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Topic: Jeb Bush: People Need to Work Longer Hours - page 2. (Read 1173 times)

member
Activity: 70
Merit: 10


Is this guy for real? Is this really who the Republicans want as president?

This is worse than George.

Of course republicans want people working more hours, then they don't have time to watch what other skullduggery is taking place in congress, due to everyone being so tired they can't keep track of much else.


What he was trying to say is that employers should be hiring full time employees, not part time ones. Read beyond the headlines.
member
Activity: 70
Merit: 10
Jeb Bush is another corporate sellout, just like Hillary.

"Longer hours". Sure. Just wait, Hillary will say the same thing eventually.
newbie
Activity: 16
Merit: 0
I'm saving all the "pure conservative" "If it's Jeb, I'm going 3rd Party" claim posts....
for re-posting one year from now.
You don't mind, do you?

Not at all. Doesn't mean I'm just to turn liberal though.
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
If the REPS nominate this delusional Little Lord Fauntleroy............they might as well just fold up the tent and prepare for a third party.

In 2011, you predicted if the GOP nominated Mitt Romney, a white separatist "Nationalist Party" would be created "within months of Obama's re-election."

Where is it?



The RNC got me thinking about switching parties when McCain was the nomination. I inched closer when it was Romney. If Jeb gets it, I'm done with them.

I'm saving all the "pure conservative" "If it's Jeb, I'm going 3rd Party" claim posts....

for re-posting one year from now.

You don't mind, do you?
member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
I wasn't a fan when he waffled on the one question that you'd think he would have been prepared for... about his brother's decision to invade Iraq.

Jeb is a very, very flawed candidate. I will give him a slight bit of credit, just because he's providing specific examples of what he'd do if elected president. Aside from that, yeah. If he in fact gets the nomination, get ready for Hillary.
newbie
Activity: 16
Merit: 0
Everything about Jeb seems to indicate "Romney-II".

From that kind of tin-ear attitude towards working people....

to the fact the Far Right today think they can "stop him" from becoming the Nominee...as they thought they could stop Romney in 2011.

Jeb's going to be the Nominee....the RNC wants it. The Big Money Boys want it. And he's leading in the polls...even with Trump in the mix now.

The RNC got me thinking about switching parties when McCain was the nomination. I inched closer when it was Romney. If Jeb gets it, I'm done with them.
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
Everything about Jeb seems to indicate "Romney-II".

From that kind of tin-ear attitude towards working people....

to the fact the Far Right today think they can "stop him" from becoming the Nominee...as they thought they could stop Romney in 2011.

Jeb's going to be the Nominee....the RNC wants it. The Big Money Boys want it. And he's leading in the polls...even with Trump in the mix now.
legendary
Activity: 3990
Merit: 1385
Seriously, any minute that government wants to really make the economy grow, all they need to do is entirely drop the income tax. Government doesn't need it, since they get enough from investments in bonds, etc.  People would invest more in bonds if government gave them the money and incentive through dropping the income tax.

Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1094
Learning the troll avoidance button :)
That doesn't even make the slightest sense economically. People working longer generally means fewer people working - if demand for goods stays the same. People earning more for longer working times translates to either more inflation or more saving.

None of this has an impact on economy. The economy can only grow if there is more demand for production. The main sources of more demand is either a rising population or access to new sales markets. Working times are totally out of the equation here. Working more, to produce more products that nobody buys doesn't help the economy.

ya.ya.yo!

I've been reading that less hours same wage is better and somewhere between a 32-35 hour workweek instead of the standard 40.
So it would be an argument that the economy can grow with less work hours and more efficiency so your right longer hours make no sense from this view considering that 32 hours can be considered part time so they might need to tweak the measurement a bit.

_
32-Hour Job Sharing
The U.S. Department of Agriculture uses many 32-hour weekly employees, although they are classified as part-time workers. It says such job sharing gives managers more flexibility in assigning duties. In Europe, the workweek has steadily declined since World War II, but productivity has continued to increase.
_

http://www.today.com/money/32-new-40-reason-why-ceo-makes-his-employees-work-t30976

So, Carson put an end to the standard 40-hour schedule and tried something different, for both himself and his family: the 32-hour workweek.

"Every moment that I have with my kids I realize is something that I can't — I can never buy back," he said. "No matter how much money I make or how powerful I get, I can't buy time."

So far, his method has been successful. Carson says the decrease in time spent in the office has actually led to an increase in levels of productivity: "We've proven that you can take it from an experiment into something that's doable for real companies and real people in highly competitive markets."

http://work.chron.com/benefits-32hour-work-week-3676.html

Less Stress, More Productivity
Among the benefits touted for a 32-hour week are reduction in stress, which could reduce disability claims and absenteeism, improved family life and employee morale and increased productivity. A study by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology shows that American productivity has increased so much that a worker today needs only 11 hours to produce as much as 40 hours took in 1950.

Cut Unemployment
Unions and others tout a 32-hour workweek as a way to reduce unemployment. Cutting the workweek by 20 percent might enable a company to reduce its costs without laying off workers. More than a dozen states now have job-sharing programs that provide some unemployment benefits to workers whose hours are cut but enable them to keep company insurance programs.

Etc.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1024
That doesn't even make the slightest sense economically. People working longer generally means fewer people working - if demand for goods stays the same. People earning more for longer working times translates to either more inflation or more saving.

None of this has an impact on economy. The economy can only grow if there is more demand for production. The main sources of more demand is either a rising population or access to new sales markets. Working times are totally out of the equation here. Working more, to produce more products that nobody buys doesn't help the economy.

ya.ya.yo!
legendary
Activity: 1246
Merit: 1000
I don't like Bush but the media is spinning what he was actually talking about.

He was speaking out against the practice of companies hiring part-time employees for 30 hours or less and we need to get more people back to full-time work.
legendary
Activity: 3990
Merit: 1385
I agree with the title. And the only way to do it is to put "time" on the metric system. Give us 10 days to the week and 10 hours to the day.

 Grin

EDIT: Dividing the same day, from midnight to midnight, into 10 hours rather than 24 hours, gives us longer hours. Get it?
newbie
Activity: 27
Merit: 0
If the REPS nominate this delusional Little Lord Fauntleroy............they might as well just fold up the tent and prepare for a third party.

The Egyptian pharaohs also thought people needed to work longer hours building pyramids to the pharaoh's god complex.
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush said Wednesday that in order to grow the economy "people should work longer hours" -- a comment that the Bush campaign argues was a reference to underemployed part-time workers but which Democrats are already using to attack him.

During an interview that was live-streamed on the app Periscope, Bush told New Hampshire's The Union Leader that to grow the economy, "people should work longer hours."

He was answering a question about his plans for tax reform and responded:

"My aspiration for the country and I believe we can achieve it, is 4 percent growth as far as the eye can see. Which means we have to be a lot more productive, workforce participation has to rise from its all-time modern lows. It means that people need to work longer hours" and, through their productivity, gain more income for their families. That's the only way we're going to get out of this rut that we're in."

Already the Democratic National Committee has pounced, releasing a statement that calls his remarks "easily one of the most out-of-touch comments we've heard so far this cycle," adding that Bush would not fight for the middle class as president.

In a statement, a Bush aide clarified that he was referring to the underemployed and part-time workers: "Under President Obama, we have the lowest workforce participation rate since 1977, and too many Americans are falling behind. Only Washington Democrats could be out-of-touch enough to criticize giving more Americans the ability to work, earn a paycheck, and make ends meet."

Bush commented on this issue speaking before the Detroit Economic Council back in February.

"For several years now, they have been recklessly degrading the value of work, the incentive to work, and the rewards of work. We have seen them cut the definition of a full-time job from 40 to 30 hours, slashing the ability of paycheck earners to make ends meet," he said. "We have seen them create welfare programs and tax rules that punish people with lost benefits and higher taxes for moving up those first few rungs of the economic ladder."

A 2014 Gallup poll found that already many Americans employed full-time report working, on average, 47 hours a week, while nearly 4 in 10 say they work at least 50 hours a week.

US workers toil more hours than workers in any other large, industrialized country, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

There are 6.5 million people in the country who, according to the Bureau of Labor, are working part time for economic reasons. This means they are involuntarily working part time because they can't find full time employment and presumably would work more if they could.

Some took Bush's comments as an opportunity to pounce.

The Clinton camp weighed in, with campaign chair John Podesta tweeting:

Rick Tyler, the national spokesman for Ted Cruz's campaign also issued a statement.

"It would seem to me that Gov Bush would want to avoid the kind of comments that led voters to believe that Governor Romney was out of touch with the economic struggles many Americans are facing," he said. "The problem is not that Americans aren't working hard enough. It is that the Washington cartel of career politicians, special interests and lobbyists have rigged the game against them."

http://abc7chicago.com/news/jeb-bush...-hours/836256/

Is this guy for real? Is this really who the Republicans want as president?

This is worse than George.

Of course republicans want people working more hours, then they don't have time to watch what other skullduggery is taking place in congress, due to everyone being so tired they can't keep track of much else.
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