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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]https://apple.news/Aufcdrb9tSU2X2_SBCbNyew “ What It’s Really Like to Support a Big Family on a Modest Income in America More Americans are choosing to put off having children—or not having them at all. The Ivys are an exception. ‘It is hard. But it’s not impossible.’” Neither went to college, the DH is 34 and DW is 20 when they get married. 5 children. Not saving any money for college, they feel kids don’t need college since they did fine without it. He managed to buy a house in 2002 in Cincinnati on his own, right before housing prices exploded but loaning standards were super loose (he was 20!). But more importantly because he has a UNION construction job that pays $30/hr. Health insurance is of course Medicaid for the expensive medical issues the family faces. They are a family of 7 in a two bedroom. This is like a developing nation. The WSJ holds this up as an example of how a modest income family can afford children. [/quote] It’s an example as in an illustration. I didn’t read it as example as in something to strive for. [/quote] Read the subtitle: [i]More Americans are choosing to put off having children—or not having them at all. The Ivys are an exception. ‘It is hard. But it’s not impossible[/i] The title is chiding Americans for not having enough kids, and then again look at this working class family doing it, they make it work with effort — as other families view it as impossible because they won’t do the hard work. Meanwhile, the Ivys have all these impossible advantages like buying a house 20 years ago, and government hand outs. [/quote] There's no "chiding".[/quote]
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