Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how people cant afford to go out.
Gas prcies are up but its only like $50 dollars every 2 weeks for me.
At the end of the day I only spending $40 dollars more a month on gas? Maybe its time to start paying people a living wage. I just don't understand how folks on Facebook are staying home and not going on when they are "working" full tine...
Op my family of 4 went to dinner last night in DC. Our ticket consisted of two BBQ sandwiches with a side each, two BBQ platters with two sides each, and one beer. The tab before tip was $72. If you don’t understand how some people could have a hard time with that I don’t know what to tell you.
Man that’s insane. A few years ago, that meal would’ve been half that price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t people realize that “paying a living wage” means that companies have to raise their prices thereby causing everything to be more expensive which in turn means that the “living wage” doesn’t buy as much stuff??
No.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t people realize that “paying a living wage” means that companies have to raise their prices thereby causing everything to be more expensive which in turn means that the “living wage” doesn’t buy as much stuff??
Anonymous wrote:Don’t people realize that “paying a living wage” means that companies have to raise their prices thereby causing everything to be more expensive which in turn means that the “living wage” doesn’t buy as much stuff??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how people cant afford to go out.
Gas prcies are up but its only like $50 dollars every 2 weeks for me.
At the end of the day I only spending $40 dollars more a month on gas? Maybe its time to start paying people a living wage. I just don't understand how folks on Facebook are staying home and not going on when they are "working" full tine...
Op my family of 4 went to dinner last night in DC. Our ticket consisted of two BBQ sandwiches with a side each, two BBQ platters with two sides each, and one beer. The tab before tip was $72. If you don’t understand how some people could have a hard time with that I don’t know what to tell you.
Anonymous wrote:I sort of see OP's point -- if you look at marginal cost. Let's say gas is $2/gal higher than a year ago, and you have a car with a 15-gallon tank you fill twice a month. That's 15 * $2 * 2 = $60/month more fuel costs than before. True for some people, an additional $60 monthly expenditure would be unbearable, but not for most. It does ignore that other costs have gone up also though.
Personally if I needed to save, I'd just look to public transporation when possible, or even drive the short distance to make that an option. For example, Ride-On buses in MoCo are free for everyone currently. Then, I'd look at less costly options for eating out or food -- more cooked from scratch vs. ready-made.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how people cant afford to go out.
Gas prcies are up but its only like $50 dollars every 2 weeks for me.
At the end of the day I only spending $40 dollars more a month on gas? Maybe its time to start paying people a living wage. I just don't understand how folks on Facebook are staying home and not going on when they are "working" full tine...
Op my family of 4 went to dinner last night in DC. Our ticket consisted of two BBQ sandwiches with a side each, two BBQ platters with two sides each, and one beer. The tab before tip was $72. If you don’t understand how some people could have a hard time with that I don’t know what to tell you.
Man that’s insane. A few years ago, that meal would’ve been half that price.