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7/19/2025, 3:08:33 PM
>>510801937
Then rephrase the statement. You didn't spend $71,000 on drywall.
You spent let's say $1200 on drywall, and $69,800 on paying someone to hang the drywall.
But is that even true? According to the first Google result I got, the average wage for someone who does home construction is $45/hr. If you spent $69,800 on labor, at $45/hr, that means a total of 1,551 man-hours of labor installing drywall. If there are 40 hours of labor in a work week, that's 38 work weeks of labor on hanging drywall. That means it would take a crew of 6 full-time laborers six and a half weeks just to hang the sheet rock in your house.
Again, going off of the first Google results, I'm getting, it should take a seasoned crew of 6 people just under a week and a half to get it done.
So, once again, no, my nigger. No way you spent $71,000 drywall + paying someone to hang the drywall.
Then rephrase the statement. You didn't spend $71,000 on drywall.
You spent let's say $1200 on drywall, and $69,800 on paying someone to hang the drywall.
But is that even true? According to the first Google result I got, the average wage for someone who does home construction is $45/hr. If you spent $69,800 on labor, at $45/hr, that means a total of 1,551 man-hours of labor installing drywall. If there are 40 hours of labor in a work week, that's 38 work weeks of labor on hanging drywall. That means it would take a crew of 6 full-time laborers six and a half weeks just to hang the sheet rock in your house.
Again, going off of the first Google results, I'm getting, it should take a seasoned crew of 6 people just under a week and a half to get it done.
So, once again, no, my nigger. No way you spent $71,000 drywall + paying someone to hang the drywall.
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