanley’s wages would be the equivalent of $17.17 today — more than the “Fight For 15” movement is demanding for fast-food workers. Stanley’s job was more difficult, more dangerous and more unpleasant than working the fryer at KFC (the blast furnace could heat up to 2,000 degrees). According to the laws of the free market, though, none of that is supposed to matter. All that is supposed to matter is how many people are capable of doing your job. And anyone with two arms could shovel taconite. It required even less skill than preparing dozens of finger lickin’ good menu items, or keeping straight the orders of 10 customers waiting at the counter. Shovelers didn’t need to speak English. In the early days of the steel industry, the job was often assigned to immigrants off the boat from Poland or Bohemia.

“You’d just sort of go on automatic pilot, shoveling ore balls all night,” is how Stanley remembers the work.

Stanley’s ore-shoveling gig was also considered an entry-level position. After a year in Vietnam, he came home to Chicago and enrolled in a pipefitters’ apprenticeship program at Wisconsin Steel.

So why did Rob Stanley, an unskilled high school graduate, live so much better than someone with similar qualifications could even dream of today? Because the workers at Interlake Steel were represented by the United Steelworkers of America, who demanded a decent salary for all jobs. The workers at KFC are represented by nobody but themselves, so they have to accept a wage a few cents above what Congress has decided is criminal.

http://www.salon.com/2013/12/30/the_middle_class_myth_heres_why_wages_are_really_so_low_today/

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The “middle class” myth: Here’s why wages are really so low today (Original Post) mitty14u2 Jan 2014 OP
Recommended. (nt) NYC_SKP Jan 2014 #1
The last thing the mill (and other industry) owners wanted to do was pay a living wage. The workers brewens Jan 2014 #2
K&R.... daleanime Jan 2014 #3

brewens

(13,542 posts)
2. The last thing the mill (and other industry) owners wanted to do was pay a living wage. The workers
Fri Jan 10, 2014, 12:39 AM
Jan 2014

organized, got out the axe handles and MADE THEM WANT TO! That's what they understood and that's what worked. They better just hope they are smart enough to not make the younger people have to do that again. I'm too old for that but I'll back them up anyway I can.

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