If you don't believe it's sociopathic behavior to leave people out here like this:
27-Year-Old Maryland Grocery Store Worker Dies of Coronavirus | PEOPLE.com
Grocery store worker Vitalina Williams dies of coronavirus - The Washington Post
And several other stories, then I don't know what to tell you.
People are risking life and limb and literally dying for these paltry sums.
And even worse in places like maryland where the young woman above died:
Average Rent in Maryland City & Rent Prices by Neighborhood - RENTCafé (rentcafe.com)
The average rent is $1700, so she'd be working herself to death literally and figuratively to stay
below the poverty line. Earning a paltry salary means she and anyone else in her position likely
had no footing to potentially reverse their fortunes.
There several studies which show that poverty is expensive and climbing out of it is HARD.
6 Ways Being Poor is Expensive | Mercy Housing
Being Poor Is Expensive. How It Costs More To Be Poor | by Jessica Hillis | The Frugal Mom | Medium
It Is Expensive to Be Poor - The Atlantic
Poverty is Expensive - There's Research on That (thesocietypages.org)
I know because I've personally been there, that's likely why I empathize with these people trying
to get somewhere in life and having no real backing from society to do so.
So yes, denying a bill which just writes in a wage increase, it's sociopathic as fukk.
And it makes sense when most of these a$$holes are multi-millionaires, most of which are completely
disconnected from the reality these Americans face.