To clarify:

ProtonMail. I don’t hate it, but their choices in what to monetize is bizarre to me, like the ability to make more folders than three, you have to pay to have more folders. Also, it’s not a perfect mail system, you’re going to not get or be able to send 100% of mail because there are mail services people or businesses use that simply don’t register when using ProtonMail.

In an age where there are tons and tons of things out there that is a subscription, paying for the ability to have more features that have been normalized would turn off some people.

  • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    This is only true if you have fallen into the trap of not understanding what healthy means.

    Eating healthy can actually be very cheap, you just won’t get to eat the things that societies thinks are exciting or the most delicious. You won’t be getting “I can’t believe it’s not meat” and the latest type of chia seed detox bullshit.

    You can eat rice, lentils, onions, carrots, potatoes, oats, chickpeas, beans, tomatoes, bananas, and some dairy products and keep your meal prices down to less than a dollar while filling all nutritional requirements.

    A basic Indian Dahl on rice works out to significantly less than a dollar per serving if you buy the ingredients in more than single use packages, 500 calories, 17 grams of protein, 8 grams of fat, and 80 grams of carbs for $0.75 is pretty fucking healthy.

    Two servings of oats and a banana for breakfast? 50 cents, for again around 500 calories, 17 grams of protein (mostly the oats), and 7 grams of fat. You could splurge on a bit of yogurt and keep it under a dollar easily.

    In terms of “effort” if you consider cooking 10 portions of Dahl for an hour and then freezing them individually to be too much effort, you don’t actually care about the cost of eating, you’re just too lazy.

    • helpImTrappedOnline@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Sure the staples are pretty easy, but a head of iceburg is a dollar while all the stuff with some nutritional value costs $3 for less per pound.

      Going to the store with produce that isn’t already half dead, so it will last the whole week costs more.

      Going the store multiple times a week for fresh produce costs more in gas and time (and “extra” buying). I end up with lots of fresh meals at the start of the week, but towards the end its all frozen or canned vegetables, which is a lot of salt.

      Buying the juice, or any snack, not full of high-fructose corn syrup costs more.

      Fresh bakery bread costs $5+, while a loafs cost $1-2. A loaf of wheat or multi-grain bread costs around $3.

      It all adds up, and yes I am lazy.

      • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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        19 hours ago

        You still don’t get it.

        You don’t need to eat Lettuce to be healthy, you’ve been taught to think that way but it’s not even close to the truth.

        Do you think that people 100 years ago had fresh produce all the time? That’s not how it worked for most of human history and they definitely ate healthier than we do now.

        Frozen vegetables don’t have extra salt. Canned sometimes does but a) salt isn’t unhealthy and b) you can rinse them to get most of it off if you wanted.

        Juice is not healthy. That’s pure marketing bullshit. It’s almost as bad as soda.

        Your mindset is wrong. You expect what society has told you to to do. That’s expensive because our society is built around selling you shit you don’t need.

    • neo2478@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      This exactly!!

      We became vegan a couple years ago and we save so much money by each ng the way you mentioned.

      Basically every meal includes a bean, a green, a grain , and whatever extra veggies and or additional protein (the beans already have plenty though) like tofu of seitan.

      People often think its expensive to be vegan because they focus on meat replacements and processed foods. They don’t realize when you cut that, its so much cheaper.