Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people really have these attitudes that certain work is beneath them?
I do. Like accounting for example.
Really? What's so demeaning about being a CPA? Please explain.
Anonymous wrote:I think people are conflating two issues. Yes, there are jobs that I consider beneath my education or experience level, absolutely. But would I take one of them if I was in a pinch and needed to earn money. Of course.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
No kidding? The generic non organic at Teeter is $4/gallon.
You must like getting ripped off.
The milk at H Teets is definitely overpriced (especially as their non-organic milk tastes like shit).
The CPI says the national average is somewhere around $3.25, so the conclusion is that H Teet is totes overpriced, and Wegmans is crazy low.
Costco is something like $2.3X. Same with Walmart. And Walmart is the largest grocer in the country, by far.
Where do you get this stuff? Kroger is the largest grocer by far.
Anonymous wrote:I think people are conflating two issues. Yes, there are jobs that I consider beneath my education or experience level, absolutely. But would I take one of them if I was in a pinch and needed to earn money. Of course.
Anonymous wrote:I think people are conflating two issues. Yes, there are jobs that I consider beneath my education or experience level, absolutely. But would I take one of them if I was in a pinch and needed to earn money. Of course.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
No kidding? The generic non organic at Teeter is $4/gallon.
You must like getting ripped off.
The milk at H Teets is definitely overpriced (especially as their non-organic milk tastes like shit).
The CPI says the national average is somewhere around $3.25, so the conclusion is that H Teet is totes overpriced, and Wegmans is crazy low.
Costco is something like $2.3X. Same with Walmart. And Walmart is the largest grocer in the country, by far.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
No kidding? The generic non organic at Teeter is $4/gallon.
You must like getting ripped off.
The milk at H Teets is definitely overpriced (especially as their non-organic milk tastes like shit).
The CPI says the national average is somewhere around $3.25, so the conclusion is that H Teet is totes overpriced, and Wegmans is crazy low.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course. My brother is on the brink of homelessness because he won't just got get a job at target.
Ha! I have one of those too!
McDonald's, Walmart, Target, and Sheetz, which are all within walking distance to his apartment and hiring, are all beneath him. Instead he bums rides, scrapes together cab fare, or texts me to order him an Uber (when really desperate) to get to a job in the next town over where he's only getting ~20 hours/week because that's where all his friends work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that you can raise wages of farm workers considerably without the price of milk going to $10 per gallon.
Milk is about $2.50 per gallon now. Simple economic logic suggests that you could DOUBLE the current wages of farm workers, and let's even entertain the ridiculous assumption that 100% of the cost of milk is due to labor. Even then, which is a ridiculous scenario, it would be $5 per gallon.
More likely, you could double the wages of farm workers and it might go from $2.50 to $3.25, at most.
$2.50?
Where do you buy milk?
No kidding? The generic non organic at Teeter is $4/gallon.
You must like getting ripped off.
Don’t spit out your coffee. The cheapest gallon of organic milk in NoVa is Whole Foods. Not HT, Shoppers, TJs, Safeway, Target or BJs. I can’t speak to Wegman’s or Costco.
The milk at H Teets is definitely overpriced (especially as their non-organic milk tastes like shit).
The CPI says the national average is somewhere around $3.25, so the conclusion is that H Teet is totes overpriced, and Wegmans is crazy low.
I think the milk at Wegmans is a loss leader for them, it's one of the staples that gets people in the door then you get sucked in by the specialty cheese section and end up blowing an extra $20 on brie and chevre you don't need.