Did you know that some banks require a minimum balance and charge their clients a fee if they drop below it? Sounds absurd, I know. But that's just the beginning of the journey we're taking.
Recently, Reddit user Paratrooperkid made a post on r/AntiWork, asking others to list all the examples why being poor is actually expensive. And they definitely picked the right place for it.
r/AntiWork is a subreddit with 1.3 million members who, according to the community itself, "want to end work, are curious about ending work, want to get the most out of a work-free life, want more information on anti-work ideas, and want personal help with their own jobs/work-related struggles." In other words, these folks have plenty of shared experiences regarding unemployment.
As more and more people shared their answers, the post went viral and now has 60K upvotes and 16K comments. Here are some of the (indirect) ways the system taxes the most vulnerable ones.
Image credits: Paratrooperkid
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Rent vs mortgage. The bank says you're too poor for an $800 mortgage payment, so you have to pay $1500 on rent instead.
Plus a minimum of like 10K up front. Because everyone can save that when they have to pay $1500 in rent a month.
Well. Here's a good example of something that happens all the time. Daily. Single mom hasn't gotten her child support check on time. A water* utility bill hits her account that was supposed to be covered by that support. Bank account goes -$135.00 due to the utility bill. The overdraft then incurs a $45 overdraft fee. So. The mom is now -$180 and the electric company sends a letter saying her power will be shut off if payment is not rendered by x date. She knows she won't be paid until two days after the cutoff. So. Waiting for support and her check she's now scouring her floorboard for change to put in her tank to get herself to work and the kids to school. The electric cutoff day comes and goes and the support check doesn't show up. Because she's being paid a sh*t wage she has nothing left over for this emergency. The electric gets cutoff and now her $135.00 bill has incurred a $50 service restart fee. Now her electric bill is $185.00 and she still owes $175 to the bank for the water* overdraft. She is still waiting on the support check. But now because she had to pay the extras for the overdraft, and the electric, she can't afford lunch for the kids this week. So she again scours change to get a loaf of bread and peanut butter. Her kids are still hungry so they get lunch from the school. If the school isn't a*sholes they'll have an account for her kids that will now also be negative. This actually happened in my friends household. It was the most heartbreaking bullsh*t thing you'd ever hear. And it happens every.single.minute.
The hardest part of being poor for me, was the “cost” of time. My weekly grocery trip took almost four hours. Between the time spent looking over fliers and making a list of what I could afford, walking to the closest bus stop, transferring to another bus, an hour of shopping and tallying up my total to make sure I was within budget, waiting up to 20 minutes for a bus home, including another transfer and the walk home with all my groceries from the bus stop. I would often go without groceries because I didn’t have time to get to the store and was stuck making Kraft Dinner Mac and Cheese without butter or milk, because that is what was in the pantry. Now that I live more comfortably, I drive to the store in 10 minutes, spend 30 minutes shopping and am home and finished within an hour.
ETA: it’s been more than 10 years since I ate Sad KD and today I’m lucky to have a full cupboard, fridge and freezer. I am so sorry for everybody who can recognize themselves in this post. I never realized this was such a universal experience.
Yes. When I was a teen I lived by myself in a little hovel on the outside of town. I didn't have a washing machine or car so I would have to walk to the laundromat to wash clothes. If I left them there, they were stolen so I had to sit and wait for them to be done and then walk home again. Instead of being able to throw a load of laundry in and go to work, it took three hours of my time. Then I had to do grocery shopping. Couldn't carry laundry and groceries and they weren't in the same direction anyway, so walk to the supermarket, shop takes time because you have to carefully inspect prices and then walk home again. I was unable to pick up extra working hours to get out of poverty because poverty demanded my time.
It’s cheaper to buy processed foods, leading to higher risk of cancer and other illnesses. Healthy foods are a privilege. I wish I could afford more fruit
This is outrageous. We've had posts here on BP about food/diet. Governments (USA?) should budge in and do something. I'm lucky that where I live veggies and fruit are cheap and good quality.
The cheap processed stuff is cheap, because it contains a lot of cheap ingredients such as sugar, made from plants like corn that are heavily subsidized by the government. It's an outrage because fresh, local produce should under normal circumstances be one of the cheapest food options anywhere.
Load More Replies...This! So much! After moving the the EU, I have lost a lot of weight and it's mostly because of better, healthier food. Even the local Aldi has fresh produce free of crap, meat free of steroids and even the processed foods have fewer additives.
that's why i can't stand it when governments complain about obesity and say people should eat healthier, you can feed a family of four for a day on less than £15 on cheap food but would need two or three times that amount to feed them the healthy food.
Some of you here have obviously no idea what poor means. Having little money is not the same. If you have yo work 3 jobs to make ends meet, you really don't have the time or the energy to cook meals, go extensive grocery shopping to find the cheapest options etc
One of the reasons I love living in Greece is that healthy options are cheap and processed options are expensive. The more unhealthy something is, the more expensive it gets.
If you don’t own a vehicle and public transportation sucks getting what you need when you need it is nearly impossible, being disabled on top of that makes getting anywhere ridiculous. I applied for free county transportation for the disabled, the paperwork I had to fill out was over an inch thick. There were no guarantees you would be picked up on time for an appointment. They requested you be prepared to wait outside (no matter the weather conditions) for an hour before your scheduled pickup time, but to expect to have to wait for an hour past pickup time!
This is so true. I know from experiencing it. In my area the 'free' transport vans aren't free at all. Only for some ( not all ) medical appointments. If you need to stop at a pharmacy to pick up your meds afterwards, they charge $5.00 and if you want to pick up any type of food, they also charge $5 and due to space they don't allow anything larger than what you can fit on your lap. First and last time I had to take one of these vans to a doc appt. they picked me up 2 hrs. ahead of agreed time, and still got me to my appt. an hour late. Due to other riders on the van that day, I didn't get home until 10 p.m. ( my doc appt. was at one that day ). I've never used the 'free' transport again.
Load More Replies...A lot of US obesity is due to this. A box of mac and cheese to feed your kids is $.50 and a frozen pizza for you and the spouse is $1.25. Its $4 for broccoli, the chicken costs $8, and $5 for apples with the same number of calories.
The price for meat is justified compared to mac and cheese or frozen pizza though. Veggies and fruit shouldn't be more expensive.
Load More Replies...I remember one of the fellows at the university did research on "food desserts." In some communities there are no grocery stores. Just corner/convenience stores that sell snacks, sodas, lottery tickets and cigarettes. Not one piece of produce within a 50 mile radius.
Potatoes and dry beans are cheap. And compared to fresh, frozen veg and fruit are pretty inexpensive.
But eat that for 3 weeks straight and you will never touch it again in your life.
Load More Replies...I agree. While not perfect, most of the 3rd world can farm & feed, non-meat is generally within the reach of everyone except what we call "breadline-poor". A 3 meal basic feeding for a day can cost as little as $3, and that's 85% starch, vegetables and fruit. That's 1800 - 2200 calories a day. Take a look at "poor south africans" and note that there is not a calorie problem or a general nutrition problem.. there's a "wealth problem"
Load More Replies...This is a myth unless you live in a food desert. Veggies and grains are the cheapest things you can possibly buy. Junk food and processed foods cost a lot more than healthy options. Sure meat, fish, and fruits can be expensive, but you don't need meat everyday anyway because it is bad for you and you can buy cheaper fruits or wait for them to go on sale. I can feed 4 adults dinner for $100 a week and every last inch of it is fresh and homemade. Last night I had a fish stew over rice. It was mostly onions, bell peppers, tomatoes and rice. Used tilapia which is one of the cheapest fish in my area but any white fish would do and I only needed two fillets. 4 adults fed for $10 and it was delicious.
Many places in the world are food deserts for many reasons. For starters, say you want to sell healty stuff, but it is cheaper and easier to buy junk food an sell it in your family shop, than grow healthy food yourself, store it properly and then try to sell it. Also many producers have to actually transport their products themselves, which adds to costs, not like procesed food corporations that also own their own truck fleet. Also junk food last forever, but a bunch of fresh veggies get rotten in a week... what do yo think people with limited money will buy? and don't get me started on climate change and agroquimics... so yeah. "Every one have access to healty food that is not expensive" my a**e
Load More Replies...We are brutally gifted in my country, in that meat is cheap, and non-meat raw foods cost nothing. Having said that, Fast food is STILL cheaper than that. When I mean Cheap, i mean compared to what it costs overseas, its still expensive if you are not earning an European-related salary. a person CAN make it on $100 worth of food a month...but that would be 2 meals a day only. Medium-to-small portions and about 10% raw protein
I am poor and I don't eat junk food. I even get food from food pantry and we cook. So don't tell me this.
More community gardens can help. Also helps to learn foraging too for some nice and healthy wild foods.
I had a plot at a local community garden. The city decided they wanted it to be a cash cow, went from $50 a year to $150 a year, forcing out those who need it most
Load More Replies...Good food isn't always expensive. Huge Canada a 2 kg bag of frozen vegetables it's only four dollars. And they have good nutrition because the frozen at the peak of ripeness
Generally speaking frozen fruits are cheaper, than fresh ones, so as an alternative, you can buy those. And their vitamin- and nutrition level are not drastically lower. Of course, mostly you have to process them at some level, making smoothies it's a great way. You decide, how much honey or sugar you add (if any), the same making milkshakes. Or just add them to your yogurt or porridge.
Veggies, such as beans, lentils, broccoli, cabbage, beetroot, sweet potato, peas, pumpkins, squash, carrots and etc are the great source of nutrients, proteins and fibre. Only one nutrient which you have to add is vitamin B12. Seasonal veggies do not cost that much, they are nutritious and healthy. There are so many amazing dishes you can make with them such as pasta, spinach curry, pea soup, dhal, vegetable roast, stews, pies, ginger soup, ramen, many type of salads, bean burritos and etc. Many word class athletes prefer vegetable source of proteins rather than animal protein because it leads to the shorter time of recoveries. Even potatoes have vitamin C (although the starch in them makes them a bit more fast carbohydrate), but there are a lot of information about it.
That's lovely dear. You clearly don't understand the problem *at all*. Many households in the US can only shop for groceries once a month. How are they going to fill their diet with fresh produce? The prices for fruit and veg don't change much with the seasons any more, it's not good for the bottom line. Calories from fresh produce are *much* more expensive than from processed foods.
Load More Replies...One of the biggest (and underestimated) roadblocks to better nutrition is children's preferences. They're inundated with media ads for junk food and that's what they want - to be the happy kids in the ad eating junk food. Parents have the choice of keeping the kids happy with junk food or putting up with tantrums if they stop buying junk food.
I have money for fruit and buy it I stroll.down the cereal ile and see boxes priced in the four dollar range.four dollars would buy eight oranges ,seven pounds of bananas,six pounds of spinach.
Not only is processed food cheaper, it also keeps longer. When you only get to make one good grocery trip a month, you can't afford to buy enough fresh meat, fruit, or veg, to last the whole 30 days. You might by a small amount. But mostly, you have to choose the stuff that doesn't wilt, rot, or otherwise go bad. You have to choose stuff that lasts in your pantry or freezer. Unfortunately, that's stuff like pop tarts, canned goods, dry pasta and beans, and frozen foods (if you have a way to get them home quickly enough). All the "bad" stuff. Sad, but true.
Fruit is extremely cheap in the UK and good cheap food & veg from ALDI & LIDL
the prices for fruit and veg and protein are a bit crazy compared to convienece food. Make me wonder what the heck is in that stuff that it can be offered so cheaply.
Potatoes, Tinned vegies, lettuce and tomatoes. Chicken, lamb and sausages. Flour and cereal. Milk tea and Milo. As long as I had most of those items, I could make a meal and stay sane.
Between food deserts in most poor neighborhoods and the grotesque expense for "healthy" foods, the cost of this shows up in health expenses.
This also has a lot to do with where you live. I'm vegan and I'm lucky to have access to tons of fruits, veggies, and vegetable based proteins. The cost of these things really isn't much different from processed foods. Also, buying in season is a great way to get low cost produce. It boggles my mind when people who also choose plant based diets don't understand that (affordable) access to these things is a privilege. Have you seen the price of groceries in Alaska???
Rice and beans with a little side of veggies is way healthier and cheaper than processed crap.
And it makes me sick to think how much produce is destroyed because of blemishes instead of donated to the poor
I'm on the fence on this one. Rice and beans are fairly cheap- flour, etc. I'm not saying this is completely wrong, but a lot of the fault lies in that young folks don't grow up learning how to make from scratch then end up trapped in the processed food issue. That one I blame the schools for getting rid of home ec. Can't even blame the parents, because by now, they too grew up without the benefit of home economics or parents working too much to have time to teach, or they just didn't notice the lack.
Boycott Kellogg! They fired all 1.400 workers on strike for a decent wage, those greedy corporate bastards!
Getting to and from work. Since you're poor, you cannot afford to live close to work and thus have a longer commute.
But you also cannot afford to own and run a reliable car, so you have a beater that breaks all the time and gets poor mileage.
When it breaks, you can't get paid because you aren't at work so you have a new bill PLUS halted income.
To compensate, you take out high interest loans to repair the car. But it breaks again later so you're always in debt for high interest loans on top of the car costs.
I see this a lot in the northeast.
Shoes.
You need good shoes to work in, but you can't afford good shoes so you buy ok shoes that break after 3 months.
After 4 pairs of ok shoes in a year, you've spent more than if you'd bought 1 pair of good shoes.
For more see genius Terry Pratchetts character cpt. Sam Vimes ´Boots' theory of socioeconomic unfairness.´
I can help you out. I worked with homeless folks in LA for a few years. The stories I could tell you.
One that was a recurring tale, all too common, were parking tickets. Rich people? Big deal. Pay it online, it’s an afterthought at its worst.
Now that same parking ticket issued to a homeless person living out of their car, trying to scrounge together money for a deposit on a place whilst working a sh*tty service sector job?
That’s devastating. It’s another 2-3 months of sleeping in the car. Or maybe it’s a few days worth of missed meals. Or maybe it’s skipping out on that expensive medication that your sh*tty insurance wont cover.
I could provide you endless examples of the way this country punishes the poor. People need a reality check.
Living in your car WHILE HAVING A BLOODY JOB is insane. The underlying system is completely broken.
I don’t own my home, I rent. My colleague owns. We make the same money and pay the same income taxes. The gov uses the taxes to upgrade the roads, and infrastructure in town. My colleague’s equity goes up, so does my landlord’s, because of our tax dollars spent. So he gets richer. My land lord gets richer.
Me? My rent goes up
this is something that pisses me off to no end. if you have a person or couple with decent jobs who show through their history that they are good renters but have no other assets or a huge savings, why the hell would a lending agency think they were not a good risk to have a mortgage. renting costs so much more than owning. also, not all apartments have utilities included and, if a person/couple is renting they they already are paying for those kind of things.
I’ve never had the money to spend on regular dental work so now I’m spending thousands more to fix everything that was neglected
I would like to make an edit and add that a ton of you in the comments have suggested dental tourism and dental schools. Both are great ideas!
You meticulously maintain a high mileage used car that is totaled in a car accident that is not your fault. Insurance company will only pay you $1,000 for your car.
This sucks even when someone isn't poor. It's such a pain to replace a car for what rip-off...er, I mean insurance company deems your car worth.
Many banks charge a monthly fee to have an account with a balance under a certain level (e.g. $1500). It's literally a poverty fee.
Seems that a US bank that would treat their customers like European banks do, would blow all the other US banks out of the water.
if you cant afford your own laundry machine or an apartment that comes with one it costs like $10 in quarters to do laundry. EVERY TIME.
And that's a luxury too. In my country I've never seen those quarters laundry places. Always thought it was an american movies thing. Also, noone has a washing machine in the basement of apartment buildings. Only in dorms.
I’m the opposite of poor and I see this every day. Because I have money to always pay my credit card bills fully on time I buy everything with them and wind up with a 2% discount/cash back on everything I buy. This adds up to thousands of $/year. There are tons of things that are discounted if you are rich. One of the sh*ttiest things about our economy
Yeah. Also, being able to buy the good, lasting stuff leads to not spending money on many things like good quality clothing, appliences and tools. Saves a HUGE ammount of money over time.
Attendance micromanagement at work.
Hear me out.
I am currently at a much higher paying position. It’s salaried. My boss has the mindset that she doesn’t care when things get done just so long as they get done. She’s flexible on when I clock in/out and doesn’t feel the need to track if I’m hitting exactly forty hours a week. (Again, salaried position).
Contrast to past jobs that paid less than half as much. Many of my coworkers took public transit (couldn’t own a car). I could have easily taken public transit, it was one bus and short walk from my house. However. I opted to drive because we would be disciplined for being more than two minutes “tardy” clocking in.
The bus is NOT that reliable, y’all.
So we have multiple workers showing up 10-20 minutes early to sit around with unpaid time so they don’t get docked for being tardy. And the policy was such that three tardies mean you get written up, then it escalates to action, then to termination. It’s real easy to lose your job because your bus route is not reliable. But most of the people taking the bus to work are in the low paying positions that micromanage if you’re two minutes late (even if it’s out of your control).
Bosses keep their thumbs on the low earners and it keeps them there.
Only being able to afford the small jar of mayo (or whatever), even though the larger jar is a better deal.
Overdraft fees that charge you money for having no money.
Late fees for not being able to afford your bills.
Having to go to the closest grocery store, even though it may not be the cheapest, because it's on the bus route or within walking distance.
Payday loans
Rent to own stores where you have to pay a ton of money for a couch, but pay weekly
And you spend so much time just trying to survive you have little time to improve yourself
When I first lived on my own (escaped a bad situation), I bought a splurge...$100 of groceries. I meal prepped, made dozens of bags of frozen prepared veggies etc. I was eating healthy and I felt like I actually just did good for myself. I thought it was a smart move.
I was literally set up for almost two months.
The power went out. My insurance couldn't cover it. I lost so much food. I just saved a few items that were frozen solid.
I cried until I threw up. I eventually had my dad drop off some leftovers but I never told him what happened, I was too embarrassed.
That’s so sad. You shouldn’t be embarrassed as I’m sure your dad didn’t mind helping you out.
Not being able to afford preventive medical care leads to huge medical bills later. I’ve seen it numerous times where people put off routine exams/procedures, and then come through the ER and end up with an amputation, or even death, because the illness had progressed so far before they sought treatment.
Every injury, every cough, every tooth pain is accompanied by panic because it is like having a hole in your pocket. You have no idea how much this is going to cost. But you know it is likely to ruin you.
40,000 per year before taxes
35,200 after taxes
Rent 1100 × 12 = 13200
Car note 400 × 12 = 4800
Car insurance 200 × 12 = 2400
Utilities, gas for the car, internet 400 x 12 = 4800
Food 400 × 12 = 4800
Total 30,000
These are nice round numbers and I live in one of the "lowest cost of living" states in the US....this also includes 0 entertainment expenses like Netflix, going out with friends, taking a vacation etc.
5200 bucks left over to save for the year easily gets decimated by just 1 or 2 car issues, maybe 1 or 2 doctor/dentist visits, God forbid you have 1 of each Car issue, doctor visit and dentist visit in the same year...
Imagine working 40+ hrs a week just to be able to work 40+ hrs a week and stay alive....nothing more.
For me, it was moreso the fact that everything was a choice. The mental strain of trying to figure out how to budget $100 when you realistically need $150...it's f*cking horrible.
It leads to bad decisions over time too. I smoked cigarettes because I was always so stressed and cigarettes are expensive. I knew I was wasting money and couldn't really afford it, but it was one of the only things that got me through shifts of hell at work
Cigarrettes... alcohol... now you know why poor people get into them
I overdrafted my account by $.27. The bank charged me $35. My credit score was bad so my interest was worse when getting a car. My credit sucked so I couldn't buy a house so I had to rent for almost double.
Just some of my past examples.
College loans: spend thirty years paying interest on a college degree because you don't have rich parents. Also if you don't have a college degree, you'll be excluded from nearly all jobs that pay decently.
Freedom of "choice"
Not me personally but my best friend recently got an unpaid internship at a hospital because he needs the experience as an upcoming graduate student in an MPH program.
The hospital required him to be fully vaccinated and to get a sh*t ton of shots. However, they won’t pay for it and if you don’t do it, you will lose your spot. Since he has no insurance, he ended up paying $280 out of pocket to go work for free just so he can build his resume. SMH !
"intern" is the new word for indentured servant, but being an indentured servant was better because room, board, and clothing was provided.
How abput depression and anxiety caused by financial pressures being 'treated' by a therapist and being charged $75 copay per visit. Then, if the anxiety is bad enough that you don't go, you get a $45 cancellation fee unless you cancel 2 days+ in advance. Self-fueling system.
US health care is a for profit system and only aimed at being beneficial for the ones working in the business. It doesn't matter if your treatment makes you better or makes you dead, you will pay the bills.
If you have a low credit score you have to pay a $300 deposit in order to get power turned on at your place. (In Las Vegas Nevada)
In Vegas there's only one power company NV Energy
We're in the New England states where it's gotten to 15 degrees Fahrenheit overnight. We've been without heat for three weeks now because it will cost us $800 to fill our K1 tank. We don't have the $350 for 100 gallons either. We're currently jacking up our electric bill, risking fire, and risking the safety of us and our cats by using the oven to heat the house. We're also risking our pipes bursting.
All because we can't come up with $350 upfront.
Higher interest rates any time you borrow. Lack of assets to borrow money against. Lower paying jobs are generally harder on a person’s body and lead to more doctor visits and medical bills. Driving a cheap old car means shelling out more money for repairs and fuel than a person driving a newer model.
My dad freaked out when he heard what my auto loan interest rate was. My credit score wasn't even that bad.
Friend broke his glasses today. Insurance wants a reeval of his eyes to get new ones, so now he's out a couple hundred for the script and can't work until they're replaced. Also can't drive until he can see.
What shíthole country is this in? An eye test costs under £20 on the high street.
Poor people can’t pay for childcare. The wealthy rely on underpaying people to take care of their kids. Meaning it’s easier to have two income households without the penalty of being a parent. Perpetuating the cycle of poverty
I hate saying this as I don't really like all these "look how bad America is" articles but it's obvious a lot (as in the majority) of these posts are from Americans. Guys, please, something is fundamentally wrong when you have to choose between medical care or rent and when a box of some salty, fatty, sugar laden conveyor belt food is cheaper to buy than vegetables.
Nothing any citizen can do about it. Corporate greed has politicians by the balls, they have no spine to change things. Unfortunately creating your own system when the system is broken usually means doing something illegal which just makes things worse. Voting for a politician interested in Making changes amounts to nothing. There is no political will to change things. Unfortunately this entire scenario creates a weak country with citizens who don’t trust their government…rightly so
Load More Replies...Thank f**k I live in Scotland, yeah a lot of these still apply but I have zero concerns about my utilities being cut off, medical bills, decent public transport, free education, free school meals in primary school....the list could go on. I'd rather eat my own toes than live in the society that's developed in a so called developed country
This is a depressing list of how a dystopian society looks like and how it is to live in one. But do keep voting for politicians who rather see you dead than earning a livable wage, telling you that you're a lazy POS if you refuse to work for less than a livable wage.
The rich get what they want in politics because they have the time to ask for it. Karen can go to the town hall meetings to make homelessness illegal because she's not on a bus between jobs trying to avoid homelessness. A doctor can give money to a lobbyist to sit in a senator's office just waiting for a meeting while his patient who gave them that money doesn't have the time to sit in that same senator's office.
Load More Replies...And you know what? Not a god-damn thing is going to change. This s**t has gone on in the USA since the late 70's (probably earlier) and our politicians have done little to nothing to help the average American. It's easy to blame Trump for the January 6th riot, but he didn't create it. The anger, frustration, and mistrust were already there, he just fanned the flames. And if our politicians don't wake up and smell what they've been shoveling us it's going to get worse, a lot worse. And if you think it can't happen here, did you ever think in your lifetime a riot would storm the Capitol Building?
A lot of these posts have been depressing to read. Create a socialist party. It's the only way out. The rest of the planet does it. https://www.fec.gov/help-candidates-and-committees/registering-political-party/
Load More Replies...i know there are people that will deny this but there is still an issue with a single woman buying a home. doesn't matter that you may have owned in the past when you were married. or, perhaps you are widowed and the loss of an income caused you to have to sell your former home. now, you are trying to buy a smaller place. the scrutiny you go through in insane.
Which country are you in Caro? You CAN do a lot. Push for global justice. Join and do charity work for an NGO which deals with global justice. Protest for America to accept rulings of the ICC, WHO, UN, and other international bodies.
Load More Replies...Unlike other Posts this is a very good one that shows how our society slowly turns more and more into... well let's say: paid slavery. I live in german where the lower classes could live relatively good but over the years I see more and more people begging, collecting returnable bottles for life and stuff, while on the other side rents are exploding and the life costs are going higher and higher. I fear that it doesn't take so long until we are at the same point the U.S. is today.
Germany was colonised by American in 1945 and remains mentally affected by their way of thinking, even though they "officially" pulled out in 1989.
Load More Replies...Oh, but it isn't over. With the wealth gap exploding over the past couple of years, there are corporations and super wealthy who are looking forward to the feudal society that is looming. Consider the number of people who have jumped on the authoritarian band wagon of he-who-shall-not-be-named. They are right in that the things are really bad but having a dictator who has absolutely no empathy and who only considers what he wants is not the way to go. I'm afraid we are too far down the rabbit hole for a good outcome.
This is been an ongoing an ever growing problem since the Reagan administration it got worse during the Gulf War with the first Bush and then the second Bush administration. The hope is that you make majority of the population so poor that they’re working so hard and they’re so exhausted that they really can’t put any extra effort time or money into trying to change things. It’s unfortunate it’s cruel and it’s completely unnecessary and ultimately the entire country will pay for it sooner or later and it’s not gonna be pretty. I sat on the board as a volunteer from my local clinic for over 10 years and I’m telling you it was the most amazing eye-opening experience I’ve ever had.
For me, childcare and travel to and from work cost more than I earned from that work. I became a stay-at-home mom because I couldn't afford to work.
Poverty is super expensive. I sometimes forget but throughout my whole childhood and my 20s I paid so much extra for crap because I lived under the poverty line. I finally reached financial stability and yea, I don't get nickel and dimed anymore. Want to buy a house without enough down, you pay over $100 more for mortgage insurance and you have higher interest rates. Good luck everyone, I know it sucks. The only comfort I had was the knowledge that I had been homeless before and dealt with it okay enough so I knew the worst that could happen is something I had already lived through before. It made me feel more confident about taking risks I was so far down the ladder that if I fell it would only be a minor step down from where I was.
Don't know if it's been said, but I'd like to add that there is an inability to relate. Ex: A friend wants to go out for drinks, but you can't afford it....ever. Friend says something like, "You can this once". No. I literally can't. Another Ex: my sister is a nurse, and when I had some sort of medical concern I'd ask her advice. She would say to go to the doctor. I never could. When I reassured her I could not afford to do so she said, "You just have to, what did you expect?". People who have never had to struggle in the same ways may sympathize over social media, but it's been my experience they just can not open their minds and understand the reality of some of these situations.
I am not saying that everywhere else is heaven, but oh my God how the USA is hell.
I read a lot of these things on B.P and elsewhere. I think everyone can agree America is in very serious trouble. I suspect other countries have similar problems we don't hear as much about but should. Here's the big question. When corruption and or rampant capitalism have infected almost every part of life how the hell does one even begin to address the problems and correct them??
The policies of liberals ALWAYS cost poor people more because it drives up the cost of everyday products! Since Biden took office almost everything costs more because of changes he's made!
Everyone raised their prices but never raised their payrates. Allowing that to happen is, in my opinion, a criminal offense.
Load More Replies...I hate saying this as I don't really like all these "look how bad America is" articles but it's obvious a lot (as in the majority) of these posts are from Americans. Guys, please, something is fundamentally wrong when you have to choose between medical care or rent and when a box of some salty, fatty, sugar laden conveyor belt food is cheaper to buy than vegetables.
Nothing any citizen can do about it. Corporate greed has politicians by the balls, they have no spine to change things. Unfortunately creating your own system when the system is broken usually means doing something illegal which just makes things worse. Voting for a politician interested in Making changes amounts to nothing. There is no political will to change things. Unfortunately this entire scenario creates a weak country with citizens who don’t trust their government…rightly so
Load More Replies...Thank f**k I live in Scotland, yeah a lot of these still apply but I have zero concerns about my utilities being cut off, medical bills, decent public transport, free education, free school meals in primary school....the list could go on. I'd rather eat my own toes than live in the society that's developed in a so called developed country
This is a depressing list of how a dystopian society looks like and how it is to live in one. But do keep voting for politicians who rather see you dead than earning a livable wage, telling you that you're a lazy POS if you refuse to work for less than a livable wage.
The rich get what they want in politics because they have the time to ask for it. Karen can go to the town hall meetings to make homelessness illegal because she's not on a bus between jobs trying to avoid homelessness. A doctor can give money to a lobbyist to sit in a senator's office just waiting for a meeting while his patient who gave them that money doesn't have the time to sit in that same senator's office.
Load More Replies...And you know what? Not a god-damn thing is going to change. This s**t has gone on in the USA since the late 70's (probably earlier) and our politicians have done little to nothing to help the average American. It's easy to blame Trump for the January 6th riot, but he didn't create it. The anger, frustration, and mistrust were already there, he just fanned the flames. And if our politicians don't wake up and smell what they've been shoveling us it's going to get worse, a lot worse. And if you think it can't happen here, did you ever think in your lifetime a riot would storm the Capitol Building?
A lot of these posts have been depressing to read. Create a socialist party. It's the only way out. The rest of the planet does it. https://www.fec.gov/help-candidates-and-committees/registering-political-party/
Load More Replies...i know there are people that will deny this but there is still an issue with a single woman buying a home. doesn't matter that you may have owned in the past when you were married. or, perhaps you are widowed and the loss of an income caused you to have to sell your former home. now, you are trying to buy a smaller place. the scrutiny you go through in insane.
Which country are you in Caro? You CAN do a lot. Push for global justice. Join and do charity work for an NGO which deals with global justice. Protest for America to accept rulings of the ICC, WHO, UN, and other international bodies.
Load More Replies...Unlike other Posts this is a very good one that shows how our society slowly turns more and more into... well let's say: paid slavery. I live in german where the lower classes could live relatively good but over the years I see more and more people begging, collecting returnable bottles for life and stuff, while on the other side rents are exploding and the life costs are going higher and higher. I fear that it doesn't take so long until we are at the same point the U.S. is today.
Germany was colonised by American in 1945 and remains mentally affected by their way of thinking, even though they "officially" pulled out in 1989.
Load More Replies...Oh, but it isn't over. With the wealth gap exploding over the past couple of years, there are corporations and super wealthy who are looking forward to the feudal society that is looming. Consider the number of people who have jumped on the authoritarian band wagon of he-who-shall-not-be-named. They are right in that the things are really bad but having a dictator who has absolutely no empathy and who only considers what he wants is not the way to go. I'm afraid we are too far down the rabbit hole for a good outcome.
This is been an ongoing an ever growing problem since the Reagan administration it got worse during the Gulf War with the first Bush and then the second Bush administration. The hope is that you make majority of the population so poor that they’re working so hard and they’re so exhausted that they really can’t put any extra effort time or money into trying to change things. It’s unfortunate it’s cruel and it’s completely unnecessary and ultimately the entire country will pay for it sooner or later and it’s not gonna be pretty. I sat on the board as a volunteer from my local clinic for over 10 years and I’m telling you it was the most amazing eye-opening experience I’ve ever had.
For me, childcare and travel to and from work cost more than I earned from that work. I became a stay-at-home mom because I couldn't afford to work.
Poverty is super expensive. I sometimes forget but throughout my whole childhood and my 20s I paid so much extra for crap because I lived under the poverty line. I finally reached financial stability and yea, I don't get nickel and dimed anymore. Want to buy a house without enough down, you pay over $100 more for mortgage insurance and you have higher interest rates. Good luck everyone, I know it sucks. The only comfort I had was the knowledge that I had been homeless before and dealt with it okay enough so I knew the worst that could happen is something I had already lived through before. It made me feel more confident about taking risks I was so far down the ladder that if I fell it would only be a minor step down from where I was.
Don't know if it's been said, but I'd like to add that there is an inability to relate. Ex: A friend wants to go out for drinks, but you can't afford it....ever. Friend says something like, "You can this once". No. I literally can't. Another Ex: my sister is a nurse, and when I had some sort of medical concern I'd ask her advice. She would say to go to the doctor. I never could. When I reassured her I could not afford to do so she said, "You just have to, what did you expect?". People who have never had to struggle in the same ways may sympathize over social media, but it's been my experience they just can not open their minds and understand the reality of some of these situations.
I am not saying that everywhere else is heaven, but oh my God how the USA is hell.
I read a lot of these things on B.P and elsewhere. I think everyone can agree America is in very serious trouble. I suspect other countries have similar problems we don't hear as much about but should. Here's the big question. When corruption and or rampant capitalism have infected almost every part of life how the hell does one even begin to address the problems and correct them??
The policies of liberals ALWAYS cost poor people more because it drives up the cost of everyday products! Since Biden took office almost everything costs more because of changes he's made!
Everyone raised their prices but never raised their payrates. Allowing that to happen is, in my opinion, a criminal offense.
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