I’m shocked egged are about 9 per dozen where I liveI’ve never looked at the price of eggs but this thread made me look yesterday when I was at the store
Free range, soy free organic eggs in alaska: $4.46 a dozen
Ouch where is that? Also to note the eggs I bought were at CostcoI’m shocked egged are about 9 per dozen where I live
I’d like to ask for a favor. Post the Rogan podcast from today on the current events/politics/echo chamber on tbh. Most of those guys need to hear it. And if they search back in the archives, they will see Ole Dapper was telling them all of this 4 years ago….
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My family of 5 goes through 3 dozen eggs a week.I wake up, get dressed, and go to work. Breakfast is a pb&j at 9:30 break time.
This whole egg thing has been eye opening as to how many eggs people eat. I enjoy them as much as the next guy but at $6/dozen at my local Wally World I still buy them when I want them. Usually when I buy a dozen I fry a breakfast worth for me and the wife and the rest get boiled for snacks.
I know they're considered a good, healthy, cheap source of protein, but I'm still wrapping my head around people eating so many eggs that the price doubling has a major impact on their grocery budget. Surely these aren't the same people buying $5 bags of chips and $7 cases of soda? Is the whole thing just blown out of proportion?
My family of 5 goes through 3 dozen eggs a week.
Of course not. It’s just the latest price increase.So does that cost going from $9 a week to $18 a week blow the budget? Is $468 a year for a family of five to eat how they want a giant issue?
That's kind of my point I guess. If that same family of five goes out to eat three times this year they've probably spent more than that difference. Yes it sucks that eggs have gotten a lot more expensive, yes that money could go towards other things if they hadn't, but is it a major hit to the family budget? Is the average family teetering that close to living beyond their means?
Of course not. It’s just the latest price increase.
I think these high grocery prices are impacting a vast majority of households.
Look up snow geese and bird flu on YouTube. It’s a thing.Question:
Why doesnt Bird Flu affect ducks, geese, etc, and only chickens?
an economist I follow gives a pretty good summary on this.It definitely impacts everyone when more of the paycheck has to go towards necessities. Maybe the massive focus on eggs is just to get people's mind off the fact that years later almost everything in the grocery store is still at peak pandemic pricing.