156 points

After years of working and saving, I can now afford to miss ONE paycheck. I’m no longer poor! /s

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45 points

Capitalist scum!

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13 points

Fuck outta here with your weak-ass bones!

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6 points

Give that man some milk!

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24 points

When the revolution comes, you will not be spared.

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96 points

Lots of people in here fighting about what “working class” means. If you have to work to survive (other than minor household chores), you’re working class. If you have enough money, or assets that you get dividends from or can borrow against, or passive income so you don’t need a regular employment then you probably aren’t working class.

Working Poor isn’t as common and definition varies a lot.

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27 points
*

This is it, it’s super simple.

If I dialed back everything, I could probably live a few years off my savings/investments, and selling some stuff. But I would be just burning trough my money, and I would need to go back to work eventually. So I’m still working class, even if I’m in a luckier situation than most people.

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9 points

I feel like there is a world in between of these two

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34 points

There really isn’t. Each group has a wider pay rate than maybe is implied, but functionally, there isn’t a role in capitalism between them. Wealthy people want us to think there is a wide range of classes so we argue with each other instead of cooperating against them.

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8 points

There is a class in between though. Those who can’t stop working and live on capital alone, but still have enough leeway to try and an asset that’ll improve their financial status. For example:

  • Investing in higher education that can bring you higher salary. For the middle class it’s a gamble - maybe you won’t make it, or maybe you won’t be able to get a job that justifies your degree - but that’s categorically different from the rich who are pretty much guaranteed to graduate and get a good job using their connections (with the degree used as laundered merit) and from the poor who can’t afford to invest the time (let alone the money) because their families will be in big trouble for several years if they don’t work and bring income.
  • Buying a house. Not a problem for the rich, not a possibility for the poor, but for the middle class it’s a huge thing - both in the effort it requires and the benefit of not having to rent (or being able to rent it to others)
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0 points

I can stop working for about 2 or 3 years depending on sacrifices I am willing to make. Do I qualify as a working poor class?

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2 points

That’s what they want you to think. If we’re infighting, we’re not outfighting.

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7 points

Oh I think working poor is pretty easy to define. If you work full time (or equivalent at multiple jobs) and you’re not able to pay your bills without government assistance then you’re the working poor.

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1 point

But you can be working poor and not in those conditions

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1 point

You mean above the assistance line? I’m willing to entertain it, but please explain.

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53 points

What I find interesting is how often statements like this that are trying to unify the working class (or whatever you end up calling it) just derails into semantics instead of actually people bringing out the pitchforks and shouting “eat the rich”

We are all fucked.

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17 points

Amongst the little mice fighting under the table for crumbs falling from the cake being divided above, once in a while one finds a slightly larger crumb, proudly raises it over his head and shouts: “See?! The system woks!”

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2 points

Fuxking right?!

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0 points

Which sounds like the statement wasn’t well crafted

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49 points

“But through my retirement I own .000000001% of a company!”

Having stock in a company doesn’t make you a capitalist anymore than checking out a bible from the library makes you a Christian.

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15 points

.000000001% of a $100 billion company is $1. The average person could own per year $5000 if they used automatic deposits and got the employer match.

I know you are trying to exaggerate to make a point, but don’t discourage people from getting the employer match if they can.

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19 points

I employee matched for years just to watch our CEO tank our stock to 1/5 the original price.

Point being, remember it’s still an investment in a single stock and comes with that amount of risk.

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4 points

Hol up, you left your retirement fund in the hands of your employer? You didn’t diversify and invest in the broader market? Most plans make you hold some for a period of time, every single plan offers a way to get out of being fully invested in one company. That’s insane.

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45 points
  • 10,000 seconds = 2.8 hours
  • 100,000 seconds = 1.2 days
  • 1,000,000 seconds = 11.6 days
  • 10,000,000 seconds = 116 days
  • 100,000,000 seconds = 3 years
  • 1,000,000,000 seconds = 32 years

Don’t be fooled. It’s billionaires against everyone else. Even multimillionaires are closer to the everyday person. The working class consists of two groups: those without disposable income (nominally those with “hours” in income), and those with some disposable income (days in income).

If they ain’t got a “year” in income, their they’re one of us.

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17 points

I think it’s better to think of it like this:

How do you make your money? Do you need to make a wage? Or can you let your property (land, buildings, stocks, etc.) be your income?

The real amount doesn’t matter, it’s whether you have to work to live or not.

If you have to work, you are the working class. If you don’t, you are the owner/capitalist class. But your analysis is still somewhat correct: millionaires and small business owners are closer to the working class than billionaires, it does still matter how they make it though.

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5 points

I think I generally agree, yeah. There’s something to be said too for if your money is made by owning or by maintaining. I don’t give a shit about landlords who rent shit out and do nothing else, but I think building administrators who fix issues and handle maintenance are probably working class.

Comes back to what you were saying. Do you make money through labor, or through ownership?

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12 points

Modern America is like Tsarist Russia. A tiny elite, a small ‘middle class,’ and a vast army of poor people.

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11 points

It’s generally considered safe to withdraw 4% of your nest egg each year. Someone with 2 million can support an 80k/year retirement.

The average multimillionaire is literally just any person with a six figure salary who has been saving for retirement and is nearing retirement. You basically can’t retire without at least being a millionaire.

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5 points

Yeah the big difference is now much it takes to amass that money. If we have a capitalist system, there’s nothing wrong with workers saving money to retire with a few million.

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