Doomscrolling Reddit's take on the 'Money can't buy happiness' myth. Because passion doesn't pay your rent, and pizza parties don't fix burnout.

Sup, fellow code monkeys and bug-squashing gurus. While you're chugging your 5th cup of coffee waiting for Friday, I was doomscrolling Reddit and stumbled upon a goldmine in r/antiwork. The legendary post with over 4,500 upvotes roasting the age-old corporate mantra: "Money can't buy happiness." You know, the exact phrase your PM uses right before offering you a pizza party instead of a year-end bonus.
The original meme essentially calls BS on the idea that wealth and joy are mutually exclusive. Sure, money might not magically cure your existential dread, but being broke guarantees it. Imagine debugging a production cloud VPS at 3 AM on an empty stomach and a junior dev's salary. Yeah, pure bliss right there.
The comment section was an absolute bloodbath of truth bombs. Here is what the internet had to say:
TL;DR: "Money can't buy happiness" is a premium DLC phrase for people who already finished the main quest of getting rich. For us mere mortals grinding out Jira tickets, money buys housing, healthcare, and peace of mind.
Next time management tries to gaslight you with "culture over compensation" during performance reviews, remember that your landlord doesn't accept "passion" as payment. Keep your tech stack updated, your repos clean, and ruthlessly negotiate that tech salary. Don't let corporate America drain your RAM.