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A "modest one bedroom" isn't exactly modest - it's a luxury for a single person. Modest would be sharing a studio with several other people.
The federal minimum wage really is quite low (even that shared studio would cost a large fraction of what a minimum-wage worker earns) but I don't think society should be targeting the "lives alone in a one-bedroom" lifestyle as the minimum when sharing a space is a reasonable and much more affordable way to live.
If we blend the peasants into a fine paste, imagine how many more we could fit!
Why are you defending both these conditions for people and superyachts? In what way is this good for society? Shall we return to slavery - productivity will skyrocket as labour costs plummet, and you can motivate your workers by beating them nearly to death.
I'm a much stronger supporter of the American status quo than most other people here are. It's very good to live in this country, certainly much better than living where I was born in the former Soviet Union. (Middle-class people from there come here to work illegally for very low wages, because even the people with the lowest incomes here have more money than a middle-class person there.) There's room for improvement, but changes should be made slowly and carefully, with an emphasis on not breaking anything. So when someone proposes a policy that would encourage billionaires to leave, I'm against that because it might have unintended side effects on the economy. And when someone has unreasonable expectations about what the minimum wage ought to be, I'm against that too for the same reason.
The new generation of "clean your plate, there's starving children in Africa."
Saying "don't complain because someone else has it worse" is the worst form of bad faith, uneducated argument. You're the problem.
I'm not saying "don't complain". I'm saying "be very careful when making changes to a system that already works better than most." A lot of people talk as if life in the USA is awful and demand radical change. I think it would be a terrible idea to trust them not to break the delicate machinery of our prosperity.
That's likely because for many people the USA is awful and in need of radical change
It's really easy to look at how other countries are doing better than we are at things and learn from them, it's not like any change we try would be some magical untested idea that would break the country in 2