Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're dirt poor for the area. DH and I are both PhD students living on stipends. I spend a lot of time on the internet because I need it for school. Our kid goes to Arlington Science Focus (it's a wonderful public school... I highly recommend it!). We live in a tiny, tiny apartment and cook every night. We never go out to eat.
We schedule our school stuff around her class schedule so that we don't have to pay for after-school care.
12:30 here - ok, you're poor, I guess - but people that I think of as poor aren't PhD students. They're lucky if they graduated from high school. Does anyone else see what I mean here?
But that's stereotyping. Poverty is $11,600 for a single person, $21,000 for family. That being said, in DC I would argue the poverty level is much higher than that probably (median income is $58,000 in DC compared to national $40,000). Poverty in rural Kansas is different than poverty in NYC or DC. Not everyone in poverty is uneducated.
Of course not everyone in poverty is uneducated. That's not what I meant. But when I think of true poverty, I think of people working three jobs to keep food on the table and keep their family warm, etc, not studying for a PhD. Not that I think the PhD poster isn't struggling with money. Not sure why no one is seeing what I mean by that.
Anonymous wrote:Those of us who are below DCUM or on the low end, never answer questions about income, tax brackets, and all that stuff where everyone tries to outdo each other. Not everyone who reads DCUM is rich. We just avoid those posters because it seems they are just bragging and it is tiresome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would hope that poor people wouldnt be wasting time on an anoymous forum or even waste their money on paying for internet
Why do some people (mostly conservatives) view the Internet as some sort of complete luxury? It may not be up there with "clean water" and "electricity," but it's certainly more important than "weekly manicures" (*) and (at this point) "expanded, non-basic cable TV."
(*) To be fair, some jobs where you're paid to be attractive, a weekly manicure would be a necessity.
I also wonder why there is this lingering feeling of resentment among some upper-middle class conservatives that the poors are somehow ripping all of us off, yet ignoring the wealthy (**) who rip us off to the tune of many more zeros.
(**) Yeah, they say they're mad about both. But it seems they're mad about the tiniest of efforts to rein in the Masters of the Universe, because they might stop creating jobs. But it's not as if they've actually created any jobs in the past decade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We schedule our school stuff around her class schedule so that we don't have to pay for after-school care.
12:30 here - ok, you're poor, I guess - but people that I think of as poor aren't PhD students. They're lucky if they graduated from high school. Does anyone else see what I mean here?
But that's stereotyping. Poverty is $11,600 for a single person, $21,000 for family. That being said, in DC I would argue the poverty level is much higher than that probably (median income is $58,000 in DC compared to national $40,000). Poverty in rural Kansas is different than poverty in NYC or DC. Not everyone in poverty is uneducated.
Of course not everyone in poverty is uneducated. That's not what I meant. But when I think of true poverty, I think of people working three jobs to keep food on the table and keep their family warm, etc, not studying for a PhD. Not that I think the PhD poster isn't struggling with money. Not sure why no one is seeing what I mean by that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're dirt poor for the area. DH and I are both PhD students living on stipends. I spend a lot of time on the internet because I need it for school. Our kid goes to Arlington Science Focus (it's a wonderful public school... I highly recommend it!). We live in a tiny, tiny apartment and cook every night. We never go out to eat.
We schedule our school stuff around her class schedule so that we don't have to pay for after-school care.
12:30 here - ok, you're poor, I guess - but people that I think of as poor aren't PhD students. They're lucky if they graduated from high school. Does anyone else see what I mean here?
But that's stereotyping. Poverty is $11,600 for a single person, $21,000 for family. That being said, in DC I would argue the poverty level is much higher than that probably (median income is $58,000 in DC compared to national $40,000). Poverty in rural Kansas is different than poverty in NYC or DC. Not everyone in poverty is uneducated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're dirt poor for the area. DH and I are both PhD students living on stipends. I spend a lot of time on the internet because I need it for school. Our kid goes to Arlington Science Focus (it's a wonderful public school... I highly recommend it!). We live in a tiny, tiny apartment and cook every night. We never go out to eat.
We schedule our school stuff around her class schedule so that we don't have to pay for after-school care.
12:30 here - ok, you're poor, I guess - but people that I think of as poor aren't PhD students. They're lucky if they graduated from high school. Does anyone else see what I mean here?
Anonymous wrote:We're dirt poor for the area. DH and I are both PhD students living on stipends. I spend a lot of time on the internet because I need it for school. Our kid goes to Arlington Science Focus (it's a wonderful public school... I highly recommend it!). We live in a tiny, tiny apartment and cook every night. We never go out to eat.
We schedule our school stuff around her class schedule so that we don't have to pay for after-school care.