@TheTarDog@fuckyouiquit 60% of hourly employees; don't forget all the salary pugs. Even so, shareholders would never let the margins get that close; they'd simply raise them to maintain their $20B profit level... which completely negates the whole exercise.
@chopstix694@fuckyouiquit Walmart - 2025 net profits - $19.4B
Walmart 2025 Employee Count - 2.1M (2.1Mx2080)x5 = $21.8B
A net loss of $2.4B just from payroll
@TheTarDog@fuckyouiquit Nah, I hate Walmart and do not shop there, but I read it somewhere, did the loose math, and it supports my very general statement.
Walmart - 2025 net profits - $19.4B
Walmart 2025 Employee Count - 2.1M (2.1Mx2080)x5 = $21.8B
A net loss of $2.4B just from payroll
@piratelincoln@fuckyouiquit Walmart - 2025 net profits - $19.4B
Walmart 2025 Employee Count - 2.1M
(2.1Mx2080)x5 = $21.8B
A net loss of $2.4B just from payroll
Back of the envelope sure, but it supports my statement.
@luxemiaa $22/hr. is 35.5% of the household income; so the sum of the contribution shouldn't exceed 35.5%. Roommates are 50/50 and marriage is combined income; situationships fall in between.
@CAgovernor Two questions to answer if you want to be taken seriously as the DNC nomination:
1. Where'd the $24B go for the homeless?
2. Where'd the $125B+ go for the train?