RaoulDook

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RaoulDook , to Work Reform in Employees Who Stay In Companies Longer Than Two Years Get Paid 50% Less

Well, it's different if you work for good companies. I've stayed at my last 3 jobs for well over 2 years each and my career is going great, making twice as much money as I need. IT / technical stuff. 6 years at one, 4 years at the next, currently at 3 years with current.

I've never lasted that long at any former employer though. My shortest employment was half of one shift at a factory, it sucked so bad I left on my first lunch break. The moral of my story is that it's OK to stay with a good company, if you can find a good job like that. Experience counts for a lot towards getting hired to these good jobs.

RaoulDook , to Work Reform in What kind of institutional gaslighting is this?

Shit I've been doing that at all my jobs for the last 20+ years. Apparently it's not really a real problem.

RaoulDook , to Work Reform in Make no mistake, the owning class is actively working against your interests

Still not a great definition, because many working class people have emergency funds saved up. It’s normally advised for adults to have a 6-month emergency fund of savings to live on, and many of us responsible types do. My basic necessities could be met for a long time with no job but I would need to get one before the savings ran out of course.

RaoulDook , to Work Reform in California Dem Barbara Lee defends call for $50 federal minimum wage: 'Just barely enough'

No idea what that means, and I don’t give a fuck.

RaoulDook , to Work Reform in California Dem Barbara Lee defends call for $50 federal minimum wage: 'Just barely enough'

OK child

RaoulDook , to Work Reform in California Dem Barbara Lee defends call for $50 federal minimum wage: 'Just barely enough'

Sure give everybody a 100k salary as the minimum wage. All companies can afford that, right?

I’ll quit my fuckin’ job and go do the most bullshit easy job there is for 100k all day. No need for special skills anymore, just do some basic shit.

RaoulDook , to Personal Finance in Salary Needed To Buy a Home In The US

People in rural areas usually commute to work to a larger town. When I was doing that it took me about 30 minutes to commute to work.

I gradually leveled up my career and now I work remote in my home office, and it’s the best possible scenario with my good pay and low cost of living.

RaoulDook , to Personal Finance in Salary Needed To Buy a Home In The US

Sure but if you live in the city, you have to deal with all the city bullshit, and that’s not worth the potentially higher pay and vastly higher cost of living. I would never live in an apartment again personally unless my financial situation went to shit and that’s all I could afford. City traffic is total ass garbage to deal with, and the crowding of people everywhere, having to wait to get through crowded lines for stuff, the stench of dumpsters in the summer… all that stuff that I never have to deal with here is the value I prefer.

RaoulDook , to Personal Finance in Salary Needed To Buy a Home In The US

That all depends on the kind of entertainment and services you want. If you want nightclubs and prostitutes, you need to go to a big city.

If you want freedom, clean air, nature, and the ability to own a home then you need to get out of the big city. For most general goods and services, you can order it online if you don’t have it available. That’s the same everywhere though.

RaoulDook , to Personal Finance in Salary Needed To Buy a Home In The US

No I don’t, I already know that most people live in big cities. It’s super obvious to everyone with a tiny bit of education or awareness.

You seem to have missed the point that I’m letting you know about the options that are out there. People assume that it costs $3000 a month to own a house, and it definitely does not. There are houses all over rural America for $100k ballpark price.

RaoulDook , to Personal Finance in Salary Needed To Buy a Home In The US

Regardless of any of the above assumptions, the title of the post makes what I said relevant and accurate. Refer to the title of the post.

It’s simply not true that good jobs are not available outside of the big cities. How do you think rural people survive? On my road, in a town of far less than 10k residents, there are easily 20-30 houses that are nice as fuck, big brick houses with large yards and well maintained everything. Those people have serious money. Places like that can be found all over the place if you drive through rural America. Likewise you can find shantytowns of poor people in rural areas and cities.

Basically if you have marketable skills, there are jobs all over the place. Taking your skills to where your money goes farther makes life a lot easier. I’m making more than double the amount of money I need to support my family at the moment.

RaoulDook , to Personal Finance in Salary Needed To Buy a Home In The US

Because the title of the post is “Salary Needed To Buy a Home In The US”

“The US” is a very large country with more rural area than large cities, and there is opportunity for a much lower cost of living out there that people should know about.

RaoulDook , to Personal Finance in Salary Needed To Buy a Home In The US

They should have also included some rural areas’ home buying prices for perspective against the absurd cost of living in a large city.

Here’s my data to add to the list: bought my house last decade in a rural area, while I was making about $45000 annually, mortgage cost per month is literally off the chart at under $800/mo.

RaoulDook , to Home Improvement in How to build fire protective battery charger enclosure?

Well I’ve seen it happen myself, and I was learnt of it by an old-ass electronics engineer who did calculus equations on graph paper all day to solve microwave transmitter issues, and he was more knowledgeable about electronics than any other human being I’ve ever met so I’m going to continue NOT storing batteries on the concrete floor.

You can store your batteries on the floor if you want to of course, but you’ve been warned.

RaoulDook , (edited ) to Home Improvement in How to build fire protective battery charger enclosure?

A small spot on the concrete floor with cinderblocks to make a table / shelf for the chargers and batteries should be fine, just as long as nothing flammable is within a distance that flames could reach it if the batteries caught fire in there (not by the wall or under something). I just keep mine on a shelf in the garage during the cooler months, but I bring them inside when it’s hot.

But batteries stored directly on the floor is also bad, so you’d want something to set them on. Somehow batteries can discharge into the ground if left on a concrete floor. An old metal ammo can on a cinderblock would be good enough IMO.

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