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this post was submitted on 18 Aug 2023
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The picture they paint in this article, of the ultra rich with their private jets and yachts, does not align with the statistic presented in the title.
I'm sure many of you know people in this group. Two adults each making 90k a year is enough to break into the 10%. And clearly they're not flying around in private jets.
That's true, but most of my social group fits into this definition and the majority fly commercial 6 - 12+ times a year, all around the globe, either for vacation or business travel. They almost all own personal vehicles, replaced every 5 - 10 years, well before the end of life of the vehicle. I live in Colorado and it's common for this class to own/rent a second home or condo in the mountains and take multi-hour drives to those places on the weekend. Those lifestyle choices produce massive amounts of CO2 relative to individuals who otherwise live generally identical lives.
It doesn't take extravagances like private jets to contribute outsized emissions.
Nobody said the "it ain't much" part. What they said is that 180k isn't enough to be chartering private jets. It doesn't make you "ultra wealthy". Upper-middle class? Yes. But people making that are waaaaay closer to a line cook than to Jeff Bezos.