• @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    I agree with the premise, but this rub me the wrong way:

    “$16 on lunch, $13 on breakfast and coffee.”

    It sounds like entitlement if you think someone should be paying for something you already do at home (eat), but choose to do it in the most expensive way possible.

    Make food and coffee at home and bring it to work. And if you’re already buying expensive shop meals to eat at home, why complain about spending that outrageous amount of money when you’re outside the home?

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      I feel this has to be pointed out to young people: it used to be possible to eat out every day, go to the movies, drink in a bar after work, see a live band on the weekend, and still buy a home and save for the future. This was possible in major cities around the country. This was taken from you.

      It is not outrageous for single people living in a city to buy food outside the house. I believe prices have clearly skyrocketed because fewer people know how to make their own food. In the 50s everyone had grown up during the depression, so if something was even a little expensive you made it yourself.

      P.S. Not only did many workplaces provide free or discounted cafeterias to eat in, they paid you during your lunch hour! That’s where the phrase " working 9:00 to 5:00" comes from.

      • @paultimate14
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        141 year ago

        This is why so many apartments have kitchens that look like they were recent ideas squeezed into the space, or tiny “kitchenettes”.

        Reading older literature I’ve noticed how in older books the main character’s living arrangements often just doesn’t have any place to prepare or store food. They’ll reference street carts, open markets, pubs, etc as where they get food from. Or maybe a meal included with the rent in a boarding house.

        Medieval peasants in pre-industrial Europe expected their employer to provide at least one, if not two meals during work. Three during long hours, like harvest season.

    • @[email protected]
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      261 year ago

      I am happy to make this concession provided I can either start making my lunch on company time, and then commute after I have finished making my lunch, or be allowed to fully go home, make and prepare lunch, dine, and commute back to work.

      Oh, is that unproductive, a waste of time, money and energy, and massively impairs my ability to get work done?

      Someone should draw some kind of conclusion from that, it seems.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      that is the entire point of the commercial real estate excuse: that was your labor and money that was supporting it not the bosses.

      the bosses don’t care about commercial real estate, either. They care about being able to use their status to bully people in person in front of others.

      it is a garbage barge with lipstick on the front.

      • @PeleSpirit
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        11 months ago

        deleted by creator

    • @Jessvj93
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      71 year ago

      I suspect people are not spending as much on nonessentials and businesses are seeing this as their workplaces being empty and not spending. But something tells me it’s a nationwide thing, people are thinking twice due to inflation and I doubt bringing people back is gonna make them want to spend money the way they used to. My claim is based on layoffs and stocking issues.

    • @Squizzy
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      61 year ago

      My work pays for my lunch, it’s how it should be. I’m here for them, if I wasn’t I’d eat at home.

    • @bhmnscmm
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      -21 year ago

      I totally agree. There’s no reason anyone needs to consistently purchase breakfast and lunch if they work in an office.

      If you don’t do it at home, why would you do it at the office?

      • @echo64
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        281 year ago

        You can make food at home as a part of your lunch break. If you make food and bring it in, you need to spend extra non paid time to do that.

        • @bhmnscmm
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          11 year ago

          That’s fair to say for lunch. Not for breakfast though, unless one makes the argument there should also be a breakfast break.

          Regardless, with the existing status quo it’s not a good financial decision to eat out for breakfast and lunch everyday.

          • @echo64
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            111 year ago

            The status quo shouldn’t mean that you are forced to spend time outside of work time preparing for work time. Unless they want to pay for that time, or your lunch.

      • @agent_flounder
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        91 year ago

        Because I don’t have a commute at home so there’s time to make breakfast and lunch.

      • @PunnyName
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        11 year ago

        Work pays well enough for meals, then it’s a non-issue.