by jbeckton » Wed 31 Oct 2007, 08:37:56
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('static66', 'A')hh, lawyers and who knows what jbeckton does for a living.... maybe he works for Google... they seem to be doing pretty well these days... I know for a fact he is not a truck driver... those guys are closing up shop in record numbers as diesel prices and related expenses force them out of work
I am an engineer, not an armchair economist.
While I was in college, I worked nights at a restaurant making $10/hr and lived a pretty decant life. My wife (girlfriend at the time) did the same. We didn't spend money like crazy but we were nowhere near starving.
With a median income of $46,326/yr the average household nets about $3860 a month:
$900 rent/mortgage
$300 utilities
$300 transportation by bus
$300 groceries
After these necessities you still have $2060 left to spend on the little things that come up and save the rest. But people do not save the rest, they spend it on cigarettes, cable, plasma TV's, cell phones, eating out, vacations, SUV's, sporting events, i-pods, designer clothes.....etc.
It's not that people can't afford food; it's that they can't afford all of that other crap. There are of course exceptions like single mothers, but the majority of "poor" people are just lazy or bad decision makers.
Most people have room in their budget for higher energy bills; they will just have to do w/o some of the other crap, which I think is good.
http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/2 ... rate_x.htm
Those that cannot do..... teach. Those that cannot teach......teach gym.-Jack black