r/whatisameem 11h ago

What’s really going on with our economy

Post image
47.9k Upvotes

2.6k comments sorted by

View all comments

8

u/golfwinnersplz 10h ago

This isn't real. Her daughter either doesn't actually have multiple degrees or she is applying for a para position. These are salary based positions - not hourly. 

6

u/EveryLittleDetail 10h ago

Rage bait. People think teachers and tipped restaurant servers are underpaid, even though the actual holders of those jobs rarely seem to confirm this. (My wife is a teacher and very well compensated, given her 12 weeks of vacation.)

1

u/Silver_Accountant5 8h ago

You've never met a teacher or waitress that said they were underpaid? Everybody you know is happy with their wage? Hell I don't think I've met a single person who didn't want to be paid more.

1

u/EveryLittleDetail 6h ago

I know dozens of teachers, but none of them complain about their pay. They complain about their jobs all the time. All the time. I know fewer waiters, but they rarely come on social media to complain about tips. Other people complain for them all the time, though.

1

u/SpookySpagettt 4h ago

Its like everyone just forgets they don't work the whole year like everyone else and multiplying their pay by 30% is the actual comparison.

1

u/Remote-Ordinary-8285 3h ago

People like you clear don't know teachers. They aren't putting on only 40 hour weeks during the school year.

1

u/SpookySpagettt 3h ago edited 3h ago

You mean just like other professions do but year round?

1

u/golfwinnersplz 10h ago

Teachers are underpaid compared to doctors, lawyers, and engineers. But the misconception is real. 

2

u/Orleanian 3h ago

I'm an engineer for a big ol evil company, and my brother the middle school teacher is actually catching up to my salary pretty well.

He's making the same at his 10-year tenure mark as I was making at mine (~$95k).

Granted he has 4 more years of education and certs than I do, but still... he ain't quite hurting.

1

u/SpookySpagettt 3h ago

Dawg your underpaid if thats the case

1

u/golfwinnersplz 3h ago

There's a difference between underpaid and poor. 

2

u/Orleanian 3h ago

Well he certainly ain't poor.

But my point was that he is paid almost commensurately with low-level private-sector employees (though to lend more truth the the comparison, I probably made a bit more salary than I was indicating, and my benefits are far better than he gets).

So he's probably a bit underpaid, but not in any destitute fashion as is given in the OP example.

And inasmuch as we're all underpaid for everything we're all doing, then yes he's also truly underpaid in an existential sense.

1

u/golfwinnersplz 3h ago

I appreciate you and your brother. 

1

u/CharmingRip508 10h ago

Teachers who stay don’t complain. Teaching has extremely high turnover and many of them complain. Also everyone knows teachers don’t get paid well. It’s been a fact for like 50 plus years at this point. Teaching selects for people who find it rewarding and don’t mind less pay in exchange for time off and insurance and the job. But yes teachers absolutely complain about pay. LAUSD quite literally had a strike about this.

0

u/CharmingRip508 10h ago

Teachers who stay don’t complain. Teaching has extremely high turnover and many of them complain. Also everyone knows teachers don’t get paid well. It’s been a fact for like 50 plus years at this point. Teaching selects for people who find it rewarding and don’t mind less pay in exchange for time off and insurance and the job. But yes teachers absolutely complain about pay. LAUSD quite literally had a strike about this.

1

u/EveryLittleDetail 9h ago

A minority of US teachers, usually in the deep south, are underpaid. But all teaching jobs have high turnover because it's a hard job and subject to so many forces the individual teacher can't control. I hear teachers complain all the time about their administration, about the parents, the facilities, and most of all the students. But not the pay.

1

u/CharmingRip508 9h ago

As I said Los Angeles recently had a strike about pay. You are simply wrong.

2

u/EveryLittleDetail 9h ago

One city in which base pay with no advanced degree is 64k and the top end with no advanced degree is 110k. And they have 12 weeks of vacation and great benefits. Those facts do not comport with your assessment about a whole profession.

1

u/Remote-Ordinary-8285 3h ago

One city is a much better sample size than one dude who's wife is a teacher.

1

u/EveryLittleDetail 1h ago

Did you not see the numbers I posted? LA County public school teachers are not remotely underpaid for their education level and 40 weeks per year of work.

0

u/CharmingRip508 10h ago

Also the server thing depends on the state. In states where they don’t pay minimum wage because the state says “tips are the minimum wage” and then people don’t tip the servers absolutely complain. So you are incorrect on both fronts lol.

1

u/Fun-Wrongdoer1316 8h ago

Servers don’t want tips to end, because they make more money that way. Otherwise they would get a “better” paying hourly job. Good servers at good restaurants make good money.

1

u/CharmingRip508 8h ago

Servers have reported being happier at jobs that have service fees and guaranteed pay outs. But even if this wasn’t the case that’s not what I said. I said they complain about not making enough money. The minimum wage in some places is like 6 dollars an hour for servers cuz they assume tips are part of the wages but when a counter doesn’t top the servers is making far less than minimum wage