SlickFranky
Active Member
Here's a simple example. I'm hungry and need to eat. So I decide if I don't want to be hungry I'm going to a restaurant to eat and spend $20 for a sandwich.
Testing your argument against logic, it cost exactly as much as it took to feed myself. $20. So I freeze how much I spend for a sandwich at $20. I'm still spending $20 for a sandwich.
Rather than my argument of efficiency. Why I can't I buy a $2 sandwich such as buy bread, lunch meat, miracle whip, etc...
Let's say your commute is a sandwich. GO is not a $20 dollar sandwich. A hired towncar with driver is the $20 deluxe. GO is the subway club. Driving yourself is the brown-bag special.
Except in this sandwich market, the subway club costs almost exactly the same as (often less than) the homemade. If you can make your own for cheaper, that's your call. But the ingredients for your sandwich are pricey. They're in limited supply, marked-up by private interests, and it's a pretty big sandwich. The subway club on the other hand is sold to you below market value, for a loss. We all chip in to keep your lunch bills reasonable. But it's a big sandwich, the 'sandwich artists' want a raise, subway's planning to expand, and the price of cheese has gone up. Subway has to raise its prices.
I don't know how you guys out there can stand eating such massive sandwiches at lunch every day. Then you complain that those giant hoagies are too expensive? Maybe you should consider going on a diet.
Analogies are fun.
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