Me and the Mothman
Claire Keane
ojovivo
RMH
DEAR READER
KIROKAZE
cherry valley forever
Show & Tell
Misplaced Lens Cap
Sweet Seals For You, Always
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

Andulka

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Three Goblin Art

Origami Around
Sade Olutola

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.
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#extradirty

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@remembermontauk
Me and the Mothman
Point Pleasant
Minimum Wage should be indexed to 2% of a city’s median rent.
And here’s why:
Housing costs are the single biggest financial burden facing Americans today.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development define being cost-burdened as spending more than a third of your income on rent. By that definition, over half of the households in this country are cost-burdened. Source
If we want people to be able to afford to live in cities and not get priced out, we have to make a two pronged approach. One is to build houses towards all incomes and price ranges, not just luxury condos. And the other is a robust wage floor so people can actually afford to live.
Fight for 15 is doing an amazing job and I love them, but we have to realize that is quite a few places, $15/hr still isn’t enough to live on.
Which is where the 2% comes in. It allows a minimum wage that is flexible with regards to the costs of living.
And it wasn’t plucked out of thin air either:
Rent should be a third of a persons income, or to restate the equation: income should be three times a person’s rent.
And since a full time job is 8 hrs a day / 40 hrs a week / 160 hrs a month.
So when you do the math, the ideal hourly minimum wage as a percentage of rent works out to around 1.875%, which for ease of calculation is 2%.
Example minimum wages under a 2% rent rule:
San Francisco: $67.40/hr
New York City: $56/hr
Boston: $55.94/hr
Los Angeles: $27/hr
Houston: $21.38/hr
St. Louis: $18.22/hr
Billings, MT: $17.16/hr
I. That puts San Fran’s cost-of-living issue into perspective.
Seattle, which has $15/$16 min wage: $40.14
I was curious about this, so I ran the numbers for myself, based on my current wage and monthly rent.
Before I share the result, a little context…
My wife and I have been married for nearly 13 years. I graduated college 10 years ago this winter. I’ve had a lot of jobs in that time. Jobs that were both mentally challenging and sometimes physically demanding too.
For much of our marriage, money was always something lurking at the edge of our consciousness. Life has been good, but there was almost always an underlying stress about paying all of our bills and having enough left to make payments so our amount of debt was going down instead of up.
I’ve never really aimed for being rich, I just wanted to earn enough money that we could pay our bills, pay off our debts a little more each month, and be able to save a little for a treat like a family vacation every couple of years.
Last year we took our first major family vacation. We traveled to a different state and had a great time and took some photos.
We were able to do that because even though we aren’t rich, we make enough money each month to save a little at a time. We make enough each month that as long as we’re being frugal and responsible, we don’t have to worry about money all the time.
In other words, after all those years of career advancement and progress, as of last year, I feel like we’ve “made it.”
So, what does that feeling of relief require? What does it mean to feel comfortable and able to save and plan and think about things other than constantly avoiding sinking deeper in debt?
Well, according to the math, when I took my hourly wage and divided by my monthly rent, I got… 0.025
That’s 2.5%
In other words, that’s just a little bit above the 2% estimate provided in the original post.
I don’t think it’s greedy for people to want to live with the means to pay their bills and save a little extra. I think it is entirely reasonable to believe in a world where EVERYONE can live that way.
People should live free of the constant stress of living from paycheck to paycheck. And if that means a minimum wage calculated as 2% or 2.5% of the median rent in that area, then I support that idea 100%
I wish Bernie pushed this economic angle more. The benefit to small businesses would be dramatic and I think that would resonate with a lot of blue collar voters in particular.
But really tho - universal healthcare DOES actually help small businesses grow. One of the reasons I’d be hesitant to work full time at my indie studio (a small start-up) and quit my corporate job is that I’d lose the corporate health care and a startup can’t offer it. If small businesses didn’t have the HUGE detriment of ‘well uh you won’t have health care if you work for us!’ I’m sure they’d be able to get a lot more employees since it wouldn’t be such a risk to work there
Hey! A trans woman is being help in a men’s prison. Please check out the twitter thread for more info and how to help!! Please reblog this to get the word out too!! Please, let’s do what we can to help this poor woman!!
“I will follow anyone who retweets this in the next 24 hours! This is so important! A transgender woman is being held on trumped up charges
https://twitter.com/dearmratheist/status/1150048611566157824?s=21
Please please please reblog this. If that is all you can do, then please do this!! If you have a Twitter, retweet this!! It’s so important that we help and protect this woman!!
@trans-mom @stealthboy
If y’all could reblog this so it gets some traction that would be awesome!! It came up on my twitter timeline and it needs a whole lot more attention then it’s getting!!
Provided to YouTube by Elektra Asylum In My LIfe · Judy Collins Colors Of The Day, The Best Of Judy Collins ℗ 1967 Elektra/Asylum Records for the United Stat...
Provided to YouTube by Elektra Asylum Both Sides Now · Judy Collins Colors Of The Day, The Best Of Judy Collins ℗ 1967 Elektra/Asylum Records for the United ...
Racism and Fascism by Toni Morrison
Let us be reminded that before there is a final solution, there must be a first solution, a second one, even a third. The move toward a final solution is not a jump. It takes one step, then another then another. Something, perhaps, like this:
1. Construct an internal enemy, as both focus and diversion. 2. Isolate and demonize that enemy by unleashing and protecting the utterance of overt and coded name-calling and verbal abuse. Employ ad hominem attacks as legitimate charges against that enemy. 3. Enlist and create sources and distributors of information who are willing to reinforce the demonizing process because it is profitable, because it grants power, and because it works. 4. Palisade all art forms; monitor, discredit, or expel those that challenge or destabilize processes of demonization and deification. 5. Subvert and malign all representatives of and sympathizers with this constructed enemy. 6. Solicit, from among the enemy, collaborators who agree with this constructed enemy. 7. Pathologize the enemy in scholarly and popular mediums; recycle, for example, scientific racism and the myths of racial superiority in order to naturalize the pathology. 8. Criminalize the enemy. Then prepare, budget for, and rationalize the building of holding arenas for the enemy- especially its male and absolutely its children. 9. Reward mindlessness and apathy with monumentalized entertainments and with little pleasures tiny seductions: a few minutes on television, a few lines in the press; a little pseudo-success; the illusion of power and influence; a little fun, a little style, a little consequence. 10. Maintain, at all costs, silence.
In 1995 racism may wear a new dress, buy a new pair of boots, but neither it nor its succubus twin fascism is new or can make anything new. It can only reproduce the environment that supports its own health: fear, denial, and an atmosphere in which its victims have lost the will to fight.
The forces interested in fascist solutions to national problems are not to be found in one political party or another, or in one or another wing of any single political party. Democrats have no unsullied history of egalitarianism. Nor are liberals free of domination agendas. Republicans have housed abolitionists and white supremacists. Conservatives, moderate, liberal; right, left, hard left, far right; religious, secular, socialist-we must not be blindsided by these Pepsi-Cola, Coca-Cola labels because the genius of fascism is that any political structure can host the virus and virtually any developed country can become a suitable home. Fascism talks ideology, but it is really just marketing-marketing for power.
It is recognizable by its need to purge, by the strategies it uses to purge, and by its terror of truly democratic agendas. It is recognizable by its determination to convert all public services to private entrepreneaurships, all nonprofit organizations to profit-making ones-so that the narrow but protective chasm between governance and business disappears. It changes citizens into taxpayers-so individuals become angry at even the notion of the public good. It changes neighbors into consumers-so the measure of our values as humans is not our humanity or our compassion or our generosity but what we own. It changes parenting into panicking-so that we vote against the interests of our own children; against their health care, their education, their safety from weapons. And in effecting these changes it produces the perfect capitalist, one who is willing to kill a human being for a product (a pair of sneakers, a jacket, a car) or kill generations for control of products (oil, drugs, fruit, gold).
When our fears have all been serialized, our creativity censured, our ideas “marketplaced,” our rights sold, our intelligence sloganized, our strength downsized, our privacy auctioned; when the theatricality, the entertainment value, the marketing of life is complete, we will find ourselves living not in a nation but in a consortium of industries, and wholly unintelligible to ourselves except for what we see as through a screen darkly.
Happening right now in Hong Kong - the police is firing rubber bullets and using batons, pepper spray, tear gas and water cannons on peaceful protesters who took the streets to protest against the passing of a controversial law which would allow China to extradite people.
Protesters set up camps, gave out snacks and surgical masks before all of this started. Tanks are apparenrly out in the streets as well and people are being hurt as I write this, but they are not backing down.
Most of the protesters are young people, university students, even high schoolers.