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  1. Embed this notice
    🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 (freemo@qoto.org)'s status on Saturday, 09-Dec-2023 22:24:49 JST 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱

    Just a reminder, your average factory worker today can buy a pound of butter with only 20 minutes of labor, compared to only 100 years ago and that same amount of food would have taken 3 hours of labor to earn.
    QT: https://qoto.org/@freemo/111550673521680041

    In conversation Saturday, 09-Dec-2023 22:24:49 JST from qoto.org permalink

    Attachments

    1. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: storage.gra.cloud.ovh.net
      🎓 Dr. Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 (@freemo@qoto.org)
      from 🎓 Dr. Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱
      @jaelisp@lgbtqia.space a pound of butter in early 1900 was 70 cents. Your typical blue collar (factory) worker at that time made 25c an hour. So would take about 3 hours of work to afford a pound of butter. (source: https://www.thepeoplehistory.com/20sfood.html) Compare that with today where the average cost of butter is 4.6$. The average factory workers pay is 16$ an hour. So today working for only 20 minutes will buy you the same food that 100+ years ago would require 3 hours to earn. Looks to me like modern technology **did** make it so you can work fewer hours compared to a hundred years ago. Its just that no one wants to live like they did 100 years ago. They would rather live a **better** life and work the same number of hours. Go figure.
    • Embed this notice
      Ben Taylor (voxdei@qoto.org)'s status on Sunday, 10-Dec-2023 04:07:40 JST Ben Taylor Ben Taylor
      in reply to

      @freemo Do you happen to know what the number was for say, 1975?

      In conversation Sunday, 10-Dec-2023 04:07:40 JST permalink
    • Embed this notice
      🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 (freemo@qoto.org)'s status on Sunday, 10-Dec-2023 04:09:13 JST 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱
      in reply to
      • Ben Taylor

      @VoxDei not off hand, but it wouldnt be too hard to research

      In conversation Sunday, 10-Dec-2023 04:09:13 JST permalink
    • Embed this notice
      🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 (freemo@qoto.org)'s status on Sunday, 10-Dec-2023 04:10:01 JST 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱
      in reply to
      • Ben Taylor

      @VoxDei you are expecting the 1975 numbers to be significantly better than current numbers and 1900 numbers I take it?

      In conversation Sunday, 10-Dec-2023 04:10:01 JST permalink
    • Embed this notice
      Ben Taylor (voxdei@qoto.org)'s status on Sunday, 10-Dec-2023 04:10:02 JST Ben Taylor Ben Taylor
      in reply to

      @freemo (Just because my understanding was that in the US and UK at least, the deregulation of Reagan and Thatcher has led to that gain going backwards since then)

      In conversation Sunday, 10-Dec-2023 04:10:02 JST permalink
    • Embed this notice
      Ben Taylor (voxdei@qoto.org)'s status on Sunday, 10-Dec-2023 04:22:12 JST Ben Taylor Ben Taylor
      in reply to

      @freemo That would be my hypothesis. Though I am frequently wrong. ;-)

      My understanding is that the gains you speak of were largely won by organised labour. Deregulation of markets and weakening of trade unions since the 80s has demonstrably led to wider inequalities between workers and executives, which would suggest the gains in worker buying power should at the very least have slowed since then and possibly gone backwards.

      In conversation Sunday, 10-Dec-2023 04:22:12 JST permalink
    • Embed this notice
      🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 (freemo@qoto.org)'s status on Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 13:13:34 JST 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱
      in reply to
      • Kilroy_Was_Here
      • Ben Taylor

      @kilroy_was_here

      Though its important to note for reference in 1975 the work-related death rate was also 3x higher.

      So you are 3x likely to die for a 40% increase in butter buying power :)

      @VoxDei

      In conversation Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 13:13:34 JST permalink

      Attachments


    • Embed this notice
      Kilroy_Was_Here (kilroy_was_here@dobbs.town)'s status on Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 13:13:35 JST Kilroy_Was_Here Kilroy_Was_Here
      in reply to
      • Ben Taylor

      @VoxDei @freemo

      The average price for a pound of butter in 1975 was $1.025.

      The average gross hourly wage for a factory worker in 1975 was $4.81.

      4.81/1.025=4.692 lb/hr

      60/4.692=12.78 minutes to buy one pound of butter.

      Sources:

      Avg Wage (see chart 606): https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015021301612&seq=406

      Avg Prices:
      https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015008856711&seq=527

      In conversation Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 13:13:35 JST permalink

      Attachments

      1. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: babel.hathitrust.org
        Statistical abstract of the United States / prepared by the chief of the Bureau of Statistics, Treasury Department. 1976.
        Statistical abstract of the United States / prepared by the chief of the Bureau of Statistics, Treasury Department. 1976.
      2. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: babel.hathitrust.org
        Statistical abstract of the United States / prepared by the chief of the Bureau of Statistics, Treasury Department. 1978.
        Statistical abstract of the United States / prepared by the chief of the Bureau of Statistics, Treasury Department. 1978.
    • Embed this notice
      🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 (freemo@qoto.org)'s status on Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 13:50:39 JST 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱
      in reply to
      • Kilroy_Was_Here
      • Ben Taylor

      @kilroy_was_here

      https://youtu.be/Qx8Ta1pi3ZI?si=Qr6ZDVXm5wEsFeUX

      s/marijuana/butter/g

      @VoxDei

      In conversation Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 13:50:39 JST permalink

      Attachments

      1. Half Baked - Rehab Scene "You ever suck d*ck for marijuana!?" 1998
        from JayJoker958
    • Embed this notice
      Kilroy_Was_Here (kilroy_was_here@dobbs.town)'s status on Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 13:50:41 JST Kilroy_Was_Here Kilroy_Was_Here
      in reply to
      • Ben Taylor

      @freemo @VoxDei

      You underestimate how much I love butter. lol

      In conversation Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 13:50:41 JST permalink
    • Embed this notice
      Ben Taylor (voxdei@qoto.org)'s status on Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 17:09:32 JST Ben Taylor Ben Taylor
      in reply to
      • Kilroy_Was_Here

      @freemo @kilroy_was_here I don't know, but I strongly suspect that increase in death risk is rather uneven. Teachers, probably about the same, coal miners, not so much. So most jobs you'd probably be fine. ;-)

      In conversation Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 17:09:32 JST permalink
    • Embed this notice
      🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 (freemo@qoto.org)'s status on Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 17:14:07 JST 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱
      in reply to
      • Kilroy_Was_Here
      • Ben Taylor

      @VoxDei

      Except that teachers made less than manufacuring jobs in 1975 ($4.01 per hour based on a 12.5K salary). AND just living in 1975 at all makes you far more likely to die of almost anything. So even teachers would likely have a much higher death rate than modern teachers.

      @kilroy_was_here

      In conversation Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 17:14:07 JST permalink
    • Embed this notice
      🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 (freemo@qoto.org)'s status on Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 23:24:51 JST 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱
      in reply to
      • Kilroy_Was_Here
      • Ben Taylor

      @kilroy_was_here

      Yea most of the advances in safety arent really specific to teaching. But back in 1975 safety was just abysmal for everyone. Teachers were often exposed to asbestos (very common in school buildings) and other hazards, just as everyone was in various settings.

      My point is, just keep in mind a 1975 lifestyle and wage is only possible when you cut safety **everywhere**. Once you start wanting a society that is much safer, cleaner, and more inclusive the cost for that is more expensive stuff, like butter.

      Also keep in mind butter itself is manufacturing/farming and when you want to do it safely even just the cost to make the butter will be more, naturally.

      @VoxDei

      In conversation Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 23:24:51 JST permalink

      Attachments


    • Embed this notice
      Kilroy_Was_Here (kilroy_was_here@dobbs.town)'s status on Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 23:24:53 JST Kilroy_Was_Here Kilroy_Was_Here
      in reply to
      • Ben Taylor

      @freemo @VoxDei

      Not to mention there have been huge advances in industrial safety over the past 50 years. Hell, even in the past 5 years.

      Teaching is basically the same as it was in 1975 - get up and yell at those damn rugrats about their grades.

      In conversation Tuesday, 12-Dec-2023 23:24:53 JST permalink
    • Embed this notice
      Ben Taylor (voxdei@qoto.org)'s status on Wednesday, 13-Dec-2023 00:51:43 JST Ben Taylor Ben Taylor
      in reply to
      • Kilroy_Was_Here

      @freemo @kilroy_was_here I don't think it's correct to say that living standards in 1975 were achieved by compromising workplace safety (and by extension that any loss since then is because more is being spent on safety). Safety standards at the time were what was believed to be acceptable, it's not that people were cutting corners to save money, and even if they had been workplace safety isn't generally as expensive as all that.

      Any erosion of median living standards since the 70s is likely to be a result of massively widening inequality between the top and the bottom. For instance in the UK in 1979 the top 10% took home 21% of the total net income, in 2009/10 it was 31%. This rise was largely at the expense of the bottom 30%. (figures from https://www.poverty.ac.uk/editorial/more-unequal-country). The top 10% have a 50% pay rise over that period, the bottom 10% have a 75% cut. Similarly, from https://www.poverty.ac.uk/pse-research/going-backwards-1983-2012, the percentage of people lacking three or more "necessities" in the UK has more than doubled between 1983 and 2012.

      Similarly in the US the share of aggregate income from 1970 to 2018 being taken home by the "upper tier" income group rose from 29 to 48%. The "middle tier" income group fell from 62 to 43%. Share of aggregate family wealth for the upper tier rose to a whopping 79% from 1983-2016, to just 4% for the lower tier (both stats https://www.pewresearch.org/social-trends/2020/01/09/trends-in-income-and-wealth-inequality/).

      The rules got changed, a lot of regulations that served a very good purpose got done away with, and the richest in society got the benefit. It's nothing to do with spending money to make workplaces safer.

      In conversation Wednesday, 13-Dec-2023 00:51:43 JST permalink

      Attachments

      1. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: www.poverty.ac.uk
        A more unequal country? | Poverty and Social Exclusion
      2. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: www.poverty.ac.uk
        Going backwards: 1983 - 2012 | Poverty and Social Exclusion
      3. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: www.pewresearch.org
        The 1940 Census: A Few FAQs
        from D’Vera Cohn
        The release of records from the 1940 Census will help people research their family history, although at first the records can only be searched by address, not name. This posting details some of the findings and methods of the 1940 Census.
    • Embed this notice
      🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 (freemo@qoto.org)'s status on Wednesday, 13-Dec-2023 00:56:48 JST 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱 🎓 Doc Freemo :jpf: 🇳🇱
      in reply to
      • Kilroy_Was_Here
      • Ben Taylor

      @VoxDei

      I don’t think it’s correct to say that living standards in 1975 were achieved by compromising workplace safety (and by extension that any loss since then is because more is being spent on safety). Safety standards at the time were what was believed to be acceptable, it’s not that people were cutting corners to save money, and even if they had been workplace safety isn’t generally as expensive as all that.

      No you misunderstand. I dont think people in 1975 said “Lets be especially dangerous and fuck safety because we want to make things cheap”… I think that they just had a mind set where safety was less important for a number of reasons, a large part of it is ignorance.

      The point however is that, while unintentional, that lack of process/effort put into safety relative to the level of time , money, and effort we put into safety today, is the reason things were so much cheaper, even if it was accidental.

      Any erosion of median living standards since the 70s is likely to be a result of massively widening inequality between the top and the bottom. For instance in the UK in 1979 the top 10% took home 21% of the total net income, in 2009/10 it was 31%. This rise was largely at the expense of the bottom 30%. (figures from https://www.poverty.ac.uk/editorial/more-unequal-country). The top 10% have a 50% pay rise over that period, the bottom 10% have a 75% cut. Similarly, from https://www.poverty.ac.uk/pse-research/going-backwards-1983-2012, the percentage of people lacking three or more “necessities” in the UK has more than doubled between 1983 and 2012.

      This train of logic makes no sense, you suggest the lack of safety wasnt intended to save money, then go on to assume it didnt save money… this makes no sense. We know the safety was less, and we know that saved tons of money. Any argument you make about intent is not relevant to that.

      Furhtermore your argument just doesnt line up witht he facts, like at all, and I debunked it before. In short when you look at the correlation throughout history between wealth disparity and cost of living it does not line up, in face we see an inverse corelation, suggesting the **opposite ** of what you say is true.

      We have to be ccareful to use facts and evidence to back up our claims and not just try to back up what we feel makes sense or feels right, no matter what amount of explanation you can produce for it. Thefact is, the numbers do not line up with your assertions, yet they line up with mine quite well.

      @kilroy_was_here

      In conversation Wednesday, 13-Dec-2023 00:56:48 JST permalink

      Attachments

      1. No result found on File_thumbnail lookup.
        that.no
      2. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: www.poverty.ac.uk
        A more unequal country? | Poverty and Social Exclusion
      3. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: www.poverty.ac.uk
        Going backwards: 1983 - 2012 | Poverty and Social Exclusion

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