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Is Thirty the new Fifty? (With ObamaCare in the wings, the 30 hour work week will be new normal)
American Thinker ^ | 11/20/2012 | Scott Mayer

Posted on 11/20/2012 7:20:55 AM PST by SeekAndFind

With ObamaCare in the wings, the traditional forty- or fifty-hour work week will soon be replaced with a less than thirty-hour week for many American workers. To wit: many businesses, including ones that previously received ObamaCare waivers, are trying to avoid paying onerous fines for not providing employees with health coverage as mandated by the new law.

President Obama recently said that he won't allow the budget to be "balanced on the backs of the middle class." He sure did give the appearance of truly caring about these "folks," but he failed to disclose the fact that, even if taxed at 100%, there simply aren't enough rich people to pay for all of his big-government plans.

But as Thomas Sowell points out, even at a rate much lower than 100%, higher tax rates don't necessarily translate into higher tax revenues. So where will all this needed money come from? While Obama is targeting the group of Americans who already pay the most in taxes, the burden of his policies will ultimately break the backs of those he claims to be trying to protect.

The Obamacare mandate is just one example of how the middle class will be forced to shoulder a heaver burden, which flies in the face what Obama had promised to the American people. But in addition to this mandate (now officially a tax), a reduced work week will in essence have the same effect as a huge tax increase for those affected.

Take-home pay is what ultimately matters, and losing 25% of one's gross pay based upon a forty-hour week or about 45% based on a fifty-hour week when overtime is factored in represents an enormous hit.

(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: jobs; obamacare; workweek
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To: SeekAndFind

58 hours a week with two companies is only the beggining. Companies will automate as much as they can, or have self service to let their customers do the work. McDonald’s has already tried outsourcing their drive in window operators to India,expect that to come back in a big way. Jobs will dissapear over the next several years.


21 posted on 11/20/2012 8:43:04 AM PST by Vince Ferrer
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To: SeekAndFind

In the early history of Ireland, a person paid his/her doctor a sum on a regular basis. If the person paying the sum, got sick and went to that doctor, he/she paid nothing more to the doctor until he/she was well again.

That’s a good incentive for good care - the doctor needed to make the patient well in order to start collecting that sum again.


22 posted on 11/20/2012 8:44:55 AM PST by Marcella (When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.)
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To: rarestia

“The idea of “insurance” has become this bastardized monolith of money for the poor.”

This is the money quote of this post! We’re in our early 70’s now but we remember when our kids were being raised that a visit to the doctor ( the same ones we use today mostly) cost $9.00 out of pocket, no insurance. Insurance was for “unexpected medical stuff” and the doctor billed us and we submitted a claim to the insurance co. It kept the patient in the loop. The problems arose when they decided to decouple the patient from the payment process. Then the insurance companies just allowed the costs to skyrocket without the patient’s knowledge. The “concierge doctor” is coming for those who have the cash to pay for their own medical care ( which is how it should be anyway for anything but out of the ordinary medical expenses). There is something really wrong with a medical care system wherein a hospital visit for 24 hours is a $25,000 venture. Good hotels on the Cote d’Azure deliver more and cost a whole lot less.


23 posted on 11/20/2012 9:17:37 AM PST by vette6387
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To: vette6387

It’s obscene, in my opinion. Insurance should be reserved for catastrophe, not for regular visits. I gladly pay my doctors in cash and often walk out just $100 lighter in the wallet. Consider I only see them once a year, and I’m only “out” about $400 all tolled.

The idea of paying a “co-pay,” to me, is silly considering the amount of headache and extra staff the docs have to have to deal with the maze of insurance companies and regulations.

If I’m in a car accident, fall off a ladder while cleaning the gutters, cut off part of my finger while making dinner, get electrocuted fixing the pool pump, or break a finger while hammering up new fence panels, the ambulance ride and/or the fees charged for triage in an ER should be covered by insurance, I believe those are valid reasons to have insurance.

A welfare mother with 10 kids and on every form of public assistance going to the ER for a head cold is NOT a valid reason for use of insurance. Insurance is meant to INSURE against loss not PROVIDE indefinite care, regardless of severity.


24 posted on 11/20/2012 9:32:08 AM PST by rarestia (It's time to water the Tree of Liberty.)
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To: rarestia
Part of me has felt, for a very long time now, that a sensible approach to this decades long mess will not come until the suffering is so deep and the retribution against what was once the status quo becomes so openly mean-spirited, demeaning, and incapable of being hid that the entrenched ‘guilt’ is overcome. Part of me thinks we won't change our thinking unless or until either we are enslaved for a significant period, we live like the USSR, or the equivalent of another Holocaust occurs.

We have been taught that to doubt the MSM and pop culture messages is to be ‘retro’, stupid, misinformed, bigoted, etc. etc. We have been taught that any questioning at all, in the slightest way, against ‘diversity’ and demographic shifts is RACIST and horrible. We have been taught that religion, and especially Christianity, is dumb. The only kinds of religion that are acceptable are those that are largely secular - which is what Judaism has become in so many ways. Although oxymoronic, ‘secular religion’ is the ‘acceptable’ ‘cool’ way to approach ‘faith’. It's basically secular humanism with a church, synagogue, or equivalent attached.

This mindset is so entrenched that we will not be able to fight it effectively without breaking the spell that has been cast by decades of cultural conditioning. We cannot and will not win back the culture without discrediting the message of ‘intellectualism’ of the left and showing it as the pseudo-intellectualism that it is. We will not have a serious shot at changing societal thinking until we are seen as the ‘smart’ ones, the intellectual ones, the ones who have thought it through and who have reasoned the most. I believe that the middle-right and conservatives, together, truly are those with the well-reasoned intellectual approach, but for many in society we are Archie Bunker or much, much worse. This absolutely has to change for anything else to change substantively.

25 posted on 11/20/2012 10:00:26 AM PST by pieceofthepuzzle
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To: pieceofthepuzzle

You’re completely right, FRiend. Sadly, even I, at 32, don’t believe that I will see a return to God in public in my lifetime. I believe the damage that has been done has cut so deep and destroyed so much that was considered fundamental just 50 years ago that turning back to where we were is impossible.

I was just discussing with my wife a few weeks ago about how I believe our yet-to-be-conceived children won’t know what it means to be a Boy Scout or Girl Scout. They won’t know what it means to celebrate the birth of Christ on Christmas. They won’t know what it means to celebrate the resurrection of Christ on Easter. These will all become passé and likely cease to exist. There’s already a war on Thanksgiving and even a call to ban Christmas. In 25-40 years, I believe the winter will be just that much colder as the idea of Christmas will be left to private celebration and not permitted in the public square.

I’m only 32, but I’m already convinced that I won’t live to see the age my grandfather (at 78) or even my mother (at 56) have seen today. I believe war is coming; a war of ideas, a war of spirituality, and a physical war against tyranny. The stakes of the entirety of humanity and the free world are on the line. It’s literally a juxtaposition of freedom and prosperity or slavery and poverty and will likely mean the future for generations of humanity.


26 posted on 11/20/2012 10:10:17 AM PST by rarestia (It's time to water the Tree of Liberty.)
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To: KarlInOhio

I used to make that decision if I calculated that the overtime was cheaper than benefits for another employee.


27 posted on 11/20/2012 10:38:34 AM PST by Rusty0604
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To: SeekAndFind

Welcome to France West.

Heck, even France has a 32 hour work week


28 posted on 11/20/2012 12:04:19 PM PST by hattend (Firearms and ammunition...the only growing industries under the Obama regime.)
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To: rarestia
Under no circumstances will I have anything put in or on my body that identifies me to authorities.

As corrupt as I believe the state has become and will become leads me to believe you'll be chipped during a doctor visit and you won't even know it.

That wasn't really a colonoscopy, that was a chip implantation. That wasn't really a flu shot, it was a chip implantation. That wasn't really a throat culture swab, that wasn't really a prostate exam, that wasn't a tonsilectomy... and on and on

29 posted on 11/20/2012 12:11:27 PM PST by hattend (Firearms and ammunition...the only growing industries under the Obama regime.)
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To: circlecity

Or you could fire them all and hire them back as independent contractors. Then you’d have a bunch of “small businesses” working for you. And, since they employ less than 100 people, they’re not subject to the (business) whims of ObamaCare.


30 posted on 11/20/2012 12:25:11 PM PST by Little Ray (I have VOTED AGAINST Obama in the General.)
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To: hattend

Yeah, pretty sure this is what the writers of Obamacare intended. The part-time employees will probably have incomes low enough to qualify for the government insurance plan. The point of this bill was to be a “step” towards single payer health care. The bill wants as many people to lose their private insurance as possible and get put on the government plan.

This helps make Obamacare impossible to overturn by getting the numbers of people taking from it high enough that they will vote against losing their freebies.


31 posted on 11/20/2012 12:42:06 PM PST by JediJones (Newt Gingrich warned us that the "King of Bain" was unelectable. Did you listen?)
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