Last September, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed California Assembly Bill 1287 into law, which includes a $20 per hour minimum wage for fast-food workers and a fast-food regulatory council which has the authority to raise the industry’s minimum wage annually. But between last fall and January, California fast-food restaurants cut about 9,500 jobs, representing a 1.3 percent change from September 2023.
The left loves to talk about Denmark and employees making 25 an hour. They then ignore there is no minimum wage law in Denmark.
That is what changed my views.
@wintermute_oregon @realcaseyrollins a lot of those people are just useful idiots. they’re mad about whatever they’ve been primed to riot about. they don’t actually have a basic understanding of how food arrives at stores or the implications of wages on the cost of their coffee. it’s really sad.
@wintermute_oregon @realcaseyrollins
And without unions, good workers get paid more and the slackers who cost everyone else money get paid less or BTFO.