

I’m with you dude. Every electric shaver I ever bought just kept breaking, so finally I got a pair of Wahl clippers. That’s the only thing my beard doesn’t just eat up. If I need to get closer I wet shave
I’m with you dude. Every electric shaver I ever bought just kept breaking, so finally I got a pair of Wahl clippers. That’s the only thing my beard doesn’t just eat up. If I need to get closer I wet shave
Thats a very propertarian view of a non-propertarian issue. You have what you use. What you don’t, you don’t. If you leave your house vacant for too long a period of time, then somebody might take up residence. But if people don’t just move into your home while you’re on vacation now, why would they in a hypothetical system where the concept of property is radically different and presumably everybody has a home? Unless you’re talking about second homes? Because that’s a non starter. Nobody needs more than one home.
I don’t think anybody’s disputing that. That’s kind of the whole point of the post, right? Everybody here gets that.
What everybody here DOESN’T get is that this kind of poverty is also present right here in the USA. I’ve encountered quite a few people who seem to believe that if you live in the U.S. AT ALL, then you’re automatically lumped into that 10%, when that isn’t actually the case.
I find it HIGHLY unlikely that I will ever buy a house. The amount of money needed for a down payment, inspection, closing, etc. just seems astronomical to me. There’s no way I’m buying a house, let alone getting 130k worth of equity out of it.
In terms of wages, I AM slightly above that 10% line, but that’s like literally within the last month, so I’m not really sure what you’re point is. I swear you must work in tech. Tech bros seem to be allergic to the idea that they aren’t the lowest of the low
I know what net worth means. That’s why I said "sitting on 130k. The threshold is 130k. The mean net worth is something like 15k globally. And I’m a 34 year old man. I make 48k/yr and that’s the most I’ve ever made. No savings. Just cashed out all 5k of my 401k to pay rent for a couple of months. I’m just an average dude who grew up in Southern California on food stamps and state healthcare. I just couldn’t afford college, so a “career” isn’t really an option for me.
Yes, like I said, “around 50%” in the U.S. I’m just saying the phrase, “Chances are you’re in that 10%” is highly reductive and ignorant considering that half of Americans are not, in fact, passing that threshold.
Okaaaay, but I’ve never had a new car, have zero savings, and despite making more money than I ever have in my entire life, I still don’t even clear $50k before taxes. But I guess if it’s not that hard to achieve I’ll just go ahead and grab these boot straps here and- oops! They broke.
I don’t and do not know anybody that owns a home. That seems like a thing from a bygone era to me tbh, and I accepted a LONG time ago that I will die working. There’s no way, even with the magic of compound interest, that I could save enough to retire without starving to death.
Assistant GM at my local Taco Bell makes $60k/yr
To be considered in the richest 10% of the world population, you would need a net worth of approximately $130,000 (as of late 2024). I don’t personally know anybody just sitting on 130k of money and assets. If you are, good for you, but many of us are not.
The chances of an average American being in that group is comparatively high compared to much of the world (around 50%), but still on the “Chances are…” forgone conclusion of your comment
It’s this. Everybody else’s take us missing this. I play a BUNCH of musical instruments, and when people are like, “Oh wow, how did you learn to play all of those. You must be so talented!” And I always say, “Time. Time and a lot of practice. And most importantly a LOT of patience with myself”.
The thing is, to get good at something, you have to be bad at it first. And many people simply do not have the passion to keep pushing through the part where they’re bad at it.