▲ | troupo 6 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> Uber drivers should pay taxes and Uber itself pays taxes - or at least should. Yup. The drivers should have to pay everything because despite working for Uber they are "free contractors" > And the drivers have the free will to choose to drive for Uber Ah yes, I forgot that's exactly how price dumping works: there are multiple companies to chose from and all of them offer competitive wages. I mean, it's not ancient history. For half of Uber's existence the ongoing story was: drivers have to drive almost 24 hours a day to make living wage with Uber randomly stealing their wages. This only somewhat changed once governments stepped in and forced Uber to change some of its practices. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | JustExAWS 6 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
There are multiple jobs to choose from. California’s attempt to regulate contractors was a disaster. Jason Snell, the former editor of Macworld, left to go independent and makes a living based on a combination of podcasting, writing books and freelance writing and he said how much harder the rules made it for him to do freelance writing because of the requirenments around hiring contractors. Trust me, Snell is far from a fire breathing libertarian conservative. It’s not the responsibility of a corporation to decide what a “living wage” is. Should Uber pay more to a single mother with three kids than a single father with no kids? Again it’s society’s responsibility to provide for a safety net and to tax corporations to fund it. On the federal level, that’s what the earned income tax credit was suppose to do and until 2016, it had wide bi-partisan support and was championed by both Republican and Democratic Presidents. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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