• @[email protected]
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    191 year ago

    Couldn’t this just be an indirect way of saying people with more money live longer? Retiring at 55 means you’re pretty well off, retiring at 67 likely means you couldn’t afford to retire early. Less money means lower ability to afford healthy food and medical care.

      • BeautifulMind ♾️
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        41 year ago

        this nonsense that healthy food is “expensive”

        This can depend a lot on where you are. If it’s readily available to you, it means you live in a well-served community. Not all communities are well-served in this way- food deserts are a thing, you know

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Maybe it’s just my area (very high COL), but the produce section is actually really expensive. $1-3 is an insultingly wrong amount. It’s cheaper to get the absurdly priced pre-made salads from my local supermarket than it would be to buy the ingredients individually. Somehow Trader Joe’s actually has affordable pre-made salads that are way cheaper than individual ingredients.

        Healthy food is expensive as fuck, in both money and time. Neither of which the working class has anymore.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            A top 10 cost of living city in the US. And trust me, I know very well that it doesn’t make sense but neither do any grocery prices right now. My wife and I were baffled not too long ago when it cost literally $50 for pretty basic salad ingredients for a Greek salad. Granted we were making enough for like 8 servings, but I don’t even think that included any ingredients for the dressing since we had all of that at home. I know you won’t believe me but I’m not kidding.

            We just buy the pre-made ones from Trader Joe’s for like $3-4 (for two servings) now.

          • @TheActualDevil
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            11 year ago

            Have you tried buying just enough lettuce for a single salad? or carrots and maybe some fruit? You don’t get fresh foods single serve. but the grocery store isn’t making a single salad, they’re making 20, and they’re not paying the same price for those ingredients they’re selling them to you for. Those ingredients cost them a fraction of the listed price. Also, I’m a single person household and I eat a breakfast and a mid-day meal. If I want a salad for that meal, I can get the ingredients fresh. In there smallest amount that’s like, 6-7 salads that only really stay good for like, 3 days, so I don’t buy salad ingredients. That’s a potential lost sale, but if they have pre-made salads I’ll buy some because it won’t wilt before I eat it, so they have another sale from me! I promise, the math works out easily.

              • @TheActualDevil
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                11 year ago

                Where do you live that you can pluck off a couple leaves of romaine and leave the rest? It’s not a butcher where they cut off what you need. You buy a whole head of lettuce. The cost is by weight, but there tends to be a minimum from the size of the food. Do you know how much you get from shredding a single carrot?

                  • @TheActualDevil
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                    11 year ago

                    What are you a rabbit eating a head of romaine in a day? Throw in some veggies and nuts, it doesn’t take a big salad to be filling for me. And I like variety in my meals, not just salad for 3 days. And have you seen the size of a full head of romaine? Not that “hearts of” romaine shit where they pull off the real leafy outsides and definitely costs more. A whole head is huge.

                    Listen my guy, it’s okay to just be like “I guess I was wrong. They brought some good points to explain why raw fresh ingredients do cost more than a premade salad, plus he definitely has even more boring ones that he didn’t bring up because it’s unnecessary. I don’t need to latch onto the eating habits he mentioned to turn the conversation away from my incorrect assumption.”

                    No one is making this shit up. You’ve had 3 people tell you how they personally have bought both options and found that buying pre-made is cheaper. Your incredulousness doesn’t change that. I’ve worked in produce departments in years past and I understand both the ordering process/prices and the how the labor is actually spent in making those salads. Your inability to comprehend is a you problem.