How rich are the Kents

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They own a farm in Smallville and Clark was able to go to college despite studying in a public school. It must be a good college too, since he immediately went to work for a major journalism company straight out of school in a big city. I'm sure Clark got tons of educational merit scholarships so money is not much of issue. I'd say around upper middleclass

kulaks

>since he immediately went to work for a major journalism company straight out of school in a big city
Fastest typist Perry has ever seen.

nobody living on a farm is rich dude

What do the Kents grow exactly?

They have a farm in KS and hardly ever see them working or growing anything.

They deal meth obviously.

corn & dairy

I imagine they grow more than just corn. It's risky to do only one type of crop, right?

Why? They probably sell tons of products and they live in a city with low life costs

the one who said I also vaguely remembering in the superboy comic that they also had a wheat field but it not that risky depending on size government payouts and alternative production like the cows & chickens (clark always mention them) I mention before

Superman can turn coals into diamonds he can set his family for life but chooses not to.

This is something modern American farmers tell your for pity points. Every modern American farm is subsidized off the wazoo and the owners are steady upper middle class.

>city slicker who isn't in the know
Dude the government pays them a mint.

Do you know how much it costs to run a farm retard? Nevermind what you have to pay in property taxes due to how many acres you need to have for a proper farm

You have to keep in mind that back in the Golden Age and Silver Age, college was a LOT cheaper, you could go to college just by flipping burgers without needing to worry about student loans.

>College was cheaper

No it wasn't. Compare tuition for college then adjusted for inflation now, it's not much different. The thing was that back then going to college wasn't even necessary and many people still weren't even finishing primary school in the 1930s

College tuition including room and board was around $900 in 1940. That's $25,000 today

>No it wasn't. Compare tuition for college then adjusted for inflation now, it's not much different.
It was, but you're right that it's not much cheaper than getting a four year degree nowadays.

The problem lies in the fact that people make less money today than they did back then.

Still more expensive today but damn.

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>he immediately went to work for a major journalism company straight out of school in a big city
It was unironically this easy back then.

Jews did this