The thing is, there is a difference between flipping a burger at McDonald's and a real restaurant.
I would not judge cooks of any kind. Or anyone really. There are a lot of problems, and you have to understand that in a lot of these cities the cost of living is astronomically higher than most suburbs.
What you get are a lot of people in densely populated areas where it's harder to get a good paying job complaining about how they don't make enough to live.
From where I stand, everyone should be able to make a liveable wage. If you are making a business money, you should be paid a liveable wage.
The problem comes into play where everyone wants a house or high end apartment and the regulations, utilities, internet, etc. are all going up in prices which results in liveable wages being higher than they should be, and indeed higher than many businesses can afford to pay out.
Now with food and basic necessities skyrocketing thanks to the left and the cucked deep state RINOs, it costs $20 bucks to fill up a quarter of a tank of gas, $10 bucks for a small meal and rent in the hundreds on top of a car lease (or unforeseen troubles with an owned car) costs numbering in the hundreds, thousands if repairs are needed and you aren't leasing.
Even good bicycles now are $800+ for entry level. And that's for a hybrid, not even a true road bike which you would probably want if commuting a good few miles in the road.
The inflation is out of control and the cost of living goes up, but wages rarely keep up. So when you see these costs going up sharply like they are now and were before Trump, you get a lot of people who are not necessarily low skilled struggling so they turn for help.
It makes sense when you create this scenario that you can exhort your plans to give free money, tuition, etc. to buy yourself power over the other side.
The average person is not ambitious enough to ask for large sums of cash for a job...that we see it in large numbers is telling.
The thing is, there is a difference between flipping a burger at McDonald's and a real restaurant.
I would not judge cooks of any kind. Or anyone really. There are a lot of problems, and you have to understand that in a lot of these cities the cost of living is astronomically higher than most suburbs.
What you get are a lot of people in densely populated areas where it's harder to get a good paying job complaining about how they don't make enough to live.
From where I stand, everyone should be able to make a liveable wage. If you are making a business money, you should be paid a liveable wage.
The problem comes into play where everyone wants a house or high end apartment and the regulations, utilities, internet, etc. are all going up in prices which results in liveable wages being higher than they should be, and indeed higher than many businesses can afford to pay out.
Now with food and basic necessities skyrocketing thanks to the left and the cucked deep state RINOs, it costs $20 bucks to fill up a quarter of a tank of gas, $10 bucks for a small meal and rent in the hundreds on top of a car lease (or unforeseen troubles with an owned car) costs numbering in the hundreds, thousands if repairs are needed and you aren't leasing.
Even good bicycles now are $800+ for entry level. And that's for a hybrid, not even a true road bike which you would probably want if commuting a good few miles in the road.
The inflation is out of control and the cost of living goes up, but wages rarely keep up. So when you see these costs going up sharply like they are now and were before Trump, you get a lot of people who are not necessarily low skilled struggling so they turn for help.
It makes sense when you create this scenario that you can exhort your plans to give free money, tuition, etc. to buy yourself power over the other side.
The average person is not ambitious enough to ask for large sums of cash for a job...that we see it in large numbers is telling.