3 in 4 Americans typically eat fast food at least once a week, but the majority are eating it less due to rising prices, according to a LendingTree survey.
I'm not suggesting it would be as simple as dropping untrained fast food workers into clinics and calling it a day, but broadly: yes, I think diverting many of the workers currently required to keep fast food places operating into healthcare jobs (for example) would probably produce a greater net social benefit than my ability to have a burger handed to me through my car window within 2 minutes of ordering it in every town in the US.
I see, I support this. All else being equal (educational institutions that aren't dogshit, etc) that sounds fairly reasonable. My question was only meant as half incredulous :)
And how would that work exactly? Are we routing fast food workers to clinics instead?
I'm not suggesting it would be as simple as dropping untrained fast food workers into clinics and calling it a day, but broadly: yes, I think diverting many of the workers currently required to keep fast food places operating into healthcare jobs (for example) would probably produce a greater net social benefit than my ability to have a burger handed to me through my car window within 2 minutes of ordering it in every town in the US.
I see, I support this. All else being equal (educational institutions that aren't dogshit, etc) that sounds fairly reasonable. My question was only meant as half incredulous :)
what if we put health clinics in fast food restaurants!?