I don't really think it's that debatable because the issue of minimum wage is a smokescreen. It hides the fact that the minimum wage simply isn't livable for a large amount of the population.
If you raise the minimum wage and it results in unemployment, then that's a clear indication that the only reason the jobs existed was to exploit workers that couldn't meaningfully survive off that wage. Which means we need some sort of other societal solution to solve the problem of jobs being rendered redundant.
Ultimate the intent of working for a living is that you work _for_ a living. If that doesn't work out, then the system is broken.
If you raise the minimum wage and it results in unemployment, then that's a clear indication that the only reason the jobs existed was to exploit workers that couldn't meaningfully survive off that wage. Which means we need some sort of other societal solution to solve the problem of jobs being rendered redundant.
Ultimate the intent of working for a living is that you work _for_ a living. If that doesn't work out, then the system is broken.