• gonzo0815@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    It’s not healthy, but it’s cheap: a hamburger at McDonald’s — €1.40, if I buy fries with it, €3.50.

    3.50€ for a meal isn’t cheap and nothing a poor person can afford on a regular basis. I can cook a great meal for under 2€ that doesn’t consist of trash. What a detached asshole.

    • Fushuan [he/him]@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      McDonald’s is not cheap food, it’s fast food. I don’t expect this cunt to know the difference.

    • Endorkend@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      The 1,40 burgers are barely enough to satiate a child, even with fries.

      A menu that can fill an adult, that’s 13-14€ easily. And that’s still just one meal.

      The quality 3 meals a day I consume and make at home average 5€ per portion. resulting in 450€ food budget per person per month, I generally go for white label products if the quality is good enough.

      That’s 900€ a month for 2 people for food alone (this was 300ish before COVID).
      850-1000€ for entry level 1 bedroom rent here, brings us to 1750-1900€ a month for a roof and food, another 75-100 for electricity (and then you have to be very usage conscious) brings us to 1825-2000€ a month, add required insurance (fire/health/accidents) for another 50-100€ brings us to 1875-2100€ a month.

      Now, a phone and internet sub are pretty much a requirement these days, so say the cost of a cheap phone, internet and gsm abbo combine to be another 50€ a month per person.

      So we’re at 1975-2200€ a month to cover the very basic living expenses for a 2 person household.

      You’d need to have one person with a decent wage or two people working minimum wage to barely get by.

      Any surprise or extra cost and you’re in the red.

      Eating McDonnalds to cover breakfast, lunch and dinner every day, you’d need over 2000€ for food alone.

      • Blake [he/him]@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        The quality 3 meals a day I consume and make at home average 5€ per portion

        That’s really very high, are you guessing or did you actually work it out for an average day?

        • LwL@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Tbh eating quality food is simply expensive. It’s a thing where i wanna say you could easily save 10€ a day but it’d definitely be less healthy and eating unhealthily is ideally something people shouldn’t be forced to do because they’re poor.

          Personally I eat out for lunch whenever I’m in the office (3-4 times a week) for 10€ and I spend less than 15€ on food a day. My regular meals at home are like… noodles with store bought pesto where ~4€ feed me an entire day, or frozen pizza which varies from 1-3.5€ per pizza. Though with some effort i could easily make my own pizzas for a similar (or even less if i make my own dough) price and have them be not unhealthy.

          I also find 100€ for electricity to be pretty high (certainly not “very usage conscious”) given that I consume around 80kwh a month, and 2 people shouldn’t just double that since around a quarter is probably my fridge.

          • Blake [he/him]@feddit.uk
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            1 year ago

            Tbh eating quality food is simply expensive.

            I don’t really agree with that, if you mean in terms of money. Eating healthily can be very cheap, but can consume a lot of time and effort.

            Take wholemeal rice with red kidney beans, for example - that’s a very healthy, filling meal and it’s also incredibly cheap.

            Honestly, in my experience, the unhealthiest food also tends to be the worst value.

            I’ll ask again because it’s important and you kinda brushed past it: have you actually properly checked - e.g. calculated price per 400 kcal, or are you just guessing based on your grocery budget?

            • LwL@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              I’m not op - i eat cheap (outside of my going out for lunch at work meals for 10€) but unhealthy. I did a quick estimate based on my cc charges in the last month and I don’t think I’m above 250€ a month, while eating out for lunch around 13-15 times a month… I definitely agree that 5€ per meal is a lot.

              Tbh I’m not nutritionally educated enough to know how relevant this actually is, but I was under the impression that some variety of ideally fresh produce would be required for optimally healthy food, and that is what seems to be expensive to me. Otherwise yea, aldi spaghetti for 80 cents and whipping up a sauce without much fat for maybe 5 euros max (high estimate) wouldn’t be particularly unhealthy either and last a day, and much like your rice with beans example there are probably many meals like this.

              • Blake [he/him]@feddit.uk
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                1 year ago

                Fresh produce is extremely cheap, if we’re talking about the same thing - how much is it for you to buy 2kg of potatoes, carrots and onions from the supermarket, and how much food can you make from that amount of veggies?

                Edit: Also, don’t go out of your way to avoid fat in the sauce, but avoiding dairy is a good idea. Using olive oil as part of a sauce for example, is perfectly healthy. Fats are good for slow release energy.

    • Fisch@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      That’s not even enough to satiate you. For that you need to buy a menu which is about 10€ here in Germany. That’s not cheap at all.

    • Obinice@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      If I could afford almost 4 quid per meal I’d be laughing! Think of all the nice food I could eat!

      We grow all of our vegetables for most of the year. Potatoes, carrots, leeks, onions, tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuce, beetroot, lots of berries for jams, etc etc. I don’t know how we’d manage without that.

      We live in the outskirts of a major city in England, not a stereotypically poor blackwater somewhere. This is how bad things are these days.

    • lazylion_ca@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      According to Google that’s about $5 Canadian. The avegage burger combo at McDonald’s in my area is about $12. $15 if you upsize.

      Not that eating healthier is much cheaper.

    • Th4tGuyII@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Exactly. Not only is it not cheap on a regular basis, but it isn’t even that much food from my experience at the cheaper end of McDonalds.

      You’d be far better off cooking your own food if you have the time, but the problem is a lot of these people are so busy working their arses off to stay afloat that they don’t have that time.

      • Endorkend@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Those 1€ (1.40 in Austria apparently) burgers are barely enough to satiate a child, if combined with fries. They are nowhere near enough to feed an adult.

        • Littleborat@feddit.de
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          1 year ago

          It’s been very long that these are 1€ here in Germany. Mcd is expensive and in a normal restaurant you can get very good meals for 15€.

          Shows how detached these politicians really are.

  • Sasuke [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    “So what does it mean that a child doesn’t get a hot meal in Austria? Do you know what the cheapest hot meal in Austria is? It’s not healthy, but it’s cheap: a hamburger at McDonald’s — €1.40, if I buy fries with it, €3.50. Now someone is seriously claiming that we live in a country where parents can’t afford this meal for their child,” he said.

    “If I have too little money, I go to work more,” he added in the video, which was filmed during a wine-and-cheese event near Salzburg — with no burgers in sight — his conservative People’s Party confirmed to Plus24.

    i hope he chokes to death on a piece of rotten cheese in his wine cave

  • s20@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Did they go looking doe the most smug, I’m-an-asshole expression possible for that guy, or does he just look like that?

  • artaxthehappyhorse@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    What on earth happened to all the small businesses in my “poor” rural village? Oh right, that pedestrian unfriendly stroad next to the freeway with the Walmart and all the fast food restaurants sucking up the village’s life force happened.

  • starrox@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Nobody in our country voted for that tone deaf asshole either. He was just “stepped in” as an interim after our prior catastrophe of a chancellor stepped down (Sebastian Kurz - He also made it to international media for his corruption).

    Before representing our country as chancellor, this piece of shit was minister of the interior. - while being in this position he was just as useless as now. Words cannot describe how much I loathe this guy.

    • Microw@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I personally couldnt care less if he was leading the party at the last elections or not. Nehammer is prime ÖVP, his politics is a perfect example of what you get when you vote for this party.

  • P1r4nha@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Idiot. That’s neither healthy nor sustainable. What’s his vision for his country?

    • jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      Bleeding it dry? There was a thread in Mastodon recently proving there’s a massive supermarket cartel driving prices in Austria higher than in surrounding countries and the government took the side of the supermarkets.

    • Microw@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      The vision of his party is to keep everything the same, they’re conservatives

    • Endorkend@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It’s also nowhere near that cheap.

      McD is hella expensive, especially if you have to live of of it.

      A 8-10€ basic menu is good to fill in a single meal, but while having a ton of calories, doesn’t satiate enough to count even as a full meal (which is on purpose so you order more). At my local prices, you’re looking at 13-15€ minimum, to have a satiating meal out of McDonnalds.

    • PoliticalAgitator@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      The sentiment remains disgusting no matter how factually accurate it is.

      “I only have a few dollars to feed my children”

      "Oh fuck have you tried giving it to billionaires?“