The Mystery Machine
Sunrise at my house. :+)
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2001
- Messages
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If you have to work you are "working class".
Working Class to me is an employee who is involved in a job that requires manual labor.
Note: Although they may also be involved in the labor, I do not consider business owners who have employees working under them to be working class.
I dont really know about how to 'classify'.. but if I had to...I'd say people who make over 250k arent' working class...again, thats MY opinion... Of course they are working...but since I'm no where near that bracket it just seems they are 'rich' or at least 'well-off' and probably dont' HAVE to work at the dollar amount or are able to have one spouse stay home on that income...
Working Class to me is an employee who is involved in a job that requires manual labor.
Note: Although they may also be involved in the labor, I do not consider business owners who have employees working under them to be working class.
But people making over $250K that own a business don't always see the $250,000... They pay a mortgage or rent for their business.. they pay their workers... plus other fees too. Also depends on where you live I think.
I know it's wikipedia, but it's a model of the classes:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Class_Thompson_Hickey_copy.png
As a child I always referred to my family as middle class until I actually looked into and realized we were a working class family.

But people making over $250K that own a business don't always see the $250,000... They pay a mortgage or rent for their business.. they pay their workers... plus other fees too. Also depends on where you live I think.
I guess I consider anyone who is required to work to keep themselves clothed and fed is part of the working class. You may be doing better than others in the class, but if you're not independently wealthy, you're the working class.
I disagree. If the owner isn't sitting back like a King watching his subjects work and wait on him and is running the business, he's working class.
I've always considered the terms "working class" and "blue collar" to be fairly interchangeable. I consider both to be people who are probably making lower incomes, tend to have fewer benefits, and tend to work in more physically-intensive jobs. As a general rule, I would say they are people who work hard to pay their own bills but probably don't have much "extra" money.
Some jobs I would consider "working class" or "blue collar" include: janitor, health-care aide, teacher, miner, line worker in a factory....
only problem with that is some of those jobs have great benefits and the best job security.
Exactly. It's not meant as a commentary on how hard someone works. I think that it's meant to describe those who might have a little bit harder time getting by than other workers.However, I think that "working class" (as the term is used politically and socioeconomically) is intended to mean low-level blue collar and white collar workers. Admittedly, I am neither of these things.
With all the talk about "Joe the plumber" and the increased tax proposed (by Obama) on those that make over $250K, the term "working class" is put out there and some people believe that anyone making over $250K is not "working class".
So how do you define "working class"? What type of job is that? What type of job isn't "working class"? Is it possible for someone to make over $250K and still be considered "working class"?
Personally, I loath putting people in classes like this but it's out there so I figured why not talk about it.
Working Class to me is an employee who is involved in a job that requires manual labor.
Note: Although they may also be involved in the labor, I do not consider business owners who have employees working under them to be working class.