this post was submitted on 16 May 2026
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It sounds like you're using a lot of terms created specifically to divide the working class. I agree that an engineer making $250k is working class, as long as they legitimately have no passive income, which at that level of pay, you probably have some passive income, right? Maybe you're not a landlord but you're probably investing and seeing returns form that, right? You may even have some healthy crypto holdings that you don't talk about on the internet but won't shut up about in real life.
Yes, I am the "working poor". That's what my parents were, that what all of my siblings are, and that's what I will be for the rest of my life. There's no way out. And for that reason, I am obviously bitter towards people who will be able to achieve my lifelong dream of owning a home and retiring, because those people most likely grew up in a home that was owned by their parents and now have parents who are comfortably retiring, and therefore have no real appreciation for what they have.
I’m not dividing anyone, these are the generally accepted terms for people’s income brackets and method of earning income.
You are lashing out at working class people for daring to do something easily obtainable for the majority of working class people.
You regularly comment on the economy and politics yet you don’t even understand who your peers are meant to be in the struggle against income inequality.
It’s not a struggle between cashier and doctor.
It’s the working class and the owner class that are in different lanes of a K shaped economy.
Owning a few shares doesn’t make your income passive. Shares are the best long term vehicle for retirement savings and people should be building investments their whole working life so they can afford to retire.
I'm not saying you're dividing people, I'm saying you're using terms made to divide the working class. Those generally accepted terms literally exist so people like doctors don't have to feel like they're in the same class as cashiers.
You say obtainable for the "majority of working class people", but I've seen very few cases of this actually happening in a meaningful way. You come from a higher income bracket, you stay in a higher income bracket. You come from a lower income bracket, you most likely stay in a lower income bracket.
I'm fully aware of who the struggle is against. My problem is that these "working class" "middle class" whatever you want to call them "class" people tend to think of themselves as "coming up" or "temporarily embarrassed", and try not to lump themselves in with "the poors". I have no faith that these people would want to actually change what would need to be changed, because it would damage their chances of becoming legitimately wealthy one day, and if you're already that close, you're not going to want to give up that shot.
It's emblematic in a lot of these comments, actually. People who seem to just straight up not understand/appreciate their own levels of privilege. That's the thing that pissed me off to begin with: just somebody living in Seattle (one of the most expensive COL areas in the country) talking about their multiple trips to Hawaii, and casually talking about owning multiple cars. It's so out of touch. That's not remotely the world that most of the working class live in. It's about as unrealistic for me as owning multiple mansions and yachts and private jets. We do not share the same class interests.
And the part that makes me saddest isn't even how obvious it is that this "working class" you're talking about don't even care about the "working poor", it's that they don't even think about the "working poor".