I don't think I was being political, and if you cannot explain a labor shortage without being political then I doubt you have a good argument. Here is mine:
"Well documented labor shortage" - yes companies want to pay too little and offer no benefits to employees because it will cut into profits and they never had to do that before. During Covid we celebrated teachers and front line workers as heroes for 20 minutes then crapped on them as soon as we could. If you offer $11 per hour as a teacher's assistant and Target offers $15 an hour as a cashier, then we have a shortage of teacher's assistants. And that $15 an hour is sadly comparable to $30K starting licensed teacher salaries in many states, teaching jobs which require a 4 year degree. So we have people leaving teaching in droves. Same with bus drivers. Same with other industries. Companies need to pay more, and those unwilling or unable to pay then cry about a labor shortage. The public sector (like jobs in education) are harder hit because they require lawmakers to approve raises which takes time and public appeal, where a company can quickly react if they deem it necessary to stay in business.
The same thing happened with disney cast members who were fired when covid hit. Many of those CM's probably thought disney would have their back. Then they thought the government would have their back with unemployment benefits. When all of that ended, they ended up getting jobs elsewhere. Would they come back for better pay and better benefits? Yes. People want to make more money, they want to make enough to not worry about missing one shift and going broke. They want to be able to go to an ER and not have to file for bankruptcy. So they look for jobs with benefits and better pay. Until disney provides that, you can say it's a labor shortage but I call it a pay shortage. Unlike some small businesses which have the business model where you need to take advantage of very cheap labor on tiny profit margins, Disney is still turning 1.5 Billion in profits in the first quarter and their cruiseline isn't running at full steam (pun intended). You cannot honestly say that Disney cannot afford to offer better pay or benefits, you can only say that they choose not to. That's not a labor shortage, that's not outside of their control.
I gave specific examples of how disney could reinvest in their employees with their profits inside of that one division. Doing that would offset taxes and increase customer satisfaction, which would end up making them even more money in the long run. In their quarterly statement they made absolutely no references to labor shortages. Why is that? Please come back to me with something more than "believe me, your arguments are meaningless but I cannot say why!"