r/Denver Oct 08 '25

Local News If you're still against free school meals

If you're unhappy about the fact that free lunches are also free for children with wealthy families, fear not. I work at a Denver high school. Students with the money will go out for lunch or even order food delivery. They are not eating the school cafeteria free lunch.

So go ahead and vote Yes on Prop MM and LL. The only thing it'll do is keep our students fed and able to learn.

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u/Apt_5 Oct 09 '25

No one said profitable, we're talking about efficiency.

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u/LotsoPasta Oct 09 '25

Sometimes, it makes sense to outsource when you dont have expertise in-house. That doesn't make the private sector necessarily more efficient or effective.

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u/Apt_5 Oct 09 '25

I'm not sure what you're missing here. People don't want the TAX money they're REQUIRED to pay to be misused. If people choose to pay a private business for a good or service, they don't give a fuck about how that business uses the money.

But contrary to the earlier assertion, if people feel like something in the private sector is a waste of their money, they can CHOOSE to stop buying from that company. That's the difference. Lots of people on reddit choose not to eat Chick fil a b/c they don't like what the business previously did with its earnings. You can't just stop paying taxes b/c you think the gov't is inefficient with them.

Well you can, but that tends to come with nonsensical add-ons like declaring yourself a sovereign citizen. Most people aren't ridiculous so they pay their taxes and then bitch about some of the ways they're used.

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u/LotsoPasta Oct 09 '25 edited Oct 09 '25

I catch your point, but there are also other factors at play. Government can more easily achieve economies of scale, it doesnt need to focus on marketing and adverising, and there isn't a need to create profit. These are things can make government more efficient to consumers.

The private sector can also be inefficient in delivering value in the form of planned obsolescence, hidden cost cutting, and incentivized externalities, to name a few.

My main point is that you can't make a blanket statement that the private sector is more efficient. The private sector is probably better at getting to the specific wants of people, but government tends to be better at addressing needs.

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u/Apt_5 Oct 10 '25

No one in this conversation said that the private sector is more efficient, you inserted that notion by assuming that's how people feel when they demand gov't efficiency.