Uggggh I really hate that argument against $15/hour. It's so subjective (this one time I had terrible customer service so they don't deserve it). In addition, how do we set value on work? Why do you deserve, at the time of this comment, $1.29 for sitting in front of your computer? Based on physical labor, you didn't do much. Am I paying you based on the time you spent? On the quality? On the thoughts and whether I agree with them?
If the purpose of working is to be able to afford to live in our current society, then $15/hour isn't enough. No one can afford a roof over their heads and food to feed their family on that. Especially in some cities, where cost of living is utterly outrageous. They certainly can't on what minimum wage currently is.
Our grandparents could afford to feed their families with the jobs they got on a high school diploma, buy a car, buy a house. The $15/hour argument is a distraction by the government to keep you from looking into how much of your money the 1% is keeping, and how bad inflation has gotten. They are reaping MASS profits- completely eradicating the middle class. They want us to keep fighting over how much the little guy is getting paid so that they can keep collecting their cash.
If it was one bad experience one time I might be more apt to agree with you. But this is the new normal. Good service is the exception, not the rule. It should be the reverse.
I had started a much longer comment than this going into loads of detail, but really, I don't care how much fast food service people make, I care about being responsible for the work you are being paid to do. When you take a job, the amount you will be paid, and the service you are meant to offer are laid out as part of the process. If people don't agree with it, they don't have to take that job. Provide good service consistently, and better opportunities will open up to you. Provide crappy service consistently and you'll be left with nowhere to go.