Hestor Stevens
The Public Record
Sometimes being in Congress is like being on a boat. There are two sides of the aisle.
So the cost of doing nothing is likely to far outweigh the cost of any action that the government takes to avert this crisis.
I couldn't think of a more pertinent topic for our new Congress in this historic moment, 100 years from when women got the right to vote.
the question around the future of work must be undergirded within our present reality, that the question of our economic orientation is, how do we choose to value human work and what are we handing over to automation versus what are we giving to people.
So when we thought about how to approach the minimum wage and how to target things, we viewed it as an opportunity to raise folks up, to put money into people's pockets...
the question of our economic orientation is, how do we choose to value human work and what are we handing over to automation versus what are we giving to people.





