Kingston should make up his mind

Last month, Rep. Jack Kingston (R-Ga.) bemoaned the notion of lawmakers working more hours on the Hill. Families, he said, are more important. Kingston told the WaPo, in response to a Dem proposal to extend the congressional work week to five days, “Keeping us up here eats away at families. Marriages suffer. The Democrats could care less about families — that’s what this says.”

With this in mind, Kingston has some interesting ideas about how low-income families can get out of poverty.

Last night, Kingston shared some advice with Americans living in poverty: work longer hours. During House debate over the minimum wage, Kingston said raising the minimum wage would do nothing for poor Americans. Instead, if people marry and work longer hours, “they would be out of poverty,” he said. “It’s an economic fact.”

First, if people work longer hours, won’t that “eat away at families”?

Second, as Nico helpfully points out, “The annual salary for workers earning the national minimum wage still leaves a family of three about $6,000 short of the poverty threshold.” In most instances, overtime pay isn’t much of an option. In other words, working longer hours won’t solve the problem.

If Kingston and his like-minded allies believe the minimum wage should stay at $5.15, let them explain why. Coming up with silly excuses to reject an increase only leaves Kingston looking foolish. Again.

What a great idea! So what we’ll do is just line up the boys (the Po’ Boys?) on one side and the girls on the other, it doesn’t matter if they know each other, and we’ll have a preacher ready and they can just go get married. Problem solved!

Brilliant!! Positively brilliant!

  • What happened to the long-lost rhetoric of an “ownership society?” If they think that is the way to encourage economic responsibility, shouldn’t they want working people to actually be able to afford consumer durables?

  • Kingston is a man with his finger on the pulse of the poor — pushing as hard as he can to cut off the flow.

  • This is just sad and pathetic beyond belief. He probably fancies himself to be a leader and statesman for his bold and visionary pronouncements.

    Hopeless fool.

  • We, the voters let these idiots into power. It is time to throw them all out, and start with newer people who have some grasp on reality.

  • Someone here once said “I could never be rich enough or mean enough to be a Republican.”

    I don’t know how rich Kingston is, but he sure is mean.

  • Too bad it’d only mean one extra job if some poor person could snatch Kingston’s day job away from him.

  • Paging Mr. Dickens…Mr. Charles Dickens…one of your characters has escaped from its book, and is causing havoc in Washington. Would you kindly collect him, please?

  • First, if people work longer hours, won’t that “eat away at families”?
    Silly CB. Poor people’s families don’t count.

  • Steve @ 9 owes me a new monitor. (Been reading Jasper Fforde have we?)

    How can Jackoff make up something he doesn’t have? I love the way he tries to make himself look pro-family by suggesting marriage will help pull you out of poverty. Absolut Fuckhead.

  • “…. And further,” Rep. Kingston remarked, “they can start working those longer hours by scrubbing my powder room toilet, then wax the floors, weed my backyard…”

    Nothing like the wisdom of someone who can say “I got mine.”

    If the Koufax Awards are taking nominations for humorous comments on a blog, beep52 #3 and Steve #9 should get a nod.

  • I hope getting trounced in the next election “eats away at” some of his meanness.

    Douchebag.

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