Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re a two parent house, college educated, decent careers. Even with supposed good insurance we really struggled to pay for braces for our two oldest. My youngest daughter plays on a cheap YMCA sports league and it seems basically every lower income teen her age has braces. Meanwhile we’re still saving $ to put her in braces. Where do they all find the $ for orthodontia? I’m at a loss as to how this is possible.
Quit worrying about them and focus on yourself. Why are you struggling to pay? Adjust your budget accordingly.
Anonymous wrote:We’re a two parent house, college educated, decent careers. Even with supposed good insurance we really struggled to pay for braces for our two oldest. My youngest daughter plays on a cheap YMCA sports league and it seems basically every lower income teen her age has braces. Meanwhile we’re still saving $ to put her in braces. Where do they all find the $ for orthodontia? I’m at a loss as to how this is possible.
Anonymous wrote:We’re a two parent house, college educated, decent careers. Even with supposed good insurance we really struggled to pay for braces for our two oldest. My youngest daughter plays on a cheap YMCA sports league and it seems basically every lower income teen her age has braces. Meanwhile we’re still saving $ to put her in braces. Where do they all find the $ for orthodontia? I’m at a loss as to how this is possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They probably get it for “free” (#yourepayingforit).
Okay, how? I don’t want to pay another $7k.
The same way they qualify for their food stamps. They don’t work.
Many people on food stamps actually work minimum wage jobs. Maybe if states raised their minimum wages more people could get off food stamps. That was a novel idea floated by a wealthy R in CA.
https://www.cbpp.org/research/policy-basics-the-supplemental-nutrition-assistance-program-snap
Raising min wage will only make braces (among other things) more expensive for the rest of us.
Op this is just another example of how the middle class loses. We make too much to qualify for assistance yet too little to easily afford things like braces.
Not having braces isn’t the end of the world. Most of the world exists without braces.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach at a Title I school. It is rare to see a tween/teen without braces who isn't also on the FRM plan.
We had a social studies teacher let go last year who used the "braces effect" as an example in class on how the Republican party keeps the lower middle class angry at poor people and immigrants.
Wow. Sounds like a terrible school.
Anonymous wrote:I teach at a Title I school. It is rare to see a tween/teen without braces who isn't also on the FRM plan.
We had a social studies teacher let go last year who used the "braces effect" as an example in class on how the Republican party keeps the lower middle class angry at poor people and immigrants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe they budget and save better than you do?
CNN says 40% of Americans can't cover a $400 emergency expense, but low-income families have thousands laying around for (sometimes multiple) kids to get braces? Something doesn't add up.
https://money.cnn.com/2018/05/22/pf/emergency-expenses-household-finances/index.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re a two parent house, college educated, decent careers. Even with supposed good insurance we really struggled to pay for braces for our two oldest. My youngest daughter plays on a cheap YMCA sports league and it seems basically every lower income teen her age has braces. Meanwhile we’re still saving $ to put her in braces. Where do they all find the $ for orthodontia? I’m at a loss as to how this is possible.
Wow. Just wow. I hope you are not a parent on my team. Your entitlement ...