• socsa
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    5812 days ago

    Where in the ever loving fuck is corn $7/lb? A 7/11 in Alaska supplied exclusively by dog sled?

    I get this sentiment here but the way these posts are filled with straight up lies makes it feel like agitprop.

    • @Freefall
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      2412 days ago

      Also how much are Chinese getting paid comparatively. I’d rather see what % of each sides income goes to various things. If $1 is 50% of your income and $7 is 5% of the US side’s… Like I can move to a nice place in Mexico and live like Elon or Bezos does here…doesn’t mean Mexico has its shit together and a higher quality of life.

      • @[email protected]
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        311 days ago

        You us federal minimum wage is less then 8 dollars, america is a third world country with the most extreme wealth inequality on earth. You are delusional if you think otherwise.

        • ProdigalFrog
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          17 days ago

          Beijing has the highest hourly minimum wage in China of 26.4 RMB, which is equal to $3.7 USD per hour.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 days ago

      As a Brit its hard to tell sometimes when posts are just Americans complaining or if they really are being screwed over. We don’t really grow corn like America does, for bulk cheap veg I guess we have potatoes. Spent £0.68/KG on them when I walked to Aldi the other day. Our minimum wage is £11.44/hour and rising to £12.21 in April.

      • @Whats_your_reasoning
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        12 days ago

        The federal minimum wage in the United States is $7.25 per hour. That’s equivalent to about £5.95 . For reference.

        Most states have their own minimum wage, which complicates things. My home state, for example, just increased its minimum wage to $15.49 . That’s about £12.72, so close to par with what yours will soon be.

        • @[email protected]
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          812 days ago

          Don’t forget that employers can pay disabled employees less than that $7.25 that was established in 2009.

      • @[email protected]
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        312 days ago

        When corn is in season, fresh corn cobs sell for about 5 for $1. I’d guess each cob is about 1 pound, so we’re talking $0.20/pound, or $0.44 per kg.

        Obviously the corn cob itself isn’t edible, so you’re not getting a pound of food from each, but there is also bulk processed frozen corn year round that is still usually less than $1/lb.

      • @nepenthes
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        312 days ago

        1kg is 2.2lbs, so that still doesn’t make sense.

    • Queen HawlSera
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      512 days ago

      It does seem like a psy-op, especially since people are denying that Social Credit exists.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 days ago

        Social credit doesn’t exist.

        It was a proposal that was piloted in 4 cities, and then scraped.

        One thing that does exist is that if you are taken to court for certain antisocial behaviors (including not paying debts) is that you can be sentenced to certain hardships, i.e. banned from domestic flights or high speed trains (commuters take 10 times as long, if not more, on long distance travels), your application for a passport can be denied, you can be barred from home ownership etc. etc. for a number of years.

        Those hardships were proposed as outcomes of bad social credit scores, vs. preferential treatment for enrolling kids in good schools, better interest rates on loans and deposited, eligibility to pre-book domestic trains on high intensity days (on Chinese New Year, trains are frequently booked out).

        The benefits have been completely discarded, and the hardships were taken over into the penal code.

        Source: Used to live in China during the pilot phase (foreigners were exempted though), I speak Chinese, my wife is Chinese, and I still visit frequently.

      • @SmilingSolaris
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        111 days ago

        Or the country in which you live with significantly more control over what you see has been running a much longer much more successful psy op to get you to believe wild things in the first place. Like social credit.