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I suppose one explanation I forgot to include is efficiency: it is possible that there are many people for whom food delivery makes sense but it wasn't a solvable problem until internet, smart phones and doordash.
It would be easy to construct efficiency arguments (and they'd probably even be true), but they're at odds with the idea of an affordability crisis.
I think the affordability crisis is primarily referring to three markets specifically: health, education, and housing.
I agree, but the lack of sympathy comes from seeing regular people splashing money around like it ain't no thang.
I get that, but some would argue that the causality is reversed. That is, people turn to financial nihilism because actually saving for a home, education, and being able to pay for your own healthcare seems out of reach
Sympathy is a feeling. It's immune to your causality.
I see the gulag is finally doing you some good
About time
This is why there's so little sympathy for "affordability"