While most people can cut out some expenses, they should not have to in order to be able to afford a decent lifestyle with productivity at the highest point in history.
I agree, but we live under the system that we live under.
Me and my friends are broke. We all live in similar places with similar rents, but the differences are that they make a moderate bit more than I do, and that I spend around $700/month on healthcare because fuck this system.
I’m very, very, very slowly saving money. They are all food insecure. One spends hundreds on amazon clothes every pay day, then can’t afford groceries for at least a few days before their next check. Another only eats takeout for every meal, and inevitably runs out the day before they get paid. The last one spends it all going to the club once a week.
Otherwise our lifestyles are very similar, but each has convinced themselves their habit isn’t very expensive and they wouldn’t save much if they stopped, and yet they should have more money than me and just…don’t.
I disagree, I think an entirely planned economy is impractical, and if people with no financial education have to exist in a market economy, they’re going to do things like this.
To me, the solution here is to fix our education system, make home economics mandatory for all pupils, AND pursue systemic reform to halt the war on the middle class.
I’ll be honest, unless they literally had so much money they didn’t know what to do with it all, I think they’d engage in the same patterns. And no matter how fair we make our system, normal people will never live like Saudi princes.
I didn’t mention a planned economy, just not a consumerist one. Still, why would a planned economy not be practical?
The issue with just making home econ mandatory is that you see it as an educational problem. The thing is, even if you taught your friends everything, would they suddenly be “enlightened?” Maybe one or two, but not everyone, and that’s due to rampant consumerism brought on by large Capitalists.
Side note: “middle class” doesn’t exist, that’s just the upper end of working class or the lower end of Petite Bourgousie or perhaps the Labor Aristocracy. Class isn’t determined by income, but by relation to production, because the common thread of class is class interest.
I’m not advocating for obscene wealth for everyone, but a restructuring along worker-centric lines, rather than owner-centric like it currently is.
You can take that opinion and put it right back in your ass. We’re done blaming the employees for not getting paid enough to keep up with inflation their bosses created.
Yeah, it says in the article you venerate consumerism
With a percentage that high I can imagine there is a good chunk of people who don’t really need to live pay to pay.
When I was young I spent every dollar on partying and no matter how much I made I found a way to spend it.
and when I finally decided to save I went all in on cutting expenses, the vast vast majority of people never interrogate their expenses.
Source: the Association for Rectally Sourced Estimates
While most people can cut out some expenses, they should not have to in order to be able to afford a decent lifestyle with productivity at the highest point in history.
I agree, but we live under the system that we live under.
Me and my friends are broke. We all live in similar places with similar rents, but the differences are that they make a moderate bit more than I do, and that I spend around $700/month on healthcare because fuck this system.
I’m very, very, very slowly saving money. They are all food insecure. One spends hundreds on amazon clothes every pay day, then can’t afford groceries for at least a few days before their next check. Another only eats takeout for every meal, and inevitably runs out the day before they get paid. The last one spends it all going to the club once a week.
Otherwise our lifestyles are very similar, but each has convinced themselves their habit isn’t very expensive and they wouldn’t save much if they stopped, and yet they should have more money than me and just…don’t.
Those are real problems, yes, but ones that can be alleviated at a systemic level. A consumerist system itself is also to blame.
Within the current system, you’re correct, but blaming personal choices over the faulty system, which does far greater damage, is misplaced.
I disagree, I think an entirely planned economy is impractical, and if people with no financial education have to exist in a market economy, they’re going to do things like this.
To me, the solution here is to fix our education system, make home economics mandatory for all pupils, AND pursue systemic reform to halt the war on the middle class.
I’ll be honest, unless they literally had so much money they didn’t know what to do with it all, I think they’d engage in the same patterns. And no matter how fair we make our system, normal people will never live like Saudi princes.
I didn’t mention a planned economy, just not a consumerist one. Still, why would a planned economy not be practical?
The issue with just making home econ mandatory is that you see it as an educational problem. The thing is, even if you taught your friends everything, would they suddenly be “enlightened?” Maybe one or two, but not everyone, and that’s due to rampant consumerism brought on by large Capitalists.
Side note: “middle class” doesn’t exist, that’s just the upper end of working class or the lower end of Petite Bourgousie or perhaps the Labor Aristocracy. Class isn’t determined by income, but by relation to production, because the common thread of class is class interest.
I’m not advocating for obscene wealth for everyone, but a restructuring along worker-centric lines, rather than owner-centric like it currently is.
You can take that opinion and put it right back in your ass. We’re done blaming the employees for not getting paid enough to keep up with inflation their bosses created.