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I think people should earn a fair wage, but it is a matter of supply and demand. If people will do the work for Minimum wage then the work will get minimum wage.
Look what YOU have done to the price of corporate evangelists. YOU expanded the market and raised the wages of everyone in that role.
At the same Time I also blame you for every Tom, Dick and, Harry thinking that their blog should make them 6 figures a year, because they write 200 word posts 10 times a day.
"Silicon Valley now leads the nation in average median income, but the janitors' wages fall far below their counterparts in other U.S. cities (New York janitors earn $20.25; San Francisco janitors earn $17.05; Chicago janitors earn $14.20; Silicon Valley janitors earn $11.04)."
That is a disgraceful stat. These companies should be ashamed.
Amid the technological and entrepreneurial clamor, the little guy gets screwed. These are real people, who've apparently put up with the situation in silence for a long time, based on what little knowledge I have of this dispute. My thoughts are with them, and I hope that they get a fairer deal.
I remember reading years ago about a woman who worked 80 hours a week at two fulltime jobs just to scrape by. Her second job was cleaning the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation offices.
The article talked about this very issue of companies that pay great salaries to the executives and other staffers, but the service workers who clean the offices aren't paid a living wage, have to work two jobs and barely have time to spend with their children because they are working so hard just to keep a roof over their heads.
These type of stories break my heart and it's not right. One really can't live on $23,000 a year in Silicon Valley without some serious sacrifices, not to mention they can't possibly have very good quality of life IMHO.
I love your idea for those who work at these companies to stick around until 8:00 on Monday night and leave their trash in front of the CEOs office. Great idea!
@Ken Hagler, I often wonder why minimum wage workers even stay in Silicon Valley where the cost of living is so high. There are so many other places outside of California where even at a lower income your quality of life is so much better because your money goes farther.
The other point is, depending on how the career goes, the cleaner nobody notices could be you.
Pullling stunts like that will get you fired, what if something toxic was dumped?
No one saying “your type can’t come in here.”
Umm yes, they are, try coding in something outside python. So the Microsoft Windows Mobile, Palm, BREW, RIM, LiMo guys are all welcome? Hah.
Well at least you are consistent, that is, consistently wrong. ;)
$23 k is tough if you are living alone or a single parent - but not if you have another working partner making the same.
Society is not guilty for others who do not use foresight when planning their future. Some immigrants came here to get those jobs that many Silicon Valley educated would never dream of doing.
If you then have a family and choose to stay in the same city to work - it is not society's fault.
They probably get work benefits also - and may live in subsidized housing - as well as get food stamps and Medicaid.
So fucking sick of hard luck stories every day
App Engine isn't even in beta. It's a preview release. They picked one language to start with, not as a final total.
On a side note, if you can't in live in Silicon Valley on $23k, how are these people doing it and why don't they relocate to someone cheaper like Las Vegas? What's keeping them in Silicon Valley?
And this is not in Silicon Valley. These are numbers for Arizona. I make these budgets all the time for my kids and even with two of them living together they barely get by. And the CEO becomes a billionaire.
Unions serve to protect skilled workers from being mistreated by their employers.
I see no reason you can't support meritocracy and still support unions. In fact, unions work perfectly fine with meritocracies.
Let me give you an example from the film industry. Yes, there are bad directors in the director's guild of America, but do you see these horrible directors being hired for the same jobs as people like Spielberg? All the union does is ensures that everyone is treated fairly and greedy executives don't keep all the millions for themselves without giving anything to the people behind the movies.
Yet, technology people seem to be averse to unions because they feel they're "professionals" and don't need it. This has created an environment where tech people are not paid what they deserve and are frequently treated poorly. There's nothing wrong with the idea that talent will rise to the top but without a union, it's more likely that you'll be unfairly compensated by your employers. It's the nature of the machine.
With the kind of success you have, it's easy to come to the conclusion that unions aren't that great. Sure, talented people like you and I are able to gain recognition and get noticed without the help of a union, but I'd say it's more about us being lucky. Even so, our careers would probably be helped by a union. There are plenty of people who are just as talented as you, but they don't have the same luck.
I just ask that you reconsider your take on unions. It's this kind of elitist attitude that makes working in the tech industry so rough for a lot of people.
Oh yeah, the union might be the problem says one.
Tech libertarians seem to be the most naive/ignorant of real world problems out there.
What I did was read scobles post and know that some commenters would play the glibertarian line.
"Unions are bad'.
It's up there in the comments.
It's not like this is the first post ever about unions.
Alex Plank makes the points I would make.
They all aren't soprano style jersey unions.
But, if you paid them well, you engender a sense of loyalty that eliminates some (not all) of this risk.
It's really the most terrible myths there is, and it's all the worse because the rich people with all the power, and who make all the decisions, believe it. That's why unions are necessary; to protect the workers from exploitation that they would otherwise be powerless to prevent.
thank you :-) btw Professions do have unions Medical Doctors and Lawyers have pre entry closed shops :-).
And just because techies are clever doesn’t been they cant get taken for a ride. How would an individual deal with a long running legal case about say pensions (look up the BT Section A Case) or represent themselves in a labour court.
Profesional unions (Ie M&P) deal with some of the same issues but there are more subtle issues that come into play at the higher end I’ve had bullying cases when i was woried about one person and when I heard that someone had jumped in front of a train at the local station I was relived that it wasn’t one of my boys and girls who hadn’t come to anyone with their problems – felt a bit bad about that afterwards.
Ill leave with the reminder that FDR said Capitalism only works when everyone benefits.
Sorry to ramble but unions aggravate me, i think poor workers should be able to be fired so that we can hire a good worker instead. Admittedly if we aren't paying enough we won't get a good worker, and then we'll have to raise what we are willing to pay for what we want.
Man, good times, what?
Power in the hands of a worker
But it all amounts to nothing if together we don't stand There is power in a Union
Now the lessons of the past were all learned with workers' blood
The mistakes of the bosses we must pay for
From the cities and the farmlands to trenches full of mud
War has always been the bosses' way, sir
The Union forever defending our rights
Down with the blackleg, all workers unite
With our brothers and out sisters from many far off lands
There is power in a Union
Now I long for the morning that they realise
Brutality and unjust laws can not defeat us
But who'll defend the workers who cannot organise
When the bosses send their lackies out to cheat us?
Money speaks for money, the Devil for his own
Who comes to speak for the skin and the bone
What a comfort to the widow, a light to the child
There is power in a Union
The Union forever defending our rights
Down with the blackleg, all workers unite
With our brothers and out sisters from many far off lands
There is power in a Union.
Furthermore, in matters of supply and demand, more people azre capable of doing unskilled labor, so wage competition ensues & business leaders profit from people out-bidding each other. I think that since Google and Wikipedia generally reduce the overall asymetrical information situation, many so-called skilled laborers will find that competition is much more keen in the future, as information is more easily available to everyone else. But then employers will hae to rely on other factors in screening and wage determination. Credit score & credible experience will become tantamount in the years to come--not formal education. I think we have seen this phenomena, already.
In closing, I want everyone to rest assured. As long as you are doing what you enjoy, or at least learning the skills for what you wish to do & preparing yourself for a growing move into what you enjoy, you will be fine. Low income is a great tool to motivate people to improve their lives & there are plenty of relatively unskilled jobs out there which pay more than poverty level--just see your temp agency. In the long run, everything balances out or oscillates the other way. One day, people are going to say, "To heck with this janitor job," and they leave their current job for something nicer / profitable / whatever. This will leave a larger than usual hole in the janitor job market, and janitors will be more empowered to set their own wages. Diminishing oscillations in economies are a wonderful long-term phenomenon which ensure a balanced, and efficient job market.
Thanks.
And as for this "FDR was a Commie" business, let's not forget that he got America out of the Great Depression, which was largely caused by Libertarian business practices.
Just a thought