• @[email protected]
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    841 year ago

    Also “this economy is killing me” after they raise their fucking prices 40% in a year…

    I’ve completely abandoned some of my favourite restaurants at this point.

    • @madcaesar
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      241 year ago

      I feel like it’s this rubber band effect where everyone just overshoot everything and now refuses to bring prices down.

    • @Alenalda
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      151 year ago

      I went from eating out every single day to making everything at home for the last 4 months. Cut back on my food spending by 66%

      • @Captain_Nipples
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        71 year ago

        Fucking grocery prices are up big time too. I like to grill Ribeyes, and the price has almost doubled. Everything has gone up, but like you said, the restaurants are even crazier. $14 at a McDonalds for a skinny guy like me? Fuck that

        • @Alenalda
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          61 year ago

          I only really eat one meal a day and it’s a big one. Would be like a 2L of soda and a large pizza or a sub and app from a restaurant. I wouldn’t have it delivered but it was easily 25 bucks a day for that one meal. Now I meal prep egg cups for breakfast and cook up a big batch of chicken tacos for the week or just make rice or salad for dinner. Grocery bills under 80$ for a week. I only have one mouth to feed though and I hate cooking.

      • @Mikekm
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        41 year ago

        You too? Door dash was the first to go, now I’d rather make something and know I’m not going to end up throwing out half of a greasy meal. When I broke down my spending several months ago, food was easily one of the biggest expenses that I had control over.

        • @hydrospanner
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          81 year ago

          Door dash (and other delivery options) lost me after like my second order when I realized I was paying like $50 for a meal for one, after all the fees and tips were added up.

          It was especially insulting to see that the fees were basically “we are charging you more because we’re doing less for you than if you were in our restaurant”, and then they also throw in shit like asking you to tip the restaurant on the full amount…and also tip the driver on the full amount.

          When I was really looking into it, I realized I was trying to order like $18 of food off the menu. But they had a $25 minimum, and after all the fees and including a 20% tip everywhere they asked for one, the total was going to be like $53.

          That was like two years ago and I haven’t felt the urge to deal with that shit since. I’d rather skip a meal than entertain that nonsense.

          • @pyromaster55
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            31 year ago

            Many delivery companies have a contract with restaurants for 20-30% off the price of each item, plus they add a mark up on every item, a delivery fee, a service fee, and then you tip the driver.

            Often most of the delivery fee and all of the tip goes to the driver (it’s supposed to anyway, but they often find ways to get that money back from the driver, there was an issue with the order, customer needed assistance, etc)

            The service fee, discount on menu price of the item, and additional markup goes to the company.

            Just about everyone gets fucked minus the delivery company.

            I worked the back end in tech and management in the field for like 6 years. They’re pretty fuckin awful.

  • @FReddit
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    531 year ago

    Even at $22, it’s not enough to ever buy a house or even rent.

    • @sunbrrnslapper
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      251 year ago

      I know it differs pretty wildly, but in King County Washington (Seattle and Bellevue are here) the median home price (condos included) is $830k. That means you have to earn $184k or $88/hour to afford a home, which is insane.

      • @FReddit
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        231 year ago

        I got a little inflation story for you …

        My father bought a house inSan Francisco in 1959 for about $60,000.

        Now it’s worth around $4 million.

        And no, I did not benefit from this. He embezzled client money and lost everything, which he richly deserved.

        • @CapraObscura
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          161 year ago

          My grandparent’s house was $10,000 in 1959.

          When my grandfather passed we sold it for close to $300,000. In a shitty small town in Texas.

          This is what happens when housing is sold as an investment and not a place to live.

      • @nwithan8
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        11 year ago

        That’s not how mortgages work…

    • @[email protected]
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      171 year ago

      Shoot I make roughly 60% more than that and still couldn’t buy a house or rent by myself unless I found a house in another state in a town with a population of 200.

      • @FReddit
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        31 year ago

        Seriously, I finally bought a house, but in a horrible place.

        I couldn’t even rent where I used to live.

        • @jiji
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          31 year ago

          I was lucky enough to buy a house this spring, after being even more lucky to live in an apartment for 6 years without a single rent increase. After I left the apartment I checked their re-listing and it is now $200 more than my current mortgage.

          • @FReddit
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            51 year ago

            The whole thing is a shit show that particularly fucks over young people.

            As an old guy, I’ve been around long enough to see it get worse for generation after generation.

            I’m on the other of the stick now. I won’t live long enough to pay off my mortgage. I’m hoping to work until 70 to max out my social security, otherwise I end up under a bridge.

    • @Chev
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      11 year ago

      Depends. In central Europe you can even build/ buy a house with this amount of money with an 20 year loan.

      • @FReddit
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        11 year ago

        Buying these things is insane for most people.

        In the U.S., the average cost of a house is close to $400,000. This like driving your down payment.

  • @CapraObscura
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    491 year ago

    Here in Texas you’ll see job posts from one clearly triggered right-wing small business owner paying $7.25 an hour, talking about how if you’re working there you’re WORKING there followed by a list of like 400 things you’ll be doing.

    This will be next to a job post from an actually sane individual that’s paying more than twice as much for 1/4th of the effort, and you’re still being overworked.

    They don’t want employees, they want indentured servants.

    • Echo Dot
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      341 year ago

      Did anybody ever “want” to work?

      If we lived in a Star Trek style utopia with replicators I wouldn’t sit around eating burgers all day and watching TV, but at the same time I wouldn’t do the job I currently have.

      • cassetti
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        121 year ago

        I mean there is a small percentage of people who genuinely enjoy the rewarding work they do and look forward to waking up every morning to embrace the day.

        But I do agree - sitting around getting drunk and high watching television all day long gets old REAL quick.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        I’d do my current job if I could work for like 4 hours a day, 3-4 days per week, and do 1/3 less work per hour.

        • @hydrospanner
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          21 year ago

          And do it from home.

          Yes.

          For me, the biggest shift from the pandemic was to realize just how much my hate for work was tied up in the fact that I had to go to work, rather than the work itself.

          Even my last job before my current one, if they would have let me work remotely (a 100% feasible option, although my ultra conservative boss wouldn’t have ever entertained the idea), I could have probably worked there forever, trading upward mobility for complacency and comfort and flexibility.

      • @captainlezbian
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        51 year ago

        If I had a say and was doing my career in a rewarding way I’d probably do 5-10 hours a week on average. Just making shit, trying to figure stuff out. And I’d be making everything I design publicly available

      • @[email protected]
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        01 year ago

        I love my job and my work, I just wish doing it for 40 hours per week was enough to live on.

      • @gornar
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        31 year ago

        Or I add “for that wage” sometimes as well! Often interchangeable!

    • @Chev
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      11 year ago

      I do. I like doing my part to help people out with their needs.

  • @dx1
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    1 year ago

    The idea of a “labor shortage” is just idiotic. The demand for goods and services is a function of the size of the population, and guess what else is? The size of the labor pool. Really just reinforces proof of how much economic illiteracy is out there.

    • pachrist
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      141 year ago

      No, no, it must be that young people these days are lazy, not that I lack a basic understanding of economics.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      I mean, that assumes all people are equally qualified for all positions doesn’t it? If the market demands 500 plumbers but there’s only 400 licensed plumbers, I’d call that a labor shortage. Now, hopefully this leads to pay increases for that trade which in turn increases the number of people pursuing it, but the problem does exist for some period of time. I feel like pretending it doesn’t belittles the pro worker argument

  • @[email protected]
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    221 year ago

    Something something damn millennials… I mean zoomers no one wants to work. Back in my day we had to walk 10miles up hill both ways to get to work for a dollar an hour and you didn’t see me complaining.

      • @gornar
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        101 year ago

        My inlaws paid for their entire university education working a summer job. Madness.

      • @AA5B
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, I’m hitting them at reality now - paying more for my kid at a small State University, than I paid for Ivy League

        At the time, I could take care of it partly by myself and partly through loans that were easily affordable given my expected pay after graduation. My kid, not so much

  • morgan423
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    211 year ago

    The $15.50 guy would have some people lined up. It’d be appealing for people who needed a job short term, quickly, and wanted the decreased competition for it.

    Not a bunch of people would be lined up there, but it wouldn’t be no one.

    • @Captain_Nipples
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      1 year ago

      Depends on the job. We have labor positions that pay $18, but demand a little bit of physical labor. It’s hard to fill those positions.

      10 years ago, people would line up for that job for less than $10/hr and the work was much, much harder. Something has definitely changed

      When I started with the company in 09, people were coming in during outages and trying to outperform each other so they’d be hired on full-time. But the economy was ass back then and it was hard to find a full-time job at my age

      • @chiliedogg
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        161 year ago

        Expenses have changed.

        My apartment I paid $700/month for in 2011 is now over $2000/month.

        When ex to expenses outpace wages more than 2:1, eventually it catches up and people can’t afford to live where the work is.

        • @Captain_Nipples
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          61 year ago

          Makes sense. Same in my area. I wonder if this isn’t all going to blow up and cause another recession soon. Seems like this shit can’t be like this for long.

      • cheesepotatoes
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        81 year ago

        Something has definitely changed

        Ya, the cost of living. If you’re offering a wage below the poverty line AND the labour is back breaking, you can’t possibly expect positive results.

        • @Captain_Nipples
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          21 year ago

          Eh, it’s not backbreaking… But I see what you’re saying. What do all the 20 y/o non college educated kids do now? I know not all of them are in a trade school.

          • cheesepotatoes
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            41 year ago

            Ya, I get what you’re saying too. I don’t know what they’re doing, I’m not particularly dialed in with that demographic. I do know that logically, if the wage being offered can’t even cover rent then there really isn’t a point to doing it. Probably more efficient to do gig economy work, or something under the table, or crime to be honest.

  • @EmperorHenry
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    1 year ago

    None of the businesses in my town are offering anything higher than $12 USD an hour and then the managers will try to talk you down from that figure.

    • @Chev
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      1 year ago

      Probably depends on your position and academic background. What are you applying for?

        • @Chev
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          11 year ago

          So you are saying that you don’t know the market prices and just make up a number for an artificial job?

          I understand that you probably want to be heard but this was not a good start. Better write about your experiences instead of making something up.

  • @vidumec
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    21 year ago

    The reality is that the guy on the left is $15.51/hr, then they put “competitive salary!” in the job description

  • @MaDeX
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    1 year ago

    deleted by creator

  • @scripthook
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    -81 year ago

    The twist is that that line of people turn down the $22/hr because they found out they can’t work from home full time

    • @Captain_Nipples
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      1 year ago

      I’m having a laugh at the people in our company that are mad about having to come in an extra day per week. During COVID, they’d say, “Suck it up, it’s your job,” or, “be thankful you have a job,” if we complained about all of the OT we were working. We were working 70-80 hours a week during the first few months of COVID.

      Now, we’re throwing it back in their faces

      Honestly, I think the company is trying to push out some office workers, and making this new rule is enough to get some people to quit. This way the company doesn’t have to give them any compensation when they’re laid off

      • @scripthook
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        21 year ago

        I work in the office 3 days a week voluntarily. A lot of people in my company grunted about coming in 3 days per week starting in Q4 like it’s the end of the world. As if their memory pre-covid was somehow erased on how the office life is. I understand the whole WFH thing but you have to give a little back to the company and find some balance. I’d rather be 3 days per week than 5.

        • @Simba
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          11 year ago

          You don’t have to do anything of the sort, especially when you’ve been fully remote for years.

          If the company was able to survive 3+ years fully remote, it can survive indefinitely.

          I understand that it might feel good to “throw it in the faces” of… Whoever the fuck you’re trying to feel superior over, but this kind of divisiveness only serves to benefit the company and harm the workers.