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Replying to @mrslolacollins There needs to be a word for what's happening to American workers that's somewhere between "employed" and "enslaved." Because "working poor" doesn't capture it. "Paycheck to paycheck" doesn't capture it. "Struggling" doesn't capture it. Those phrases make it sound temporary. Like a rough patch. Like if they just worked harder or budgeted better, they'd be fine. But that's not what's happening. What's happening is systemic economic entrapment where people work full-time jobs and still can't afford rent, food, childcare, healthcare, and transportation simultaneously. They're not unemployed. They're not lazy. They're working. Sometimes multiple jobs. And they're still trapped in a cycle where survival is the ceiling, not the floor. So what do we call it when you're legally free but economically trapped? When you can't afford to quit, can't afford to stay, and can't afford to change anything? Because whatever we call it, millions of Americans are living it. And pretending it's just "hard times" is gaslighting. Drop your suggestions in the comments. What's the word for this? ๐Ÿ†˜๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

@nomadveronica
341 views24 likes2:58ENMay 26, 2026
454 words2508 characters17 sentencesReadability: High School

Transcript

This commenter was comparing the Walmart employees that I was talking about to basically slaves. And while the word "slave" might be an offensive word to choose in this situation, we've got to have some word to describe the nature of employment in the United States these days. What word could we possibly use to describe somebody who's working a job that does not pay enough to survive off of, that they have to piece together the paycheck plus rental assistance, plus childcare subsidies, plus food assistance in order to make up enough of the income to basically live off of and survive off of. This person is stuck in a way that they can't get out of, they can't quit the job to find something better because there is nothing better that's going to fix all of the money woes that they are facing. They aren't able to create more income at that job because that job wants them to stay in that survival mentality where they are stuck. And the government has allowed all of this because they subsidized the corporations like Walmart, which is what I was talking about in this previous video. They subsidized them by providing that assistance and then blamed the poor person for being in the situation, not the corporation for not paying a livable wage. So how does somebody get out of that vicious cycle and what are we calling that vicious cycle? What are we calling it when these corporations exploit the fact that workers need to make something but it's not enough to do anything of substance. Those people can't get a nicer, newer place to rent. Those people can't go on vacation and so they just feel trapped. So many people come to my comment section and say I would move abroad but I have no money because they're stuck in this situation of the Walmart employee, of the McDonald's employee, of the right aid employee, of any of these different corporations that are exploiting them because they know there's no other option. What else could they do other than just continue to work at a job that doesn't pay the bills? It doesn't fulfill all of life's necessities to get a roof over their head, get clothes on their back and feed them simultaneously and that's why the government programs come in to fill the gaps but it's just never enough to get them to a place where they can breathe and relax and feel calm. They're always in survival mode. Is there a word for that? Tell me in the comments if you know what this is called or have a better word to describe this other than thinly veiled slavery.

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