Hopefully there is going to be wake up call in society. Surely a large scale demonstration like this would convince people that your "free market capitalistic assigned worth, i.e. your salary" is not a sufficient measure of your value in society and external adjustment (eg: government regulation or welfare or ...) is actually quite reasonable.
That is not an option for those living paycheck to paycheck, or not in the prime of their life.
Human beings are not a resource, and managers need to understand that there is a social cost they pay and thus need to comply with a social contract.
The switching cost is near infinite and not reflected in the pay.
We read Atlas Shrugged and see ourselves. Let us run the world and everybody will do great. We don't read The Jungle or Nickel and Dimed, and if we do we don't see ourselves. We enjoy the benefits of the labor movement as natural rights -- or even dismiss things like weekends and sick leave as unnecessary.
That's not everybody on HN; in fact HN seems to be better than many. Slashdotters, last I saw, seemed quite convinced Rand had written scripture.
Is our world now more like 1984 or Brave New World?
https://www.intelligencesquared.com/events/brave-new-world-v...
Edited: I've just re-watched that Intelligence Squared debate and, my God, it is bang on and more relevant now than ever!
Rand gave us a picture of a just world where everybody earned what they got, and where misfortune was your own fault. The Invisible Hand self-corrects. It's easy to support that when you come in the top 1% of the world and therefore must have earned it, and conversely everybody else didn't.
At the very least, if one is sending a gig shopper to Whole Foods... tip like crazy. (Or don't break the strike at all.)