mpjh wrote:There are no mud huts in Chicago, so that is not a choice. You seemed to have missed an important point. No landlord will rent a studio apartment to a family with annual income fo $16,000. I will not and does not happen. The choices are public housing (if you can get on a list), divorce and live separately with no child support to the children (most often the result), or street life. Today, the shelters are full and really are only a transition to divorce and street life for most people.
You are saying that a large percentage of people only make $16000 a year. So, where do they live? Are you trying to say they all live on the streets? And if they do, they should be able to save a good portion of their earnings. And soon they can take those savings and rent a place.
This little discussion is doing what so many other discussions do here. It is ballooning and losing focus.
You said it was nearly impossible to get an apartment for under $2000 per month in Chicago. I showed you an ad for an apartment for rent for just over $700 per month.
Wouldn't it be appropriate for you to respond with something like "Wow, I guess I was wrong." or "Rent must have come down since I last looked."?
When you are wrong, and it is clearly demonstrated that you are wrong, it would be best to just admit that you were wrong.
You want to switch your argument and say that even though they could afford to rent an apartment, they would not be accepted. I don't buy that idea. Save your money, produce first and last month's rent and a few good references. You are in.
When I went to college I lived in a boarding house with 9 other people. I ate a lot of oatmeal for breakfast - Old Mill oatmeal that I bought in those large plastic bags. I ate chicken weiners on bread for most suppers. I bought cheap fruit and vegetables. I didn't drink at bars - I drank before because it was cheaper. I bought all my clothes on sale and wore them until they were worn out. I got laid regularly.
When I moved, it was to the main floor of a house with a friend of mine. The rent was cheap. The crack whores were always close by outside. Two guys and a girl lived upstairs - they were full-time drug dealers. Nice guys actually, although their Rottie bit me in the arm for no reason as far as I could tell. One block down was known as "crack alley" because nearly every house was a crack house. There was always a lot of excitement. Fights, muggings (I was mugged about 14 years earlier just a block away), drunks, break-ins, whatever. Very few guns though. I got laid regularly.
But my point is that I lived very cheaply. I am not saying I rose out of the slums of Detroit or anything. But I am saying that I know what I am talking about when I say I know how to live on a shoestring budget. And I could easily live on a wage that is considered "poverty" in the USA by the charts that were shown. Would I want to do it forever? Of course not. If a person carries himself well, stays positive, and does well at his job, somebody will notice. And a better opportunity will present itself. And it helps if you get laid regularly.


