• Formfiller@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    But you’ll only be able to afford them in the limited time that you’re deemed useful and subservient by the ruling oligarch pedofile cabal.

  • Th3D3k0y@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I think this is slightly unfair. I think if we Americans work hard we probably still won’t be able to afford basic necessities

  • glorkon@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    I’m German.

    I used to be poor as fuck, didn’t have a job, had lots of medical issues due to being very overweight, was depressed and dysfunctional, also a stoner on top of all that. That was basically how I lived from 2000 to 2009.

    But the state paid my rent and gave me some money so I would at least not become homeless. And then, a guy at the “Jobcenter” said hey, wanna have a two-year state sponsored job training? It’s 18k Euros, but the German state will pay for it. All you gotta do is see a doctor every month and have him certify to us that you’re off drugs.

    I said fuck yeah, let’s do it. Last chance to get my life back on track.

    Fast forward to today… I’m married, have a well paid job as a software architect, earned enough money I could probably live independently for over two years, have a handsome ETF portfolio.

    In America, I would have been fucked. If you’re poor in Germany, there’s always a way out if you just get your shit together.

    • Tencho@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      Heart warming. Are they this kind to immigrants? I’ve been thinking about heading that direction for a few years. People keep telling me EU is in decline. But they still seem nicer than the Americas

      • TheJesusaurus@sh.itjust.works
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        3 hours ago

        People are kind, a state can’t be kind, it just is.

        I’m sure Germans are generally kind of folks but by and large states do not extend social welfare benefits to non-citizens.

      • glorkon@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Well, I’m not quite sure which requirements there are for immigration to Germany, and which conditions there are on getting welfare once you got here. They obviously would like to avoid having people immigrating into the welfare system.

        And of course, Germany isn’t the land where milk and honey flow either, many people struggle too. I had a bit of luck for sure. But I very much feel Germany is a much more forgiving place to live. That’s why I would never move to the US under any circumstances, even for a tripled paycheck.

    • Strider@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      Gratuliere, freut mich. Solche Geschichten hört man viel zu selten.

      Nur den Mythos der Sozialschmarotzer der immer gerne genutzt wird.

      • glorkon@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Danke dir. Ich hatte natürlich sehr viel Glück, dass sie im Jahr 2008 gerade Geld im Topf für sowas hatten - und dass ich einiges an IT-Vorkenntnissen hatte. Sonst wäre der Jobcentertyp nicht auf die Idee gekommen, mir das zu bewilligen. Aber ich bin dem heute noch extremst dankbar für die Chance.

  • That Weird Vegan she/her@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    10 hours ago

    I’ve been in psych care (not anymore, as of a few days ago. go me amirite) for 30 years. I’ve paid nothing for it. On top of that, I’ve not worked much because disabled. The government paid me welfare for it. I feel bad for Americans, they would actually pay LESS if they adopted socialised healthcare

  • lonefighter@sh.itjust.works
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    17 hours ago

    Reading this while working a shift that will put me at 85 hours of work this week. Will be able to buy groceries this month and pay for the surgery my cat needs. Also, am tired AF.

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      10 hours ago

      I wish my ADHD and other issues would let me work 85 hours a MONTH with my toddler around all day every day. I’d be able to pay myself a very decent salary for the part of my country that I live in right now. If I could consistently work a reasonable 150 a month, I’d have the deep into 5 figures amounts of debt my ex put me into, paid off in 2 years. Worst part is, I used to be able to work over 200 a month easily, but I wore myself out like that and now that I’m an exhausted single parent, it’s so, so hard to get anything done.

      Best of luck to you and your kitty. It sucks that you need to work so much to be able to afford necessities.

      • lonefighter@sh.itjust.works
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        2 hours ago

        Oof, I don’t know how I’d function if I had a toddler. Single parents amaze me, I can barely function as a single person. I have pretty bad ADHD and work is an absolute white knuckle struggle, but I have absolutely no one since my last relationship failed and I don’t want to be homeless so I cry a lot at home and then slap a smile on and grind through my shift.

    • That Weird Vegan she/her@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      13 hours ago

      I’m sorry :( I hope your kitty will be okay. I have a $4K vet bill to pay too, but i love my cat, as I’m sure you do yours, so we make it work, no matter the sacrifice. Anyway, best of luck <3

      • lonefighter@sh.itjust.works
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        10 hours ago

        Vet bills are the worst, but my cats don’t have the option to do anything about their situation or choose to work different jobs or change things about their life so it feels wrong to decline medical care and potentially make them suffer when they don’t get a say in the matter. I can make that choice for myself and my own medical care, but it feels cruel to make that choice for them, you know? They’re stuck in whatever life I give them, so I try to make it better than mine.

        I hope your cat is ok!

        • lonefighter@sh.itjust.works
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          10 hours ago

          Kitty will be ok, thank you. Just needs teethies taken care of. If we’re lucky not pulled, just anesthesia and deep cleaned, so not really surgery, but still expensive as hell. If not lucky, teeth pulled and painkillers, so more like surgery. He goes in tomorrow, both of us will be very unhappy.

  • psx_crab@lemmy.zip
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    14 hours ago

    What is the actual baseline for american to at least afford a cheap house and live a just-ok life, assuming you’re single? As in you can afford food, transport, and just tiny bit of saving? I’ve been hearing that it’s bad, but not sure how bad it is.

    • burntbacon@discuss.tchncs.de
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      5 hours ago

      I’m trying to think of different places I’ve lived, because the cost of housing / food / other changes. For example, when I lived out in the sticks, rent was cheap but food, gas, and incidentals were hella expensive. I’m near a big urban area now, and it’s expensive rent, cheap gas (due to using less), moderate food, moderate incidentals.

      Anyway, more relevantly, I know people who can get by with incomes of ~$18.00/hr full time jobs. Anything that is unexpected kills them though, whether it’s car trouble, medical issues, or otherwise. You won’t be in a house though, unless you’re renting a room. You won’t be in a rat-infested hole, but something like a one bedroom apartment or two bedroom with a roommate. I know of a few folks who are raising a family on that salary, with the caveat that family helped them with housing (either an inherited property or similar). This is in an area where you can find cheap housing due to natural disasters and generally ‘rural’ areas that are basically paying developers to build cheap housing (i.e., looks like it’s decent but is basically matchsticks and glue).

      I helped people budget when they were making $11.00/hr full time, and that’s where you start seeing a lot of compromises made (it was also 10 years ago, so things have probably gotten worse). Kids and parents are stuffed into tiny rooms in bad apartments, a car is held together by tape and a prayer (and if anything happens it’s going to be scrapped and they’ll try to scrape by with a wreck they could get running, and then hope they never get seen by a cop for its numerous problems / lack of insurance/registration), and hopefully they’ll be able to get a few government benefits to get the kids help for medical benefits.

      I’ve worked with people making the federal minimum of $7.25/hr, and they rely on the government to have any hope of a not-horrible life. They’re either in government housing, or in a trailer with 5 people living in it. The car is shared between several people; they walk to work, even if it sucks and is an hour+walk, because they’ll be fired in an instant if they don’t show up; they’re probably on food stamps, utility help,etc.; medical is basically call ems and get to an emergency room if they’re keeling over (and hope that the er can fix it, i.e., that it’s not something that just gets ‘stabilized’); bills are always piling up… it wasn’t pleasant.

      So, all that being said, I’d peg it somewhere around $25.00/hr. That’s where my higher paid coworkers seem to start looking at houses, and talk about starting families. I’ll have to go look at the numbers (and we know that those are probably fucked due to the administration right now…) but I think that’s near or above median income in america. That would mean 50% of the population isn’t going to be living “just ok,” which really sucks to think about.

    • Truscape@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      12 hours ago

      Depends on your area (because of the housing market and local cost of living), but in my area in California, if you are not making $150,000 or more annually expect to be in a lot of debt and never owning a home.

      • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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        10 hours ago

        I’m assuming that’s a pretty high cost of living area compared to Bumfuck, NW though. Sucks for anyone working a low wage job in said HCoL area of course, but this is somewhat of a state issue rather than a federal one, since HCoL states and areas should have higher minimum wage than federal minimum wage. And I mean California is at least doing that already, but I think even Cali needs to double its current minimum wage.

        Note: I’m not even American, these are just my ramblings.

        • Truscape@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          4 hours ago

          We have I believe the second or the highest minimum wage in the nation. Although our housing/utilities market is the most fucked up.

  • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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    6 hours ago

    What country “guarantees” basic necessities to all their people? Food? Housing? Clothes?

    • bryophile@lemmy.zip
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      5 hours ago

      China does. And in Western Europe no one needs to live on the street (if they agree with getting the help they need) and is provided with some income for basic necessities?

    • elbiter@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      Education, healthcare…

      And yes, the state can put the means to provide affordable housing and even affordable food, but billionaires will tell you that’s a commie thing.

      (Well, not billionaires themselves but their paid puppets)

        • SLVRDRGN@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Sometimes it’s helpful to connect the dots between billionaires and the voices that do all the talking which affect public discourse. edit: I know you’re joking, but js.

      • guy@piefed.social
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        19 hours ago

        Work 7 days a week, 18 hour a day, 27 days a month, 34 years of your life, additionally 38 years of your life, 51 weeks a year?

        • AsoFiafia@lemmy.zip
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          18 hours ago

          You’re only working 7 days a week and 18 hours a day? Rookie numbers.

          I created an extra day and work 20 hours in each of em. No wonder you pansies can’t afford health insurance.

      • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        Oh that’s a terrible plan. Veterans are far more likely to end up poor than rich, and that doesn’t include the ones who never come home.

  • bitofarambler@crazypeople.online
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    17 hours ago

    Hi, I’ve been traveling for 15 yearsish and it is an absolutely dynamite financial decision in terms of saving money and accruing capital. It costs about $500 usd per month (rent, utilities, wi-fi/data, groceries) to live in most countries.

    If you’re a fluent English speaker, you have a guaranteed job with nearly 2 billion English students looking to pay you $10 to $100 per hour for a skill you’ve been practicing your whole life.

    If you want any info/details/context, ask here, the Travel community, or message me.

    • glorkon@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      In Germany, those are viewed as basic human rights. So, yes. Ask yourself how humane the American system is if it doesn’t.

        • glorkon@lemmy.world
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          5 hours ago

          On welfare they pay your rent. Tap water in Germany is perfectly drinkable, so - free water. Food? Bahnhofsmission. Also, the free money you get on welfare allows you to get food.

          • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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            3 hours ago

            You don’t have to pay for tap water in Germany? I pay about $100/month for municipal well water that’s barely drinkable.

            • glorkon@lemmy.world
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              2 hours ago

              You have to pay for tap water, but not when you’re on welfare. The state will cover it.

            • friendlymessage@feddit.org
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              1 hour ago

              If you are on welfare (Bürgergeld or Sozialhilfe) all costs in Germany are covered by the state that are deemed necessary for a dignified life. Several governments over the years repeatedly tried to cut benefits below that but were stopped by our constitutional court, referencing the first article of our constitution:

              (1) Die Würde des Menschen ist unantastbar. Sie zu achten und zu schützen ist Verpflichtung aller staatlichen Gewalt.

              (1) Human dignity is inviolable. To respect and protect it is the duty of all state authority

              It’s not a perfect system and many fall through the cracks because like everything in Germany, the welfare system is highly bureaucratic. But yes, basic necessities including tap water are covered. To be honest, I don’t get that this is so mind-blowing to some, I think that’s the bare minimum.

              It also comes with a lot of cooperation duties: if you are capable of working, you must accept job offers that are deemed reasonable or you might be sanctioned. If you are incapable of working (e.g. because you’re a single parent or disabled) you need to provide proof. It’s not a universal basic income, it’s meant as support to get people back into the job market.

              • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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                1 hour ago

                I had misinterpreted and thought they meant tap water was free for everyone in Germany, which is what sounded weird to me.

                It makes sense that you can get utility assistance if you’re on welfare. Even the US has hardship programs or charities that will pay for utilities, its just usually limited availbe slots restricted to the homeless, families with kids, or its a church membership benefit.

    • madejackson@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      As a matter of fact. Yes. And you won’t believe it, that’s even cheaper than millions of fentanyl addicts.

    • djmikeale@feddit.dk
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      13 hours ago

      In Denmark we quite happily pay a fuck tonne of tax but you get a lot of bang for your buck:

      you get money whether you’re a student, unemployed, to old or mentally/physically unwell to work, or one year after you’ve given birth. If you’re homeless you can get accommodation (not sure how this works though). Parents get some money for clothing and food for their kids until they turn 18. No free water though, but like clean tap water for 2 USD/ cubic metre so pretty affordable

  • Ilixtze@lemmy.ml
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    21 hours ago

    If you are a complete psycho and absolutely bloodthirsty, you have a bright career in the military. And if you are not the military can turn you into the desired psycho!