• Utter_Karate [he/him, comrade/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    I'm pretty sure this person has not in fact seen people selling milk they get from EBT. Unless you get industrial amounts of milk from EBT, how would you even go about selling whatever amount you get? I'm certainly not gonna buy a single carton of milk from a stranger in a parking lot. To get any buyers at all they would have to sell at well below market price, which is a real problem when you're not dealing in valuable commodities like drugs, but trying to sell a very limited amount of milk. Combined with the amount of work you would have to put in to hawk single servings of milk to strangers without receipts or any quality control I just do not see this as a viable business idea even as supplementary income and I did not even have to leave the liberal mindset to arrive at that conclusion.

    What this person might have seen is someone offering a glass of milk to friends and family who are also helping them out economically. That makes perfect sense and is a nice thing to do, but isn't really a question of selling milk.

    Or maybe EBT delivers industrial amounts of milk. If the tonnage of milk you receive is large enough it would only make sense to try to sell it.

    • Gork@lemm.ee
      ·
      1 year ago

      Suppose you were to resell the bougie $6 organic milk at market value to save up for an iPhone. Since you're the type of person who resells organic milk in a parking lot of the store you just bought it from, it's safe to assume that only the best iPhone will do, the $1099 iPhone 14 Pro Max.

      You'd have to sell 195 of these milk jugs (adding in a 7% tax) to be able to buy it. I agree with you that this person has not done this.

    • StewartCopelandsDad [he/him]
      ·
      1 year ago

      I'm pretty sure this person has not in fact seen people selling milk they get from EBT. Unless you get industrial amounts of milk from EBT, how would you even go about selling whatever amount you get?

      I once encountered a gentleman who offered to buy my groceries with his EBT card in exchange for a smaller amount of cash. I declined since it didn't seem worth the hassle. It probably does happen but not in the "reselling groceries" way and not at scale.

    • SootySootySoot [any]
      ·
      1 year ago

      The only people buying milk from people on EBT are even poorer people who desperately need the milk and cannot get it.