https://twitter.com/orwellngoode/status/1560731904256708610
actually real or not? (Give genuine answer please) no baits allowed
https://twitter.com/orwellngoode/status/1560731904256708610
actually real or not? (Give genuine answer please) no baits allowed
Sushi_ [#3]For a 25 year old in america too afford that house they would need to be born super wealthy, or kill multiple people and sell their organs.
Oddly specific
Zaynio [#2]no?
I’m thinking… anyone with normal university education(STEM-only), leaves university at 22, has job at 23 (mid case scenario) so is 25 unrealistic for American Dream or no?
Edit: ok lawyer too, (but only humanities degrees which matter to society) not the BS art ones.
Sushi_ [#3]For a 25 year old in america too afford that house they would need to be born super wealthy, or kill multiple people and sell their organs.
That house is too exaggerated but, let’s say u have 3 bedroom house, is it reasonable?
X_ae_A_12 [#8]That house is too exaggerated but, let’s say u have 3 bedroom house, is it reasonable?
lmfao no, for our grandfathers yes, but that was a very differant time. I live in a 3 bedroom house, my parents, with extensive help from my grandparents, bought it in 2000, they are still paying an expensive mortgage will continue too until well after they retire. If i wanted to buy the house i live in rn it would cost me around $400k usd And i dont live in a particularly wealthy neighborhood. Most 25 yr olds fresh out of college are scraping by in a shitty apartment, if they have a partner or went too a good college they might live in a nice apartment. Owning a house in the current generation simply isnt realistic
Not for an average-earning, no intergenerational wealth, non-STEM/Lawyer/any health/doctor majors
For a person with intergenerational wealth (aka ur parents / grandparents are hella rich) then yeah this is easy
Also depends where you live. I live in Northern California (aka housing hell) so even a high-paying job won't get you a 3 bedroom house in 3-5 years.
Sushi_ [#3]For a 25 year old in america too afford that house they would need to be born super wealthy, or kill multiple people and sell their organs.
not if that house is in texas and that american has been a trade worker since 18, which that american in the picture looks like
traviswheeler [#14]not if that house is in texas and that american has been a trade worker since 18, which that american in the picture looks like
Damn texas is wild, a house like that in my state would be a mil minimum, and 7 years of work sure as hell aint covering that unless your working for big law
Sushi_ [#3]For a 25 year old in america too afford that house they would need to be born super wealthy, or kill multiple people and sell their organs.
nope that house is really cheap in regions like Texas
X_ae_A_12 [#8]That house is too exaggerated but, let’s say u have 3 bedroom house, is it reasonable?
even that would be on a loan they would take out and have to pay it, it's not realistic buddy sorry
hiyo [#13]Not for an average-earning, no intergenerational wealth, non-STEM/Lawyer/any health/doctor majors
For a person with intergenerational wealth (aka ur parents / grandparents are hella rich) then yeah this is easy
Also depends where you live. I live in Northern California (aka housing hell) so even a high-paying job won't get you a 3 bedroom house in 3-5 years.
You can kinda get it in the south, you only have to put up with living a 15 min drive away from a third world country.
Sushi_ [#15]Damn texas is wild, a house like that in my state would be a mil minimum, and 7 years of work sure as hell aint covering that unless your working for big law
yeah bro its crazy, real estate and land is crazy cheap in texas, mansions like that for 500k and u cab easily get a shit ton of acres with it. and trade work everywhere in america is good if u know how get in the good programs and [art of a union and stuff, can easily be making 26+ an hour at 19-20
weakest_marved_enjoyer [#20]the house is a bit unrealistic, but everything else is pretty much spot on
everything is realistic, you just gotta add another picture showing that youre 2 mil in debt
X_ae_A_12 [#5]I’m thinking… anyone with normal university education(STEM-only), leaves university at 22, has job at 23 (mid case scenario) so is 25 unrealistic for American Dream or no?
Edit: ok lawyer too, (but only humanities degrees which matter to society) not the BS art ones.
Yeah but debt is a thing and internships, while they do cover a lot, aren't going to make it debt free. Assuming you are a pretty silent person and not someone that spends a lot on themselves, then 25 is a realistic scenario.