Guy #1 is correct and I wouldn’t say guy #2 is confidently incorrect, as he only sent one message.
Some Pythagori in this thread as well :)
I want to get to the bottom of this OP. Do you think that the guy who said pythagoras is the one that is confidently incorrect?
Yes, first guy is confidently incorrect, pythagorus lived over 2,500 years ago, so the chances of him operating that twitter account are slim at best.
Haven’t played Assassin’s Creed: Odyssey, have you?
No, middle guy thought he’d corrected first guy but first guy was correct all along.
Ok got it… I thought you were mocking the guy that said Pythagoras.
No, I just particularly liked his comeback.
I’m genuinely confused, what is incorrect here? Tax deduction is not done?
Guy #1 calculates the payment per month. Guy #2 tries to “correct” him by calculating the payment per year. Guy #1 suggests that Guy #2 divide his answer by 12.
Guy #1 said Blake Griffin earns 2.8 million per month. If that is correct, the math chexk
Right, but the $50k figure mentioned is a yearly salary, not a monthly income. If you paid $4,500 a month on a $50,000 salary, you would pay $54,000 in child support per year, which is more than your total income.
It’s definitely odd to swap timescales, though. Almost like he was baiting people to be wrong.
I think the deal is that most people can judge an annual salary than a monthly one, so he’s trying to give a comparison of what the same percentage would be a month for someone with a more modest income. Guy #2 just didn’t notice that.
I think the deal is that he’s trying to stir shit by trying to tell people to “just relax”, which is an easy way to keep people who are agitated from relaxing.
Alright, calm down.
Just relax dude
Not really, the article mentions the monthly amount, so they compared it to a monthly amount from someone who makes less money per year. A yearly salary is what most people in the work force in the US are used to talking about when referencing income, which is why they used that instead of monthly income. It also contrasts the dramatic difference in income between the average worker and someone who makes many times more in a single month than the average person does in an entire year.
In an in-depth critical analysis, sure, not a pithy tweet.
I can accept that it wasn’t an intentional attempt at driving clicks through casual misinterpretation, though unlikely. But it’s not an effective way to convey information to swap scales when trying to make comparisons. If you wanted to make that kind of comparison, you’d do it separately. At least if you were trying to convey a cogent point.
It’s a tweet not a thesis statement. It isn’t difficult to understand what they’re saying without needing them to send it in to an editor to make sure it meets academic standards of conveying info.
first/last person (same person) is incorrect; it says 258k/month, therefore you wouldn’t divide said 9% by 12, i.e. equates to 4500/month on 50k.
edit, wait, no, im wrong, first guy is correct; 2.8 million per month on the income as well
Yea, that’s the punch. All the numbers are per month, guy confidently incorectly kicks in with a yearly figure, gets actually corrected.
What’s the issue here? Seems correct to me
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