Everyone is arguing about this video of Tucker Carlson buying groceries in Moscow
ยท Feb 15, 2024 ยท NottheBee.com

What do you think?

(Full video if you want it)

Okay, so over here in the Midwest, I can still feed a family of 6 on less than $600 a month, if you exclude the extra toiletries and household items you get at the store.

As a baseline, my state of Michigan has an average yearly salary of $58,000, compared to $75,000 in New York or $73,000 in California.

In Russia, you're lucky to have a yearly salary higher than $15,000 USD (the average is still around $700/month).

This is why everyone is arguing in the comment section ๐Ÿ˜ญ๐Ÿ˜‚

My favorite:

๐Ÿ’€

Then the Russians chimed in:

Lower income, lower costs of living.

I'm not gonna throw some expert economic theory at ya ... I just know prices are wild in America and if there's a phrase I could use to describe the situation, it would be "UNSTABLE PRESSURE." Our fam has to budget these days to stay ahead. We spend as much on healthcare as groceries. My internet bill just jumped $9 randomly last month. I feel like we're in a vice and we're being squeezed. It's pressure - so much dang pressure. And it's gotta give.

Anyone else feel like that?

I agree with Tucker when he says a lot of the "good person vs bad person" stuff the media frames isn't true - the world is better divided between the people who want to get rich by starving people and the people who want to feed the world to make it richer ... and holy moly do I feel like my own government is in the evil category right now.

Now go check out the comments under Tucker's video about Moscow's subway stations...


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