Its relevant. Having reduced buying power yet not risking loosing all of your buying power for the rest of your life is generally preferred.
Most people don't realize how terrible it is in the US. Lots of migrants to the US searching for better pay, but they don't realize how miserable life in the US is because most of their paycheck gets eaten by rent, transportation to work, healthcare, etc. And as soon as they manage to save anything, it all gets wiped out by a single hospital visit.
I don't think Hollywood (how most people lean about the US) does a good job conveying how most people live in poverty in the US, how miserable they are, and how many of us kill ourselves because of the conditions.
Is not "we have most if the world's wealth, we're aware that 25% of our populationvm can't find the biggest ocean in the world in a map, and we also won't allocate funds to schools to fix this" a sign of low intelligence?
Like, that's the biggest ocean and biggest country in the world. I wonder how many in the 75% just randomly pointed at blue and got lucky at identifying the Pacific Ocean.
The actual number of people who didn't know where is the Pacific Ocean must be higher, because of the ones who guessed and got lucky.
Accessibility is important. Couldn't they modify them to meet accessibility standards?