the cac mamba
Banned
People will go broke to pay them tithes![]()

its stupid if you can afford it, but the fact that people who cant afford it give money to the church is pretty saddening
People will go broke to pay them tithes![]()

You seem to be speaking from a place of privilege.
Both my parents were too busy working full time jobs (and my mom went to school)?and keeping their sobriety in check to teach us that stuff. When you're struggling you don't think about teaching your kids how to manage what little you have in the best way possible because you're still learning your self. My Parents just wanted us to do good in school and stay out of trouble.
truth is, this idea of "should save some money" is false. what people are usually doing is fake saving. meaning they have all sorts of debt( not talking about the basic monthly bills/car payments). i'm talking about old debt. so what they do is choose not to pay those debts and use that money to save. but in reality if i did a your budget sheet. you would still be in the red with zero savings. true savings is when you are at worse up to date on all of your bills(current and old debt). at best, (dont have debt at all). all the while saving some cash on the side. anything else is fake savings. and people that are poor do this a lot as well as middle class and people with money.Someone asked me my opinion
I said it depends on the situation and assuming we are talking U.S poor and not 3rd world country poor, it really on a case by case basis but IMO a single no children having, mentally/physically healthy adult in the US should be able to save some money
Adding kids and other things add complexity to the situation and really boils to down to how much sacrifice there willing to make. Again havin children is a huge factor on what sacrifices can be made
A ghetto tax is not literally a tax. It is a situation in which people pay higher costs for equivalent goods or services simply because they are poor or live in a poor area. A paper by the Brookings Institution, titled From Poverty, Opportunity: Putting the Market to Work for Lower Income Families,[4] is widely cited as a study into ghetto taxes, although the report itself does not use the term.[5][1][6]
The problem of ghetto taxes is closely associated with mobility; one study in the USA showed that higher prices might be prevalent in some neighbourhoods, but people with access to a car would have more access to affordable goods and services elsewhere, whilst those without a car would bear the brunt of higher local prices.[2][7]
Tackling the problem of ghetto taxes is difficult. For instance, high-interest-rate loans are more likely to be taken by people on lower incomes; however, a study has shown that capping interest rates results in reduced credit availability for those people who most need it. This may make the problem worse.[citation needed]
Examples[edit]
- Credit services: Lower income consumers are much more reliant on upon alternative financial services that are more expensive, such as check cashers and payday lenders, pawnshops, and auto-title lenders.[5]
- Cigarettes: In some areas it is possible to buy (legally or illegally) single cigarettes. Purchasers are typically poor (and perhaps unable to afford a whole pack of cigarettes), but per-cigarette cost is higher, thus making smoking a more expensive habit for poorer people. This is in addition to the fact that (in many countries) the prevalence of smoking is already concentrated in lower socioeconomic groups.[8][9]
- Household appliances: In the USA, lower-income households are more likely to spend more on a given household item. Also, rental of household electrical items is generally more expensive in the long term than purchasing them, but these rental services are mostly used by people unable to pay the whole cost of the item up-front.[5]
- Groceries: Grocery stores in poor neighbourhoods are smaller than in large neighbourhoods; lacking economies of scale, they are more expensive as well. Low income households may find it difficult to access cheaper out-of-townsupermarkets.[2][3] Some poor households may not be able to afford large quantities, and hence lose out on bulk discounts.[10]
- Utilities: Poor people are more likely to pay higher prices for long-distance phone calls.[11]
- Financial Services: Customers that can maintain a minimum bank balance (usually $1000) can avoid debit transaction fees that can add up quickly. those that have less than the $1000 minimum have to pay the per transaction fees; also there are far fewer bank machines in poor areas, often those machines are third party cash machines that charge very high fees, especially when withdrawing small amounts. A $2.50 fee on withdrawing $20 is not uncommon.
America's Poverty Tax
While America’s jobs and economy remain flat, it’s getting more expensive to be poor, with everyone from payday lenders to subprime credit cards charging extortionate rates. Gary Rivlin crunches the numbers to find just how much it costs.
It’s expensive being poor. And with the misery index high and unemployment persistently high, that’s good news for those in the poverty business. The working poor have become Big Business—with the invention of the payday loan, rent to own, and a long list of diabolically clever ideas that entrepreneurs have devised to get hundreds-of-millions rich off those with thin wallets.
Call it a poverty tax. It’s the hundreds of dollars, if not thousands, in extra fees that people making $20,000 or $25,000 or $30,000 a year pay because they live on the economic fringes. These days it takes more money than ever to be poor.
The corner check casher takes the biggest bite, at least from those 20 million or so Americans who have no bank account—the so-called unbanked. In the main these are people who’ve messed up their relationship with a bank. They’ve bounced so many checks that no bank wants them as a customer. Or they’ve racked up so many fees they have dug too expensive a hole from which to escape. ................
that isn't the norm. I mean alot of ppl like to think it is so they don't feel like they are underachieving. But that isn't the normRight but these people are the norm in America. Slowly changing, but they Fed still uses these ridiculous benchmarks on what feeds a family of 4-5 based on 1970's standards of living. I'm like nikka life hasn't been like that since my parents were just born in that era.![]()
well it depends on which church you give it to. if you're giving your 10% of your broke pay check. thats still tough. but if the church you give it to has a track record of helping those in need. you will then be able to reap the benefits of your 10%.
its stupid if you can afford it, but the fact that people who cant afford it give money to the church is pretty saddening
Yes but are you telling me that the 27.4% of blacks in poverty are all like that? That all of them are simply poor because they didn't try hard enough? Using the same stereotypes they use on Fox News. A lot of these posts are ignoring institutionalized racism too bringing up immigrants that are making it
Some of the responses are very oversimplified
keep saving.I'm sure no one asked it yet, but what exactly happens with a year of savings?
So you miraculously save $1000.
Then what? You can't buy a house or a car with that. The money may act as a barrier in case you hit a hard spot, but it's not saving you from poverty.
that isn't the norm. I mean alot of ppl like to think it is so they don't feel like they are underachieving. But that isn't the norm
I ain't saying the norm is wealthy or rich, but the average person is living...average
How many kids did your parents have?
I don't know about you but in my city being broke and barely scraping by with 2 kids seems to be average.
Everyone I talk to including in my family considers me to be "Rich" because I can afford organic food. Well it's rather easy: Don't have kids unless you have a cool Million in the bank, don't live beyond your means and buy property with space you aren't going to use. But many folks have the traditional American dream of the 1950's and we are living in a different time and people are living in the past instead of adapting their expectations to the new reality.
Game is rigged against poor people. You know the rules now find the loopholes to your advantage.
Complaining ain't getting u nowhere but mediocrity.

