• Horsey@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Americans are too lazy to travel to their lunch. However, for the vast majority of the people, you’re not 15 minutes of walk away from a healthy assortment of food. Even in NYC, depending on where you are, it may not be possible to always go to your food. The idea of your lunch being paid is also not common, and you’re expected to be back to working (not done eating) within 30 minutes or less. In many cases, your lunchtime is timed and unpaid. Nurses and hospital staff? Eat the shit downstairs in the cafeteria or nothing; if you’re late coming back from lunch, it’s almost as bad as being late to work itself.

  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    I’ve honestly never quite realized up until now how utterly ridiculous it is that people regularly demand that their food be cooked for them.

    I’ve honestly never quite realized up until now how utterly ridiculous it is that people regularly demand that their food items be prepared and packaged for them.

    I’ve honestly never quite realized up until now how utterly ridiculous it is that people regularly demand that that the animals they eat are slaughtered for them.

    I’ve honestly never quite realized up until now how utterly ridiculous it is that people regularly demand that their grain be milled for them.

    Society evolves buddy. I don’t churn my own butter, but my grandmas did, and would find it ridiculous I have 247 access to a supermarket selling some. And it’s even being kept at an exact temperature, all the time? Packaged without any sweat on it? Ridiculous!

  • PolarKraken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    12 hours ago

    Of all the modern capitalistic irritations (to put it mildly), this one I really detest. And not least because of how ridiculously popular it is, wtf people? I watch folks I know, who can barely afford the food itself in the first place, then inflate the price by like 40%, just to eat the already (very!) mediocre food…cold. Solely so that they don’t have to leave the house. Just completely unhinged from my POV, and honestly produces almost a sense of alienation in me, I find it so bizarre.

    Disclaimer though - I will acknowledge both that I happily enjoy various different foolish things myself, so the point about glass houses is worth my keeping in mind, and also there are some great reasons to use it (limited mobility for one, as another user pointed out).

    But sheesh folks. Restaurants largely hate it from my understanding, the drivers doing it hate it (cuz the job - oh excuse me, the preferred exploitation-hiding euphemism is “gig” - is utter shit, a literal minor improvement over straight up homelessness), the environment hates it, the wear-and-tear on a likely broke person’s vehicle and the wear-and-tear on already struggling infrastructure…I mean what the fuckity fuck, seriously. How is this so popular, we’re all insane and just conveniencing our way to oblivion. SMgoddamnH.

    Aside from the aforementioned reasonable uses (largely edge cases, let’s be honest), there is precisely one group of people who truly benefit in any serious way from this amazingly destructive nonsense - and wouldn’t you know it, it’s the exact same group fucking us in every other way! Weird!

    Sorry. This one really gets me.

  • ObjectivityIncarnate@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Why was the subtotal of the actual food being ordered omitted?

    Likely because it would give meaningful context to the amounts of the fees, and the ragebaiting OOP wants to avoid that.

  • minorkeys@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Funny how Chinese and pizza places could do this all day everyday and it cost 5% of the cost of the food. Not double it. Delivery food has been hit with inflation and market ‘innovation’ just like everything else. But let’s pretend working people wanting convenience services is somehow the problem…the avocado toast on wheels argument.

  • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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    13 hours ago

    Do Americans really get their shit delivered by car?over here it’s motorcycles 99% of the time (and bicycles the other 1%)

    Seems rather… Sluggish and inefficient for delivery drivers to go by car.

  • arc99@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    People really, really need to learn to cook for themselves. Nothing wrong with the odd takeout, or even delivery but I sense a lot of people live on deliveries all the time and waste a fortune

  • bigschnitz@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    I assume that most deliveries in NYC are by push bike couriers and vesper type scooters. Thats more typical than yank tanks for this sort of thing in most densely populated cities I’ve seen.

  • Phegan@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    When you build infrastructure that requires you take cars everywhere you minimize people going to get things for themselves

  • peetabix@sh.itjust.works
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    17 hours ago

    I find it funny that the tip is already there before you get your food. I mean, did the driver make the burrito? He might be late and you get cold food, he might be a dick.

  • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    This is dumb, hating for the sake of hating just shows a low level of thinking. Cars are very useful tools that have practical applications that aren’t going away any time soon, and delivery services are an example of that.

    The issue with cars is that we decided to designed our cities and towns around them at the expense of pedestrians, culture, and the environment. This has spawned societies that are plagued with long commutes, inactive lifestyles, dangerous infrastructure, smog, and an arms race to get comically huge cars. Criticizing the car industry, the car lobby, specific aspects of cars, or our urban layouts is perfectly valid. Blindly hating on cars just because they’re cars is counterproductive.

    • mister_flibble@sh.itjust.works
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      19 hours ago

      Especially in NYC. Bike delivery has been a thing there long before uberdashhub. Hell, it was a fucking plot point in Spiderman 2 back in 2004:

    • iegod@lemmy.zip
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      18 hours ago

      In high density urban settings this is absolutely true. 99% of my orders are delivered by bicycle.

    • Zink@programming.dev
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      16 hours ago

      I’ll add in addition to the “not where I live” replies, I live in pretty textbook white suburban america and I believe I have never seen anything delivered to me or a neighbor or relative by a two-wheeled vehicle of any kind, even motorized. Every single time it is a private 4-seat passenger vehicle or larger.

      It is different in other areas of course, like when visiting cities and other countries.

      But damn are such vast swaths of suburban and rural america designed so specifically around cars. It would take forever to change even with a progressive culture & government. With the culture and government we have now, I will be stunned if I am not driving my own vehicle for the rest of my life, and I will not be surprised at all if it’s mostly ICE vehicles. I drive a well maintained 13 year old Mazda3 that gets 40mpg, so it’s not ideal versus more efficient and environmentally friendly types of transport, but at least it’s a more efficient use of the existing infrastructure than most americans.