It’s A Lifestyle Crime: If You’re Not Rich You Can’t Eat Out Everyday In 2023 America

<p>I call them sheep.</p> <p>Many of the people in the image that anchors this article.</p> <p>They see one person eating the $16 burrito, $16 avocado toast, $22 traditional breakfast or $24 bowl of rigatoni at this &ldquo;cafe&rdquo; and they must do likewise.&nbsp;<em>No matter what lies at the heart of the experience.&nbsp;</em><strong><em>No matter the cost.</em></strong></p> <p>They&rsquo;re going through the motions of eating and drinking out in America as&nbsp;<a href="https://medium.com/rooted-publication/43-for-3-burritos-and-pretty-much-everything-about-the-experience-stunk-2f155526175c" rel="noopener">the experience of eating and drinking out in America</a>&nbsp;continues to rapidly degrade. And get more, if not prohibitively expensive.</p> <p>Even when it&rsquo;s good, it&rsquo;s bad. Because it takes a ton of money &mdash; like some form of immediate or otherwise sustainable wealth &mdash; to make dining out a primary element of your lifestyle.</p> <p><strong><em>This isn&rsquo;t hyperbole.&nbsp;</em></strong>You have to be rich or otherwise wealthy to eat and drink on the streets and in the storefronts and strip malls of America on a daily basis. The way so many people in so many other parts of the world do. The way so many people apparently manage to do in, say, pricey Los Angeles.</p> <p><strong><em>By the end of this article, we will have defined rich or otherwise wealthy in this most meaningful, day-to-day, on-the-ground context.&nbsp;</em></strong>And we will have blown our minds with how much it would cost to live like a cafe-sitting, tapas-eating, vermouth-drinking European. Using my penchant for the Spanish lifestyle.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/rooted-publication/its-a-lifestyle-crime-if-you-re-not-rich-you-can-t-eat-out-everyday-in-2023-america-55dc16472c61"><strong>Website</strong></a></p>
Tags: Crime Rich