Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair
238 posts

Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi

@strallweat I'm in the kitchen remodeling and design business and my bread and butter are the tradesmen. If they make it out of their 20's without messing up, they go on to own multiple properties, vacation homes, etc.
If they don't get into addictions, aren't retards with money, they win.
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Something I find interesting.
The boomer blue collar workers didn't want their kids breaking their backs so they sent them off to college to get white collar jobs. In the US that coencided with the gov backing student loans, which meant anyone could get a loan bc it was guaranteed repayment. That caused a massive boom in college students and also jacked the school prices way up. Now that the boomer guys are retiring it's creating a massive shortage in blue collar workers.
It's an incredible opportunity for people to get in on. I did it for 10 years before switching career paths. But blue collar guys are the ones with the disposable income now lol. It's a cool shift to see.
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Matthew Stair retweetledi

There is a big problem crushing Americans that’s not being talked about
This American lives in a small rural town. Almost overnight a bunch of developers came in and built a large amount of $400,000+ homes
The avenge home in the town before this was 100k -200k
Now residents have “their property taxes going up because their property values are being reassessed by the county, and that's pumping more money into whose pockets? The developers and the local politician”
“This type of gentrification is the type of gentrification that destroys the middle class and the working class Americans, and takes away American dreams from those families who've lived here forever, or transplants who moved here to find a better life and to adapt to the area development — this is what takes away their American dreams”
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Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi

In 1960, roughly two-thirds of Black children grew up in two-parent homes.
Today it’s under 45%.
Pastors. Entrepreneurs. Fathers. Black poverty had already fallen from 87% to 47% in two decades — without major welfare programs.
Then the 1970s arrived. Film began centering street figures over community ones.
The 1980s and 90s followed. Music made that life aspirational. A criminal past stopped being a liability — it became a credential.
The role models didn’t get replaced. They got inverted.
Thomas Sowell put it plainly: the Black family survived centuries of slavery and generations of Jim Crow — then disintegrated in the post-1960s.
Today nearly 70% of Black births are to unmarried mothers.
Chad O. Jackson calls it a culture problem — not a race problem.
Full clip below.
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Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi
Matthew Stair retweetledi

I think some people vastly overestimate how much of the workforce is employed as electricians, plumbers, and HVAC techs
It's about 1%
Planet Of Memes@PlanetOfMemes
Electricians, plumbers and HVAC technicians watching AI wipe out nearly every other job.
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