This isn't a contradiction of my example. My example is pretty clear: Mom makes X before/after prices have gone up, and years after so.
> Inflation usually means wages going up.
Inflation is a rise in prices, that's what it means. Maybe I am being pedantic about your use of "means".
> But low wage workers in the US have gotten significant pay raises since 2019.
Mom in my example hasn't, so irrelevant. Why do you insist on using generalizations to try to contradict an example? My example is very real, the generalization does not apply.
> Inflation usually means wages going up.
Inflation is a rise in prices, that's what it means. Maybe I am being pedantic about your use of "means".
> But low wage workers in the US have gotten significant pay raises since 2019.
Mom in my example hasn't, so irrelevant. Why do you insist on using generalizations to try to contradict an example? My example is very real, the generalization does not apply.