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As a Facebook user who is used as a data milch cows I want lavish perks too!

I should really bring this up the next time the Emperor goes on a tour of the realm.

I like the term 'data cow', all the data cows sitting around chewing the fat on Facebook while the application milks them for data which they sell to the highest bidder. Very dystopian but awesome none the less.
'Attention merchants' milking 'data cows' and reselling ...perfect...
I'm going to go with 'Attention Farmers' to stay thematic with the Cows. :-)

Attention Farmers put out Click Bait to attract Data Cows which they then milk for Data that they can resell.

Your lavish perk apparently, is that you get to get milked for free.
This isn't really specific to Facebook. How many notable companies have in house employees as cafeteria workers, security guards, cleaning staff, building maintenance, landscape staff, etc?
But putting Facebook in the title gets the Guardian more clicks.
Not at all noteable, but the company I work for (Cego) has in house staff for the company cafeteria. I don't know their salary, but they basically have the same perks we do, if slightly less flexible hours.

The massage therapist is a contractor, but she runs her own business.

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i think it goes beyond notable companies. almost all companies in California that hire cafeteria workers, security guards, cleaning staff, building maintenance, and/or landscape staff hire from the same underclass.

the article could just as accurately call it "California's underclass"

True Google does it too and probably Microsoft, Amazon, Apple and probably Oracle too.

In fact it seems that Facebook is actually doing more than most companies.

From the article it seems that these service workers at Facebook actually get a minimum wage of $15 an hour which is not bad except for the horrible housing situation in SV.

Yeah, how is the fact that top engineers and sales make way more money than cleaning staff news? I doubt cleaning staff at the Guardian make the same as editors in chief.
Editor at the Graun makes £450k.
It's news when some of the biggest and wealthiest companies in the us do not pay their staff (regardless of work, regardless of contractor status) a livable wage.
I think it's useful to look beyond the symptoms of the problem and instead to examine the source: the SF Bay Area's residential zoning is just terrible. It actively works against high density residential housing. It's the main bottleneck for affordable housing.
I would think it better for Facebook to pay a living wage, and push to lower the cost of living so they can then pay less, instead of paying less and letting their employees hope that the situation will somehow solve itself.
That's the thing, raising salaries won't solve the issue. Why? Because it doesn't solve the issue of supply. Demand won't stagnate or go lower. Once salaries go up the only thing that changes is the price due to higher demand of limited housing units, leading to the same situation. The problem is with multiple city halls. They refuse to add more residential zones let alone high density residential zones.

https://shift.newco.co/letter-of-resignation-from-the-palo-a...

Palo Alto is just one example. People need to raise the issue with elected officials, that they want more zoning for higher density residential.

That isn't a reasonable expectation. Morally speaking, companies should be expected to pay market rate for the job and anything above that is charity.
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Morally speaking, if your company can't afford to pay all of its employees a liveable wage, then it doesn't deserve to exist.
This is true and it's largely hidden by welfare costs that are shouldered by other taxpayers. If your company isn't paying a living wage then you owe a debt to society because they're literally picking up the tab.
Well no, the company would still be a net positive to the employee. Without the company, the employee would be making an even lower wage or unemployed.
Define “liveable”. Then ask yourself why you defined it that way.
They aren't Facebook employees though, they are employees of a company that provides these types of services for many places.

It's somewhat like FB being responsible for the A/C repairman being paid a fair wage by the HVAC company that Facebook uses to maintain the equipment in their campus.

Semantics. If you're working in Facebook's offices for a large majority of your hours, you're effectively working for Facebook. They've just added the middle man to avoid paying decent wages.

Your HVAC worker who may spend 4 hours a month on the Facebook campus is different from someone whose daily job is to clean Facebook's headquarters.

Building Maintenance and HVAC techs spend a lot more than four hours a month on the campus they support. Or landscaping businesses for example. Or security guards.

I just don't see how the building that you work in defines who your employer is. There's lots of counterexamples for that.

If I own a business, and don't want to have expertise, training, etc, in food service, laundry, security guards, landscaping, etc...I should be able to get a company to do that for me. That company has expertise in hiring, training, regulatory compliance, etc. They are delivering that service to many companies, not just me. Their employees might even be transferred from one client to another. They charge me whatever the going rate for that sort of thing is. They then pay their employees however they do. If they are underpaying their employees, that's an issue, but not one that's my issue to solve. That is, barring some odd thing where my company, specifically, is using some unusual kind of leverage to NOT pay market rates for this service. I see no difference in whether that service happens on my campus or somewhere else.

Employment is not thus defined. If I am a salesman responsible for 1 particularly important client for my company and spend almost all my time at the client's office, am I suddenly the client's employee, and they should pay me decent wages?
Morally, Facebook would realize that it has all the power in this situation and use its position to act for the good of everyone involved. Squeezing an employee to see how little you can get away with paying them, especially when this makes their living conditions much worse, is immoral.
I doubt that the contract FB has with the cafeteria services provider specifies individual wages, or even the number and type of positions.

It is more likely specifying things like how many people they have to feed, standards around variety of food, selection, etc.

So, if I boil down your argument perhaps a bit too much: because everyone else pays a wage that requires someone to work 2-3 jobs to put a roof over their family's head and food in their bellies, it's morally right for Facebook to do the same thing?

Perhaps my own morals are jacked up, but something seems really wrong there.

>> It's news when some of the biggest and wealthiest companies in the us do not pay their staff (regardless of work, regardless of contractor status) a livable wage.

> That isn't a reasonable expectation. Morally speaking, companies should be expected to pay market rate for the job and anything above that is charity.

You're seriously equating the unlivable "market rate" with the moral choice? You've got to be trolling.

Perhaps part of the difference is those $15/hour contractors working three jobs to support their families are also working for a company that is making $9 billion a quarter.
Are they "contractors" though? My impression is that they are employees of some service company.

The word "contract" was around the idea that Facebook contracted with some entity like "ABC Cafeteria services".

So low wages is a problem, yes. But why Facebook's particularly? Is that significantly different from the low wage employees at the Burger King around the corner from Facebook?

Hmm, pay is based on value the employee produces not how much the company makes. If an employer can get away with paying an employee $15/hr -- aka people are voluntarily willing to work there -- then what is the problem?
This is a common problem with companies. I've worked as both contractor and staffer. Being a staffer is always better in terms of what perks the company offers on terms of day to day perks. Contractors may seem to get paid a bit more on a per hour basis but when you add up all the company perks, it's always less.

Also, staffers always see temps/contractors as outsiders. It does not matter how long they have worked together. It's a strange dynamic. I try to avoid contract/temp work if it's going to be a long term position. It's never pleasant.

Facebook is not the first and it won't be the last. Contractors/temps are a benefit to companies since the company can have a flexible workforce they can increase or reduce with little friction.

Would you say that even highly payed contract should be avoided? By highly paid I mean between 300k-400k a year? Where the job is an hourly pay that is a never ending contract? Specifically in the financial industry?
If you get paid 300k, jump on it. Just make sure you are aware that this may end anytime so save most of the money.
If you can get that much, you're in a different league. I say take it and don't look back. 300k makes the pain of being a contractor much easier.
> It's never pleasant.

Can you expand on that if you don't mind?

From my point of view, as I was saying, you are always the outsider. I particularly remember a situation when contractors and temps were excluded from all company functions, no holiday parties, no company get togethers, no company gifts and on and on. Also, there's always a definite divide between the temps and staffers. It may seem petty but after awhile it wears on you; being the outsider is not pleasant.

I can take it when I know I'll be working somewhere else in a few months but I could not take it for years.

This is about janitors and engineers.
"Martinez, 30, actually works three jobs to support himself and his family. His Facebook shift goes from 1.15pm to 10.00pm, so he drives for Lyft in the mornings. On weekends, he picks up shifts as a park ranger. All that work affords him a three-room house that is home to four adults and four children: his wife, their two daughters, his mother-in-law, his wife’s sister, and her two children. The sister and her children sleep in the garage."

I think it really sucks that the contractors sound underpaid and dont have access to the benefits. I also wonder why more people dont just leave Silicon Valley for basically anywhere else in the US (assuming they can find a job there) and live a more reasonable lifestyle. If you have three jobs, you dont get to see your family at all, and that is not living. Life is too short.

Consider the opposite story, of someone languishing somewhere that isn't Silicon Valley. It could be characterized like this:

"Well, if they were bold and courageous, they'd take their chances in SV. Tough it out for a year or so, but take advantage of the immense number of opportunities, and eventually climb up from the bottom rung and become successful."

If poor people stay in poor places, people wonder why they don't move to take advantage of opportunity. If poor people move to expensive places, people wonder why they didn't stay back where they were and live within their means.

It's always possible to blame the victim.

Moving is harder to do when you're not making enough money to save for it. You can say, "yeah, life is hard, save anyway" but that doesn't really fix anything.
Moving is expensive and disruptive, not just financially. Having to start your professional and personal life over is daunting as fuck.
Financially, yes... But... the second part is mostly just the dread of it. I've moved (with family) 6 times in the last 7 years... most of which do to bad luck of contracts falling through in the companies i worked for and them just not having enough work to support the staff... lay offs... and while its disruptive, there is actually a ton of growth out of it that, honestly, has been worth it... Just because something is hard up front doesn't at all make it a bad choice...
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Yeah. The inability to move is actually a huge friction to life and the economy. People are not able to go to where the jobs (or where they can afford a comfortable life) and companies aren't able to get the people they need.

We should seriously have a discussion about government-subsidized moves.

One issue is building up the savings to do the move, including the proper research, finding an apartment, etc. There's also the soft cost in losing in-person access to your entire friends network.
I think they are comparing staff engineers with contract janitors. I think most of the pay differences are between engineer / janitor, not between staff / contract.

I heard that engineers on contract at Facebook are in general paid very well and I suspect many could easily move to a full time position at a less-hot company, but choose not to.

Are his mother, wife's sister and wife working?

Supporting 7 people + yourself on one persons labor is going to be tough no matter where you live

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This is a perfect example of how demands for socialist implementation are a zero sum game. Facebook's contractors make the $15 an hour that minimum wage workers are clamoring for.

Now that they have that - and without offering any new value to Facebook - they want all the perks that high demand, highly skilled workers get. It's a never ending cycle.

Not that I don't feel for their disposition, but it shows how these types of requests come with no understanding of basic supply and demand.

The costs of living in their area may not be affordable at $15/hr.
Is that Facebook's problem to solve? Part of the Bay Area's trouble with affordable housing has to do with their heavy handed rent control policy (another side of price-fixing), which squashes supply.
It's a mix. It's Facebook's problem to suffer, which means people are going to push them to solve it, even if it's a local government problem.
Yeah, I would say Facebook should get involved in policy because it directly affects their employees and their ability to do business. Also there's a homeless encampment across the street, so it wouldn't be out of line to invest a little in the community they are reshaping. https://www.cnbc.com/2017/07/07/facebook-and-google-are-buil... https://www.bizjournals.com/sanjose/news/2015/02/06/exclusiv...
In what way does this affect Facebook's ability to do business? They seem to be doing business just fine with the status quo.
They're trying to expand their campus. They wouldn't do that if it wasn't going to improve their bottom line. Facebook engineers have asked Zuckerburg if the company could subsidize their housing. Employees are leaving because of this problem. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/feb/27/silicon-a...
For every employee that leaves over something like this, there are 10 lined up who would be thrilled to work there.
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If Facebook wanted those 10 engineers they would have hired them first. High housing costs are reducing FB's ability to offer competitive wages.
but, the ones who are leaving now -- weren't they initially thrilled too? retention can be pretty important.
Well, if FB doesn't want to do massive wealth transfer to real estate developers and current land owners it would benefit them to get involved. Part of the reason salaries are immensely disproportionate to the rest of the country is cost of housing.
That's not rent control, it's Proposition 13. It incentivizes city councils to build offices (which they can tax) while rejecting housing (which they basically can't, over the long term).
but at some point housing scarcity causes additional housing unit prices to skyrocket. so the property tax basis for those new high priced units must look pretty good to city councils.

i mean, don't city councils also find it highly revenue-enhancing to encourage the replacement of older housing stock and long time owners with new, high priced, units?

If Facebook is paying the high end salaries that cause housing/rents to rise, they certainly are contributing, however indirectly one may believe, to the problem.

The point remains that both groups of workers are essential to have in close proximity.

It may not work for everyone, but where housing is in short supply, and the demand for labour is great, a working dorm/camp setup for those forced to be working homeless might be helpful.

You can make $150/hr, if your living expenses work out to $140/hr you're not making (or keeping) much.

Like co-working, maybe other setups like co-housing setups might need to come up. They obviously may not work for everyone including families.

How do continued subsidies help this problem?

If COL in an area is so high that essential personnel can't afford to live within 100 miles or reasonably commute there, it seems to me like the sort of circumstances that lead to a company moving to a more affordable area.

Why does skill come into consideration at all? Does a software engineer with 15 years of experience at Facebook get laundry service or health insurance that a fresh out of college QA engineer does not?
Because the cost of not retaining a software engineer is greater than the cost of the perks. The same doesn't apply for all positions at the company.
No but the QA engineer's BATNA has those perks. The janitor's probably does not.
Nor will Facebook when they realize that they just "can't afford" to provide all these freebies to staff because at a certain point it becomes too expensive to contractors to be able to live within an affordable radius of their employment.

That leads to Eloi and Morlocks, an underclass schlepping 50+ miles, doubling their day, to do janitorial work for companies.

Are they (technically) skilled employees with valuable knowledge, to Facebook? No. Is the value they present to Facebook worth more? Arguably so.

Or they'll start deserting SF/SJ and who will valet park your car at Facebook after that?

Just wait until the "high demand, highly skilled workers" get squeezed too and then remember your words. Most of software engineers do work that at some point can also be replaced by machines. How many of us do really cutting-edge stuff?

I think it's a moral issue. We need to find a way to structure society in away that even people who don't have the hot jobs of the moment can survive.

It's certainly a moral issue, but it's not Facebook's moral issue. It's an affordable housing issue that Bay Area cities are failing miserably at.
If it's a moral issue, it's hard to give Facebook a pass for going "not my problem." Especially since they have the cash to actually act morally.
You're not really addressing the point of the person you replied to.

Increasing wages does not help if the housing supply is the underlying problem, since everyone is still bidding for a fixed resource. It just means everyone pays more rent. Wage increases in the bay area are always at least partially wealth transfers directly to landowners. Facebook can't solve that by paying more, the housing policy in the bay needs to change to allow more density.

> We need to find a way to structure society in away that even people who don't have the hot jobs of the moment can survive.

We have several ways to do this, but evidently none of them are acceptable to the people who have the power to implement them.

I think that's a pretty narrow, reductionist take, asserting that they don't add any new value to Facebook. Those "high demand, highly skilled workers" don't support themselves (clearly). Neither is the perceived value of working at Facebook the same without the perks that these contractors provide. I'm not sure it's possible to isolate the value-add of developers from the environment they work in and the infrastructure that supports them, in the same way it's difficult to separate the value-add of a local business from the value-add of the public road that it's built next to. No one is an island.

Also, I don't think I saw a quote where these workers asked for "all the perks". Just perhaps an opportunity to not be homeless.

If housing prices are their main concern, they may wish to consider the opportunities to be realized by asking questions about zoning and permitting.
By all means, they can slot it in between their three jobs.

Not everyone has the means for political action. Frequently, those who need it most are those least able to participate.

Alternately, Facebook can take dictatorial control of Menlo Park and address the issue that way. But there may be some potential downsides to this as well, and other voters and activists react rather badly when well-compensated people or their employers mobilize against the policies that drive expensive housing.

It's a losing situation all around. What's left that might be a winning option? Convert contract services into in-house services, (and downside services until the costs are considered acceptable)?

I'm not sure why you think it's about supply and demand. Obviously engineers and managers are going to make more money than low-skilled workers. But this is about perks that are equally offered to all employees - except those who are deemed unworthy of even being an employee and have no potential job ladder toward becoming one.

At companies like Facebook and Google, perks aren't divvied up by how skilled you are. A junior HR worker or accountant gets the same free food as the top engineers. One could hardly argue that they are equally important to the company. The division is between white collar and blue collar workers - the former get all the perks, and the latter get nothing. When you offer the perks to lawyers (an oversupplied profession) without a second thought but withhold them from the technician who fixes stuff at your datacenters in the middle of the night (someone who actually works on your product), it smells more like classism than anything else.

I just don't think that's true. At Google or Facebook or wherever you're not getting a floor to yourself and a personal admin/assistant as a junior engineer, but you can as an SVP.

Similarly as a contractor for an external services company you aren't going to get all the perks as the employees of the company. And they have to be separate for tax reasons.

And of course this is shitty. I think there needs to be something done about the housing market and general CoL in the area though, as well as asking one employer to pay a bit more. Having Facebook subsidize the area might look great while they have money but isn't sustainable; they should be putting pressure on Facebook to back/lobby for affordable housing initiatives on behalf of it's employees.

This is not just about the choices available to Facebook in this situation. The better question is how we can change the economy to distribute not just money but opportunity more evenly. That is what is at issue here.

The differential value software engineers create over janitors is not because of their intrinsic worth but because of their position in the economy. There is no reason to think engineers should be more entitled to the surplus value they produce than the support workers who are equally essential to the process.

Saying "this is just how supply and demand works" is a refusal to think.

>Now that they have that - and without offering any new value to Facebook - they want all the perks that high demand, highly skilled workers get. It's a never ending cycle.

Everyone wants everything they can bargain for. Welcome to real life. Nobody goes and reads God's Supply Meter to decide what job they're gonna do or where they're gonna live. People don't make personal career choices to optimize the GDP; they make them to maximize their own standard of living.

Now workers behave exactly as the system says they should -- and you complain?

Shouldn't any worldly, aware capitalist understand this?

There's possibly a good reason for this. If you don't treat your contractors different from your regular employees, the IRS might decide that your contractors are effectively employees and you're just dodging your tax burden.

So, yeah, just about anywhere, you "should" be able to tell the difference between contractors and employees.

IIRC this happened to Microsoft
Yup, Microsoft. And the IRS was followed by contractors suing for benefits.
This is how you get rich: By exploiting others. Thats why i never want to be rich.
I'd view this as commentary on the housing situation in Silicon Valley more than commentary on any specific company.

The problem is that, in order for all the tech companies to grow; they need affordable housing for all levels of the staff. This is just as much a government problem as a corporate responsibility problem.

> The problem is that, in order for all the tech companies to grow; they need affordable housing for all levels of the staff.

I'd be curious to know why the major tech employers aren't flexing a bit more muscle on the state level. Cynically, are the higher ups beneficiaries of the currently absurd housing situation, and thus disincentivized in terms of personal wealth to advocate for any change?

>Cynically, are the higher ups beneficiaries of the currently absurd housing situation, and thus disincentivized in terms of personal wealth to advocate for any change?

Giving the proles a place to live would shadow their sunlight and ruin their countryside views... in Atherton.

They're sensitive to the optics of megacorporations undermining local control as neighborhoods and cities determine what's best for their own futures.
I used to do contracting at another well-known company, filling up coffee hoppers and candy baskets. The work is easy, and arguably not worth much in the way of pay.

The problem is that this is all part-time work, and it is effectively impossible to get full-time work. These companies also tend to be in far-off places that, if you are earning $9/hr part-time, means you are taking a 2 hour bus ride each way.

In theory, outsourcing to contracting is a good deal, as the contracting companies have no real HR issues with hiring and firing. They are also supposed to supply some sort of health insurance, as required by ACA, but this is circumvented by shifting everyone to part-time, putting them on 6 month contracts that roll between canceled and renewed, and so on.

It's a difficult situation for all companies involved. It bothers me that tech is getting the smear for this, when basically every low-wage job has been affected in similar ways.

I want to bring the focus on inequality here to the absurd cost of living in Silicon Valley. There is a world in which contract workers at Facebook making 15 dollars per hour are able to live reasonably close to work and provide for their families while working only 40 hours per week. That future does not exist without a LOT more housing in the south bay, the peninsula, SF, and the rest of the bay area. FB cannot pay the 15% raises yearly that the housing market demands of those at the bottom. If you care about these issues and live in the south bay, please look into volunteering with and/or donating to siliconvalley@home http://siliconvalleyathome.org/. If you live in SF, look into SFYIMBY http://www.sfyimby.org/.
The absurd cost of living is due to an illiquid housing market because of prop 13. Adding more housing just kicks the can down the road a decade or two.
Prop 13 and the resulting lack of liquidity in the housing market applies everywhere in California.

There are multiple causes in play in the Bay Area specifically, of which Prop 13 is merely one.

I agree with the spirit of your comment, but FB certainly CAN pay 15% raises to their lowest paid employees - I imagine w/ very little impact to their bottom line.
Nothing grows 15% compounding every year. Not even cancer. 15% compound growth is a motherfucking financial singularity.
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If everyone does that, then you have just started running faster to stand still. They should back initiatives to build more housing in the area.
Its not about a 15% raise today, it's about a 15% raise every year indefinitely. Rents are increasing at 10-15% annually, no company can afford salary increases of that year after year after year.
So leave. I just don't get that.

I mean, we're literally talking about a group of people with lower-to-middle class US jobs, who, on a daily basis, go to an auction together with a large amount of billionaires and millionaires, and bid against them for real estate, food and all kinds of amenities. To me, that's a joke.

And then an article gets written about a staffer vs contractor dichotomy.

Come on. Just because you were born in a place of 50 square miles of land, in a country of 3.5 million square miles of land, does not mean you're entitled to the laws of supply and demand being suspended by a massive subsidy program so that you can keep on living there when you're not needed and there's tons of people waiting in line for your spot who're willing to do it for less, while you are needed in other cities where your family can live much more affordably.

And this is coming from a leftist who left his own home town because it got overrun by rich kids with daddy's money and expats. I didn't like it either. But I also saw that I was not entitled to hand outs in order for me to live in the most prime location in the country, because everyone wants that and that just does not work, as much as we want it.

And the last thing I'm going to do is try to outbid the 1% as a middle class earner and have a shitty quality of life. Working fulltime without kids for 6 months and being homeless all that time because the average rent equals your pay just means you need to move. You've got skills, you're employable, you've got income...

People have roots, man. If somebody would have tried to kick my Grand-x father off his homestead in Scotland, he'd have shoed them away with the blunt end of an axe. And yet when it's capitalism rather than war that displaces people from their homesteads, it's lower-class stubbornness to blame?

Why should money entitle people to live in certain places, rather than history? You can argue both sides.

Your grandfather owned the land. These people do not.
That may be an explanation, but it's not a justification. Why don't these people own the land they live on? Keep asking why a couple more times.
Because we tried a bunch of ways to allocate lands over the course of human history. The current system (where you pay money, acquire it peacefully and the government backs your "property rights" with all the guns) seems the best among alternatives (like violence, ceding it to people who live somewhere for X years etc).

Do you have a better alternative to allocate land (or any other asset)? Please share so that we can discuss.

Public housing works quite well in Vienna.[1]

But my point was not necessarily that no one should own land. Another interpretation of my question — "Why don't these people own the land they live on?" — would be, why isn't there land around that they can afford to buy and give themselves security? And that has various types of answers, some related the kinds of opportunity in the economy that would give them more income, some about how we can change the supply of housing.

Here are some more developed thoughts on the subject from someone more expert than I am: [2]

[1] https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/case-for-pub...

[2] https://danielkayhertz.com/2017/05/11/what-is-a-left-approac...

I find the argument in favor of sunset towns in your second link rather disturbing.

The article about Vienna shows that the forces of supply and demand work very well, given an adequate supply. That seems very instructive.

Well many of the people displacing residents don't "own" the land either. They can just afford crazier rents. The distinction between whether someone is renting or owning has little bearing on where someone considers "home".

See: entitlements people feel about going back to "homelands" in the Middle East, or to Europe after the war. These are not people that owned land, and yet we still feel morally responsible to help them return to their original homelands.

No, I don't think it has much to do with morality. Its just that some peoples won the wars and hence could return to their homeland. Do you think Jews could have settled in Israel had they lost the fight in 1948? Or Germans would have been expelled from east of Oder had they won WW2? Even Hongkong had to be ceded back to China only after China became powerful enough to leave no other alternative. Do you think UK would have given back Hongkong if China was as weak as, say, Argentina (see: Falklands war)?

Ultimately, land ownership (or its euphemisms like "homes" or "property rights") can only be backed by monopoly on violence, otherwise known as Governments, in that area.

I agree with your sentiment, but historically your Grand-x father potentially got sold out in the Highland Clearances by his clan leader and then emigrated to Canada/US. This made way for sheep (lots of Scotland is still relatively underpopulated) and the head of the clan probably blew the money on a town-house in London.

People have roots, but they often get pulled out.

See John Prebble - the Highland Clearances 1963 - ISBN-13: 978-0140028379 "‘Mr Prebble tells a terrible story excellently. There is little need to search further to explain so much of the sadness and emptiness of the northern Highlands today’ The Times.

Historically, this is exactly what happened. I'm just saying—it's a morally repugnant thing to happen, and it shouldn't be any less morally repugnant whether it's an entitled capitalist techie kicking my grandfather out of his house, a swindling clan leader, or some imperialist with an (albeit smalller) axe to grind.

Coercion is coercion.

I did mention that. Again, I had to leave my own hometown too. And yes, we've argued, just like every major city, with history vs money. But at the end of the day, you're not entitled to live in the 0.01% richest square mileage because you were born there, or lived there a few decades. That's akin to birthrights.

Now you can live there, if you can afford it. Affordability is a large spectrum. For example, for years I spent about 50% of my rent there, and I had a great quality of life, I liked it. But at some point, especially if you want to buy a house, get kids, reduce risk of total financial collapse the moment your income dips, etc, that's no longer affordable. The solution for me was to move to a cheaper area.

In tech, wages vary quite wildly, but most people with ordinary jobs roughly earn the same. Facebook employs 17 thousand people. I don't really care much about them, relatively speaking. Walmart employs 2.3 million. I care about that number, relatively, loads more, as it concerns lots of people. Walmart salaries are pretty much the same across the country with little variance. So it just makes sense, from a quality of life perspective, for you and your family, to move to an at least somewhat affordable location. That doesn't mean sorting for price and picking the lost spot, there's lots inbetween. Lots of semi-expensive cities that can still be affordable. But SF? Come on. If you make $25k a year and have a family, that's just irresponsible. And if people need help moving, we should facilitate that.

What else is the solution at scale? Giving birthrights? Giving million dollar subsidies to poor people so they can buy a 1 bedroom apartment in SF?

There's ACTUAL huge issues that demands our government's resources. Look, if you live in an affordable city and can't make it on your own, need partial or full help, you should get all the help you need. But all these poor, but otherwise employable people with a decent brain and a decent body, who work hard but choose to live in a place among the richest on the planet... that makes no sense. In the same way I don't buy a BMW, or go to the four seasons, or pick the most expensive restaurant. At the end of the day, we need to pick our spending patterns based on our earnings for everything in life, living area included, and living in SF like some people do today is for many (not all) a (bad) choice.

And I'm all for shifting the wealth, progressive tax rates, helping parents with daycare, in every city, I've always voted for those programmes. But we're talking about people trying to live in a city where a tiny home costs $1m, with a minimum wage income. You'd need programs that take 10x the resources that our government affords to helping people in other cities.

I mean just extend the argument to the extreme... if all of the 200 million working Americans suddenly wanted to live in say Portland for some significant emotional bond... what would happen. Well there'd be homes for 10 million. The homes would skyrocket in price. There'd be jobs for say 20 million. So you'd have 200 million people offering their manhours for a tiny amount of jobs, and the wages would approach zero. You'd have affordability in the city crash, because rent and wages move in completely opposite directions at the speed of light. The solution then isn't for companies nor governments to pay/subsidise ever more than the market rate to a few million, while the rest are completely fucked. Nor is the solution to give a few people a birthright lottery ticket. The solution is for people to not choose to all live in Portland. SF is a bit like that, much less extreme. Affordability is dying, and the long-term solution probably is that some people improve their quality of life moving to places with 25% less wages and 50% lower expenses, and for the remainder to see their wages increase due to a drop in labour supply.

If you don't understand why these people can't leave, then you've never been poor.

The reality for a lot of these people is that they can't really afford to stay where they are, but they equally can not afford to leave.

No one is going to pay to relocate a Janitor from SF to Idaho. That Janitor can barely make there rent, let alone find the deposit for some place they can actually afford, and that's before you take into account moving costs, living while you find new work, etc.

The truth is, moving is expensive, very expensive, and if you live somewhere with a high cost of living, it's hard to drum up that kind of money.

My local church is setting up a ton of people from Tijuana who work menial jobs and came here with no money. They help anyone who asks with deposits, transportation, job hunting.

The truth is, moving can be cheap, very cheap, and if you live somewhere with a low price of labor, it's profitable to drum up that kind of support.

Can you show some statistics that proves that is the case? Because I grew up in a poor family surrounded by other poor families and everyone moved around a lot because they were poor and had to continually look for new housing and opportunities.
That's nonsense man. I'm literally referring to a woman in the article who sleeps in a parkingarea because she can't pay rent, but she does work, owns a phone, a car, earns more cash than is necessary to pay for her non-rent living expenses.

You're telling me she can't drive, or take a bus?

Because what, she has to move all her belongings from the parking lot she currently lives in?

Come on. Look, my parents were on welfare since I was 3, never had any financial support, I've hustled plenty of times moving places, never having owned a single car. Not a single piece of furniture in my home is new, everything is second hand and half of it I found on the street.

Look I'm not saying it's as easy as opening an email account. Life is hard. But we're talking about a person who is homeless. She's way more capable than you may think, and I'm telling you, the solution to her problem is NOT staying in SF. You know that and I know that.

But even if people can't move without help from third parties, the solution to this problem still isn't letting people who make little money to stay in the most expensive place on earth that they can't afford, it's just not going to work out. It's governments facilitating them to move. I'd completely support that.

As soon as some people leave, who's quality of life will improve, companies will be forced to pay a living wage for those who stay, who's quality of life will improve, too. Would you stay?

> you can keep on living there when you're not needed and there's tons of people waiting in line for your spot who're willing to do it for less

That "need" is supplied by Facebook, et al, who have this race to provided the most "perks" to their employees.

And at a certain point, you're going to find there are less and less people willing to "do it for less" due to simple economies of scale, cost and time.

And (hopefully) the bubble will burst.

> And at a certain point, you're going to find there are less and less people willing to "do it for less" due to simple economies of scale, cost and time.

Unfortunately, that point is well below minimum wage. You will always have a line of people willing to "do it for less" until you make it illegal to pay less.

>And this is coming from a leftist who left his own home town because it got overrun by rich kids with daddy's money and expats. I didn't like it either. But I also saw that I was not entitled to hand outs in order for me to live in the most prime location in the country, because everyone wants that and that just does not work, as much as we want it.

You're not a leftist. You're as bourgeois as they freaking come, dude.

But hey, surely with the shiny new open borders y'all left-neoliberals will put in, middle-class Americans can move to Mexico, where there will be tons of manual labor jobs with no safety standards, just like everyone remembers!

Moving requires a massive amount of privilege in the first place: - Money to fund the logistics of moving (van, first month's rent, etc) - Money to cruise on until you get a job in a new location - Money to transfer all of your life-stuff to a new location (internet, cable, power and water, etc) - Building on the last point, a high enough credit score to be able to get power, water, cable, etc in a new place without putting down a deposit - Ability to take time off work to interview, IF you're lucky enough to be in a position where you can job hunt while still being employed full-time - Reliable daycare where you are moving TO- daycare is super expensive and often times daycare has waiting lists so you can't just plop your kid down somewhere else. - No ties to the area you're leaving- so no elderly parents to take care of, no family network to leave behind, etc

And on and on and on. Saying "Just Leave" is like saying "Just pull yourself up by your bootstraps!". If you're already working 60 hours a week and barely scraping by, how in the hell are you going to find the time and the money to uproot everything and move?

I moved to San Francisco with no money and 50,000 in college debt with a degree that wasn't worth much at the start of the great recession. No one wanted to hire me. Yet I pulled through.

Having a bad attitude is the worst advice.

Easily said when you're young, unbound and without family.
Ok, eliminate anyone who meets that criteria and the criticism remains valid.
I met a lyft driver yesterday: a man from Afghanistan who quit his day job is starting a business (a smoke shop in Santa Rosa). He has a family and he said

"I have had many businesses in my life, I fail and I try again, I fail and I try again".

He lost his home in the war and is literally starting at zero. It is really about a positive attitude vs a shit attitude.

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> But it does strike her as ironic that the most highly paid workers at Facebook are also the ones who get all the free amenities.

That's not irony. That's economics 101.