58% of Silicon Valley Tech Workers Delayed Having Kids Because of Housing Costs (chicagotribune.com) 209
An anonymous reader quotes the Mercury News:
Though some residents blame the area's highly paid tech workers for driving up the cost of housing, data increasingly shows that these days, even tech workers feel squeezed by the Bay Area's scorching prices. Fifty-eight percent of tech workers surveyed recently said they have delayed starting a family due to the rising cost of living, according to a poll that included employees from Apple, Uber, Google, LinkedIn, Facebook, Lyft, and other Bay Area companies.
The recently released poll, was conducted by Blind, an online social network designed to let people share anonymous opinions about their workplaces. Blind surveyed 8,284 tech workers from all over the world, with a large focus on the Bay Area and Seattle. Blind spokeswoman Curie Kim said the findings were "really surprising. In the Bay Area, tech employees are known to make one of the highest salaries in the nation," she said, "but if these people also feel that they can't afford housing and they can't start a family because of the rising cost of living, who can....?"
The average base salary for a software engineer at Apple is $121,083 a year, the article notes, yet the company also had the largest percentage of surveyed tech employees who said they'd been force to delay starting their families -- 69%.
"Anywhere else in the country, we'd be successful people who owned a home and didn't worry about anything," said one 34-year-old in a two-income family. "But here, that's not the case." While her husband helps Verizon deploy smart devices with IoT technology, they're raising two daughters in a rented Palo Alto apartment, "only to experience a $500 rent increase over two years."
The recently released poll, was conducted by Blind, an online social network designed to let people share anonymous opinions about their workplaces. Blind surveyed 8,284 tech workers from all over the world, with a large focus on the Bay Area and Seattle. Blind spokeswoman Curie Kim said the findings were "really surprising. In the Bay Area, tech employees are known to make one of the highest salaries in the nation," she said, "but if these people also feel that they can't afford housing and they can't start a family because of the rising cost of living, who can....?"
The average base salary for a software engineer at Apple is $121,083 a year, the article notes, yet the company also had the largest percentage of surveyed tech employees who said they'd been force to delay starting their families -- 69%.
"Anywhere else in the country, we'd be successful people who owned a home and didn't worry about anything," said one 34-year-old in a two-income family. "But here, that's not the case." While her husband helps Verizon deploy smart devices with IoT technology, they're raising two daughters in a rented Palo Alto apartment, "only to experience a $500 rent increase over two years."
Tech companies don't care (Score:5, Insightful)
If tech companies cared about families, they would locate more jobs outside Silicon Valley.
Re:Tech companies don't care (Score:4, Insightful)
If tech companies cared about families, they would locate more jobs outside Silicon Valley.
Probably not. I'm not a SV resident, but I'm a londoner for possibly many of the same reasons. It's much easier to attract people for jobs when there are lots of alternatives available, the person's spouse can easily get or keep their job and they don't have to move. I'm in London because my spouse has a career here. We kind of settled on that because we knew it would be easier for us to both get good jobs than just about anywhere else.
I'm guessing SV is pretty similar in that regard.
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Think having children will make you happy?
https://thepsychologist.bps.or... [bps.org.uk]
BPS = The British Psychological Society.
Re: Tech companies don't care (Score:1, Informative)
I would jump at the chance to move back to the midwest and pay $200k for a 5 bedroom, 3000 square ft. house on 2 acres of land. But despite my work being almost entirely remote, my boss has a hardon for daily face to face meetings and won't allow "telecommuting."
So I'm stuck making $150k in CA and paying $40k a year in rent because I can't afford paying $1millon for an entry level home. After taxes I clear about $35k and support a family of 4, so my actual cashflow is about the same as a minimum wage worker
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I would jump at the chance to move back to the midwest and pay $200k for a 5 bedroom, 3000 square ft. house on 2 acres of land. But despite my work being almost entirely remote, my boss has a hardon for daily face to face meetings and won't allow "telecommuting."
1) LOL. Houses aren't that cheap anymore, even in the Midwest. I'd estimate you're going to pay $350k at least for that setup now. Btw, remember that area with this kind of cheap housing are normally in areas with crappy internet offerings. Keep that mind if you plan on telecommuting.
2) If your boss is such a douchebag and you're so skilled, why don't you change jobs to someone who does allow telecommuting?
Re: Tech companies don't care (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not necessarily Midwest but I just got a 200k double-family house (separate in-law living space).
Sure it needs some work and I don't make CA-level money but my commute is either 0 (from home) or less than 30 minutes to just about any amenity.
I gave up the 120k+ contracting/high pressure IT life for a low(er) level managerial gig. Sure I don't touch everything I do anymore, and I sometimes miss the soldering iron in one hand and "Learning Python/ObjC and NodeJS for 8Mhz Microprocessors" books in the othe
Re: Tech companies don't care (Score:2)
I'm not necessarily Midwest but I just got a 200k double-family house (separate in-law living space).
Sure it needs some work and I don't make CA-level money but my commute is either 0 (from home) or less than 30 minutes to just about any amenity.
I gave up the 120k+ contracting/high pressure IT life for a low(er) level managerial gig. Sure I don't touch everything I do anymore, and I sometimes miss the soldering iron in one hand and "Learning Python/ObjC and NodeJS for 8Mhz Microprocessors" books in the othe
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> 1) LOL. Houses aren't that cheap anymore, even in the Midwest.
Sure they are. They certainly are com pared to California.
Outside of California, the options are diverse enough that you don't have to make yourself house poor. You can live in a cheaper neighborhood or buy a smaller house.
You also have a very real possibility of having your house COMPLETELY PAID OFF. Mine is. My 2nd is and I'm working on getting #3 paid off.
You sound like you are trying to convince YOURSELF much more than the rest of us.
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Even in Sweden or France, if you make 150K you are clearing more than $35K after taxes. Online calculators for California take home pay peg you around $99K with no deductions, if you're single.
As for min wage workers in CA getting free housing, day care and food, dream on.
You clearly find this hard to believe, but you're far, far better off than those on minimum wage.
It is dangerous that so many Americans are so out of touch with reality. You collectively have enormous wealth and education, and it cannot l
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> As for min wage workers in CA getting free housing, day care and food, dream on.
So you've never heard of Section 8 or Food Stamps? It's a minor scandal that's well reported in the news media that poorly paid Amazon and Walmart employees are on partial public assistance.
Bernie Sanders is even making noises about a punitive tax directed squarely at Amazon over this. HELL, it was posted HERE.
This stuff is no great secret.
Re: Tech companies don't care (Score:2)
So I'm stuck making $150k in CA and paying $40k a year in rent because I can't afford paying $1millon for an entry level home. After taxes I clear about $35k and support a family of 4, so my actual cashflow is about the same as a minimum wage worker because they get housing, day care, and food for free.
Wait a minute, you left out something - what are you paying in income taxes? Seems like half your paycheck went to taxes ($40K in rent, $35K left over from $150K income).
Re:Tech companies don't care (Score:5, Informative)
While that might be true, in extreme cases, I often feel like they're not even trying.
Before I lived in Silicon Valley, I was basically invisible to tech companies. Their recruiters didn't even acknowledge that I existed, and I never felt like I had many job opportunities. It was rare that I'd even get a response to a resume send-out.
The moment I moved to Silicon Valley, updating my address, the barrage began. Recruiters started constantly trying to get in touch with me, and its never let up. The simple fact that I'm already living here makes me 10x more desirable to them.
Re:Tech companies don't care (Score:4, Interesting)
Having just left the Bay area I can confirm there is a huge difference in hiring outside the Bay. The speed you get hired in the Bay is usually 1 week or less. A full day interview session after the initial phone screen and typically before I get home ( thanks bay area traffic ) I would have an offer.
Outside the bay area people ask so many questions before the phone screen. Take 3 weeks to decide to interview you. Then another couple weeks to move forward.
I found a remote gig for a bay area company faster than any outside the Bay area company finished interviewing.
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I don't get full day interviews. My work history and experience is the most important thing and we can go over than in an hour. I'm not a graduate so all the other silly tests just tell me they don't know what they are doing and I probably don't want to work there.
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I don't get full day interviews. My work history and experience is the most important thing and we can go over than in an hour.
Your work history and experience are nearly irrelevant, because it's too hard to confirm that they're actually true. It's easy to check that you worked the places you claim, moderately difficult to verify that you had the titles you claim and completely impossible to determine whether you did the things you say you did. I used to think that it was possible to discuss the details of someones work to ascertain whether it was really theirs, but it's too easy for people who were really carried by their teammate
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The verification part is when they ask you about those projects and you can answer questions about them in some detail.
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I'm guessing you're one of those bitter childless tech workers, Probably in your case a mixture of lack of pay AND inability to attract anything that breathes.
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And if you're talking east TN, don't forget Chattanooga--the city that pioneered 1 Gbps municipal broadband for just $70/month back when everyone else was still paying over $100/month for an "extreme" 6 Mbps.
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You don't need to be a Republican to think people are BIG FAT CHUMPS in California for putting up with those real estate prices and those insane health insurance rates.
That's why I fled in the other direction.
I would still vote Democrat if they handn't turned into socialists.
Hysterically complaining about who is in government while at the same time pining to give that same government a monopoly on your cancer treatment is insane beyond description.
So, move somewhere else (Score:5, Insightful)
Anywhere else in the country, we'd be successful people who owned a home and didn't worry about anything,
The solution is obvious: move somewhere else.
There are plenty of tech all across the "flyover states." Garmin is in Oklahoma, Boeing is in Kansas (along with a number of other aviation companies), Motorola and T.I. are in Austin, NASA is in Houston, 3M and Target are in Minnesota, etc.
You will probably earn a little bit less, but the cost of living will be much lower and the quality of life will almost certainly be much higher. Especially if less commuting and less traffic are appealing and if you want to be able to afford to have one parent work only part time or even not even be employed in order to parent full-time.
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The solution is obvious: move somewhere else.
I thought folks were living in their parents' basements these days . . . so that would mean that you would need to convince your parents to move somewhere else.
In addition, if you are already living in your parent's basement . . . where will your children live . . . ?
I guess you will need to dig another basement, below your parent's basement. This is probably what The Boring Company's real goal is . . . it's going to be basements . . . all the way down.
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Moving is harder than you think (Score:4, Interesting)
I lost track of him when I did the opposite and moved to a bigger city for the more stable working conditions. If I hadn't I couldn't afford my kid's college expenses. I'd prefer to go back to the small city I came from but there's no work there to speak of. At the end of the day workers go where the jobs are. And one or two employers isn't enough.
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The solution is obvious: move somewhere else. There are plenty of tech all across the "flyover states."
Good God, don't encourage them; Keep your SJWs there. I just read on slashdot earlier today a smug guy laughing that "Everyone is moving out of CA? SURE they are."
If I hold a door open for a lady and she starts screaming about it, I'll slug her because she certainly ISN'T a lady. To quote my mom: "I'll give you something to scream about."
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Does it really make sense to move to a place where there's only one good job in the city or the state? In SV you can walk out a job in the morning and have another one by lunch time. In the flyover states if your one-company town becomes a no company town you're fucked. You can't even sell your house because the local market collapses.
A little bit less pay? It's a lot more than that. Plus the lesser amenities, no options for eating out other than chains and diners, no stores other than Walmart, the racism,
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Small town kids don't go anywhere alone, they're driven everywhere, that's why they're all fat. And a lot of these small towns don't even have a downtown, just lots of parking lots and strip malls.
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The solution is obvious: move somewhere else.
The single variable solution is obvious. The multi-variable solution is far less so. When you move somewhere else are you going to be moving into a place where tech companies are falling over each other to recruit? Are you going to be getting the same money or will your new living place come with a new $60000 average yearly income instead of what you had?
You will probably earn a little bit less, but the cost of living will be much lower and the quality of life will almost certainly be much higher.
Probably is an understatement, and the quality of life can be a huge overstatement. Quality of life is determined exclusively by those people living it. Pe
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Ah, San Francisco, how I long to be there: the smell of human excrement everywhere, used needles and condoms, campers in the great outdoors all across the city, and the smug feeling of superiority any techie gets when stepping over passed out drug addicts!
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> GOP backwoods faggots deserve their coal mine lifestyle,
Sure. Anyone that doesn't buy into the California Kool-Aid is a Republican. The only alternatives are "Carbon Creek" and San Jose.
It's this kind of deranged nonsense that gets you Trump.
Keep on stumping hard for the stupid Cheeto.
Cry me a river (Score:4, Insightful)
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Cry me a river. There are decent tech jobs elsewhere.
But are there? Basic economic theory dictates there are not, at least not without considerable downsides.
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Not judging by the plenty of other comments in this section from people who have lived in an out of the bay area regarding how easily they found work and relative pay grades.
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Perhaps their expectations were out of line?
So what you're saying is there's an economic downside to not being in the bay area? At least you agree with my original point which was: downsides to not living in the bay area.
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... if you don't mind having to have your food flown in, and not having educational opportunities for any kids you might have.
This is not news at all (Score:2)
BS (Score:2)
"Anywhere else in the country, we'd be successful people who owned a home and didn't worry about anything," said one 34-year-old in a two-income family. "But here, that's not the case." While her husband helps Verizon deploy smart devices with IoT technology, they're raising two daughters in a rented Palo Alto apartment, "only to experience a $500 rent increase over two years."
BS. Anywhere else in the country you'd make 25-40% less - you have to go to SF to get your 6 figure salary, that salary doesn't follow you to MS when you change jobs and move to MS.
Re:BS (Score:4, Interesting)
Not really a big deal unless the only reason you need a " six figure salary " is for bragging rights.
Lemme break it down..
You need to make $160k in San Francisco to enjoy the same purchasing power as you would have in Houston, TX at only ~$80k
( Pick any Salary Calculator online to see the results for yourself )
Here are a few reasons why:
Groceries 31% less
Housing 71% less
Utilities 4% less
Transportation 28% less
Health Care 27% less
If someone is truly concerned about raising a family, why would they choose to live in one of THE most expensive places in the US ? :| )
( We can't have a child darling ! We pay $5k a month in rent !
Basically, one needs to choose between their ego and their family.
The fact this article even exists tells me all I need to know about what choice they've made.
Protip - You can't have your cake and eat it too. With the exception of the extremely wealthy, most folks will need to choose one or the other.
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Because 1, you want equity in a million dollar house not a 200k house, 2, you don't want to raise a family in a giant, city-wide parking lot, 3. you don't want to eat out exclusively at diners and fast food chains, 4. you don't want to have to drive everywhere, and raise fat children.
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You mean you don't like the literal swampy weather, and cockroaches the size of your head?
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I got the company I worked for in Sunnyvale to pay the moving expenses for me to relocate to a field office in Illinois and kept my original salary while getting to enjoy half the cost of living.
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A six figures salary, eh? Is that in binary?
Re: BS (Score:2)
Six-figure jobs are everywhere, but it doesn't take 'mad skilz' to make over $100K in Silicon Valley. It *does* take great skills to make that much elsewhere.
I contend the person complaining (who, by the way didn't defer their family, since they are a parent of 2 at 34) is a mid-level grunt with a big paycheck, not a world-class programmer that can command a quarter million dollar pay check.
A $500 rent increase over two years? (Score:2)
Don't you guys have laws that limits the rent increase to a percentage of the current rent?
Unless the limit is around 10% and they're paying $5000 per month for a freakin' apartment... are they?
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Techworkers Contributed to the Problem (Score:1)
it's a free country (Score:2)
Well, then move. It's a free country.
And maybe if Apple values you enough, you can even continue working for them.
Tech companies might like to move (Score:2)
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So, for you:
Blue State= enlightened cultured citizens
Red State= bumbling morons
I didn't' even vote for the that chump in the last election, but I can clearly see why he got elected.
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Well, this explains why he thinks an iPad is a computer.
And I really wish that was sarcasm.
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Why run to the Midwest or Texas? (Score:2)
Work elsewhere (Score:2)
There are plenty of good paying tech jobs outside of SV.
kids (Score:1)
Better to have kids early (Score:2)
Have them while you still live in a crappy apartment. If you wait until you can afford that 2 million dollar home with nice furniture they're just going to ruin it anyway. Kids are messy and break things.
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Have them while you are still too young to really grasp the realities of:
1) You will be giving up basically everything you like, including sleep, for them for years.
2) They will dominate your spending even long after they stop dominating your time. And still they will require a lot of your time.
3) They are really disgusting, and they bring home diseases and keep you sick all the time. That combined with the lack of sleep and the stress really takes its toll on your health.
4) The spouse of your dreams...ye
What else is there to say? (Score:2)
The information stated is no surprise at all. We all know the cost of living out on the west coast has gotten insane. Tech companies desperately want to hold onto that clout of having an HQ in the heart of Silicon Valley, but it's only doable as long as young, singles want to work there so badly, they'll take what amounts to these massive pay cuts due to high housing costs and more.
Even on the other side of the country, you deal with the same struggle to some extent in the DC metro area and anyplace around
This is what's wrong with society (Score:2)
The people who are going to be responsible parents look at their lives, their jobs, their finances and they thoughtfully consider whether or not they can afford to have children, and whether or not they can provide that child a good life.
On the other hand, all too many people 'accidently' have kids and don't seem to care about the consequences because they know that the social services safety net is there for them. And at the extreme end of the spectrum, you have mothers living in poverty who are literally
It's not going to improve anytime soon (Score:3)
Tech companies are driving unmeetable (for now) demand for new office space. As a result, lease rates are about 56% higher (last time I checked) per sq ft for offices than for Peninsula-area rental housing. You can see why financiers and developers prefer to build offices rather than housing.
It's fashionable in some circles to blame the jobs/housing imbalance on zoning restrictions, but that doesn't seem to be consistent with the ground truth. There are many millions of square feet of new development going on right now, and in many cases these are mixed-use projects with the freedom to build lots more housing, but the mix is overwhelmingly dominated by offices because of the difference in rates of return.
Construction costs are also a factor. Land is expensive and in short supply, of course, but high-rise construction is also expensive. High-rise flats are about 2.8 times as expensive as row houses for equivalent units, and therefore likely to be expensive to lease and not as likely to be profitable for the developers. They're surprisingly candid about this problem; for example, see https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/05/01/construction-costs-could-limit-where-san-jose-homes-are-built-google-adobe-diridon/ "Construction expenses have pressured developers severely enough that new market-rate apartments are profitable in no more than two districts in San Jose... Even worse, downtown San Jose — seen as a cornerstone of the city’s economy — is one of the sections where development of new housing is unlikely to produce profits for developers..."
Transportation is arguably more important than housing, but it's received little attention so far. The road network is saturated now at enough times and places that additional housing wouldn't always be viable in those places. The population distribution makes rail systems unusable in much of the Peninsula.
If the occasional Marxist analysis doesn't bother you, or if you can put it aside temporarily, chapters 5 through 7 of Richard Walker's "Pictures of a Gone City" offer a tremendous amount of useful data on the situation.
Silicon Valley arose in part because of conscious decisions to distribute strategic industries geographically. (See Margaret O'Mara's "Cities of Knowledge" for a good synopsis.) Silicon Valley is hyper-expensive, earthquake-prone, water-poor, transportation-poor, and at risk from sea-level rise. Learning from past experience and distributing some of the growth elsewhere might be a smart move.
obligatory - Idiocracy movie beginning (Score:2)
Population control (Score:2)
With how overpopulated the earth is becoming, isn't fewer people having children a good thing?
And isn't people waiting until they are more financial stable to have children also a good thing for society?
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Most clever people delay having kids! (Score:4, Insightful)
The cruel logic of natural selection (Score:2)
When Silicon Valley got its start, the high developer/engineer salaries it created allowed nerds to mate and marry for the first time. With the bidding up of California housing, the same forces are now preventing them from having children.
Enjoy your future of lawyers and politicians.
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My Electrical Engineer father got married thanks to drunken parties at college, not his salary. In fact, his income was largely unreliable in the early days of Silicon Valley due to all of the start-ups that failed. Although, maybe that aspect hasn't changed much. Kids were what held the marriage together, not income. The thing that convinced my Mom to pursue a relationship with my Dad over all the other frat-boys was his ability to hold onto something without dropping it while drunk.
Unlike the movies, frat
As low as that? (Score:2)
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Well that is dumb ... if everyone delayed having kids till they had better financial situation then we would have a near zero birthrate
Considering how expensive having kids is today, it's borderline insane to not delay having kids until your financial situation is in order. In my mid-20's I was making about a third of what I was making in my mid-30's when I had my first child. Not only that, but my wife and I were able to get youthful things like partying and traveling out of our system before settling down.
Accidents happen, but choosing to have kids in your 20's is a lifestyle choice I would never recommend.
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That fact is caused by society and it's unhealthy biologically..
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Having kids in your 30's is highly dangerous for the mother and dramatically increases the odds of birth defects.
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And worse, it's the responsible people that are delaying or not having kids while people that aren't have them. We're literally breeding more irresponsible people.
I know here in Seattle that have college degrees and work hard do not have kids while my friends I grew up with that dropped out of high school mostly have three or more kids.
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Different cultures have different expectations (Score:3)
In other older societies (especially hunter/gatherers), raising children is more a responsibility of the extended family, village, and tribe. Expectations for what people need to provide a child also differ. Also, increasingly workers in US society don't get a fair share of their contribution to production (compared to other societies). So, this notion of "cant afford children" is culturally relative.
See also the book "Our Babies, Ourselves" by an anthropologist.
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I am unable to locate that author, "An Anthropologist". Perhaps you meant Anne Anthropologist?
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LOL. Her name is Meredith F. Small:
https://www.amazon.com/Our-Bab... [amazon.com]
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This is pretty much what you have in Europe for the same reasons.
It's that "utopian socialism" that leftists in America pine for so much.
The difference between communism and democratic socialism is the size of the dinky apartment you get to share with your parents.
Re: Doubt it (Score:4, Insightful)
Same but 42 and 40, plus weâ(TM)re millionaires a couple times over with all the money we saved not having kids, and our lives are a hell of a lot more fun than our friends with kids.
Fun is quite subjective. Your life is probably more fun to you than theirs would be. But fun isn't the same to everyone. I for instance don't like vacations, so I would never trade places with a childless couple constantly taking vacations around the world.
Fun is also a very shallow way to measure a life. I prefer to strive for meaningful and purposeful experiences, rather than simply pursuing happiness. Having kids is certainly not the only way to find purpose, building your own company or becoming a top performer in your chosen profession are other great ways to lead a meaningful life. Having kids is one of the easiest way for your life to have meaning, though, which is one reason it is so common. That and the fact sex is so much fun.
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Let me try to explain (Score:2, Insightful)
First, I am not saying you are wrong in not having kids. If you don't want them, you should definitely not have them. And second, you are right: you probably have a lot more fun than my and my wife. And probably have more sex as well. You probably eat out more, travel more, see movies more, and generally do more of the things typically classified as fun.
But when my youngest daughter brings a pile of her favorite stuffed animals down and snuggles up to me with them, to watch terminator 2 together, or when my
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The other few billion people who don't feel the need to live in Palo Alto or anywhere nearby?
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I plan to die like my grandpa, on a road trip across the US, and peacefully in his sleep.
Not screaming in terror like the people in his car.
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You will have no body to take care of you when you're old and infirm, and without grandkids your golden years will be empty and pointless. Especially if/when one of you dies.
We are unlikely to be short of labour in that time scale as many do want to have children, and the dependency ratio in many western nations is expected to start declining from about 15 years hence. Even then, there are robots and digital assistants being developed to help with life in later years. In terms of grandchildren being required to make life fulfilled in later years, these days families are often spread so the contact time between grandparent and grandchild is often not that great anyway, so it's p
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Who want their kid to grow up in the middle of a race war? (Yeah, I am Swedish) Maybe in fifteen years when the dust settles.
If you are Swedish you are on the winning side of any race wars I know of. Unless perhaps you are a Laplander, but considering you are worried about an Islamic takeover I doubt that is what you were referring to.
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The islamic version of the movie idiocracy?
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