(January 14, 2016 at 12:12 pm)Rhythm Wrote: @Drich
How about I just ignore all of the things you got wrong with regards to labor laws and ag and answer those questions relevant to my model? I don't use day laborers because migrant laborers are more experienced. I also do not wish to pay a fee on their wages (day labor companies aren't charities)...and my labor pool can't work at a day labor facility, legally, without a SS number, nor would any who could work through companies on a visa be given those benefits only guaranteed to citizens. More than any of that, I'm committed to -not- being an example of a bad model, and I'm not interested in predatory hiring and wage practices, nor do I need them as a crutch to be solvent. Why..because I don't condone slavery -or- explotation.
I've already commented on the ignorance of implicating a captive consumer for the most questionable models that a supplier might engage in. I don't know what I can add to that, and obviously it doesn't matter what I have to say about it or what any fact of any matter is, to you. You -need- to make yourself comfortable with your comments and I don't see you letting some minor detail like a fact or coherent thought getting in the way.
One farm or even 1000 farms like yours does not feed an entire nation of people in such away as the food can be affordable to purchase by it's citizens.
again you May be the exception paying more than min wage not the rule.
http://nfwm.org/education-center/farm-wo...abor-laws/
If you don't know that the things I said were true about migrant workers then maybe your plowing fields on an imaginary farm.
*Amendment: I said child laborers can be as young as 10, I don't know what I was thinking. according to that website the age is 12 in somecases/some crops.