• Tb0n3
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    -212 years ago

    Some beggars make bank. Like, more than you do.

      • ASeriesOfPoorChoices
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        2 years ago

        Nah, car window washers.

        $2 per car, 4 cars per light change, 6 light changes an hour = about $50/hour.

        Edit: Since people need more help with math:

        1 light change: 6 minutes.

        Time to wash a car window: 30 seconds at most (20 seconds is normal)

        Lets call an additional 30 seconds between cars for moving 3 feet and getting money.

        That’s 1 minute per car. Out of a slow 6 cars per minute, doing ~24 cars per hour gives you plenty of time to account for resting and being turned down

        $100 an hour would be a good hour, $20 would be slow. $50/hr is a round average. Most work a couple hours a day.

        Yes, it’s illegal to walk in traffic like that.

        Edit edit: https://thewest.com.au/news/perth/a-16-year-old-perth-window-washer-reveals-what-life-is-like-on-the-roadside-ng-b881029234z

        $375/day, $150 in “a few hours”

        • prole
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          2 years ago

          Lol, right. Just like you can just ignore air resistance when doing your physics homework.

          We all know there’s just a line of hundreds of cars, everyday, waiting to willingly give $2 to a random homeless person to wash their windshield. Just all day, cars coming through and voluntarily giving up $2 for a service they don’t need BECAUSE THE CAR CAN DO IT ITSELF.

          What reality do you live in?

        • LemmyInRedditSux
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          62 years ago

          Sounds like estimation of a best case scenario. If I was in one of those cars I would definitely say “no.” I don’t even look at those median grifters. And if they did climb onto the hood of my vehicle and start washing my windshield without my consent, there would be hell for them to pay.

        • Tb0n3
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          2 years ago

          Well in my area. It’s people that just sit at a traffic light. Maybe with a dog and people just give them a couple dollars when they pass by. There’s so many different individuals going through a light at a grocery store that everybody has the chance of giving them some money without feeling like they’re being imposed on. It’s a very lucrative racket in the right area.

          It’s a fantastic way to earn money if you have no morals or self-respect.

    • RiverGhost
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      72 years ago

      If it’s such a good gig, nothing is stopping you from doing it yourself?

      • Tb0n3
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        -72 years ago

        Self respect and morals as mentioned in another comment.

        • @PaupersSerenade@sh.itjust.works
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          42 years ago

          Money has no morals. The amount of money you have is probably the worst way to judge a character. More often it’s circumstances and I see no reason to kick someone when they’re down like you do.

          • Tb0n3
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            -92 years ago

            I’m not big on relying on charity to pay my bills. If you could get it by doing an actual job and just beg because it’s easy you’re stealing from those who actually need it.

            • Flying Squid
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              62 years ago

              How is it stealing when people are giving it to you voluntarily?

              • Tb0n3
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                2 years ago

                I’m saying that the available charity is limited. When you solicit charity while not needing it you remove that charity from those who do. So while it may be a fraudulent appeal for charity it also steals a available resources from those in need.

    • Flying Squid
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      62 years ago

      So what? If they can, good for them. Why is that a bad thing?

      • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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        12 years ago

        They aren’t doing it on their own either. They usually live with family, or families. Are also on assistance, and that 2009 Mercedes that they drove the lot over, is the family car, registered to their cousin. It’s not a glamorous life, like OP thinks.

    • ASeriesOfPoorChoices
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      -42 years ago

      The downvotes from ignorance on Lemmy are simply astounding. People can’t believe things outside their tiny bubbles.

      Car window washing: $375/day, $150 in “a few hours” https://thewest.com.au/news/perth/a-16-year-old-perth-window-washer-reveals-what-life-is-like-on-the-roadside-ng-b881029234z

      Begging: $400/day https://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-07-15/professional-beggars-intimidate-women-tourists-melbourne/6621824

      Begging, $40 before lunch, then went to work: https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/164e6f/comment/c7sm5b5/ (the whole thread is really good, fantastic content in this post. There’s a link to a blog where guy begged in different ways, and logged the results. Worst: “ex-wife” ($3.30/hr), best: “wheelchair” ($23/hr))

      For 38 studies, $20usd-$60usd/day: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/10575677211036498 - which is what most people are thinking about.