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Future Predictions
radio shack, JC penny, or sears
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<blockquote data-quote="Thoth93" data-source="post: 152175" data-attributes="member: 7866"><p>Well yeah they tried to grow themselves too big with all these locations housing all kinds of books that nobody is ever going to read when they should have scaled down to small magazine kiosks and focusing on magazines callenders and best sellers like the latest DrPhil or Harry Potter. Then they should have made deals with the airports and they would be sitting well right now. See I have a buddy who studied and economics and he knew that the whole system was designed to benefit only those at the top and the idea that anyone can become rich is a quiet lie because there are too many restrictions and the only way our country is going to get back on its feet is through local production and local distribution. By cutting out as much shipping costs and overhead as possible and rather than having two or three giant Monopoly corporations having hundreds of independent stores across the country like back in the old days when a guy working at a soda shop could afford to buy a house. People could afford to go out and do things with each other and have a social life. It used to be that manufacturing would happen all over. Down the road from town they make shovels and further down the road they make plumbing pipes and fittings. So everybody in town has a job at either the shovel factory or the pipe factory and those factories supply the general and hardware stores of 3 states.</p><p>Then Glutton economics happened and the shovel company moves to China all those workers loose their jobs and so they can't afford to go to the soda shop so then that guy gets laid off and next thing you know there is all this wealth all this production but only a small few are benefiting from it. So now you have a jobless society flooded with second rate shovels designed to break so you have to buy another one and in the long run you end up buying four or five shovels over the course of a few years and since each time you buy it, it seems cheaper than the good shovel you don't notice that over a 10 year period you end up spending 3x the amount of money for a shit product anyhow and nobody in the US benefits from the sale. The guy who sold it to you works for minimum wage for the Walmart reminiscing about the old days when he used to own the local hardware store selling the shovels and pipefittings that used to be made down the road. I say get in your kitchen or garage and start making things then sell it to your neighborhood family and friends and sell it for a fraction of the price of the big companies. Say for example you make laundry detergent in your kitchen and sell it for a 1.50 a gallon to your neighborhood. It's fee of toxic chemicals and cheap for them and you make an extra 50 bucks every two weeks. Sell it right out of your garage on the weekend or deliver it. But the main thing now is that citizens get creative and use the mass of information on the web to slowly cut out big corporations from your life and replace them with local goods.</p><p></p><p>We said it back in the 70's buy American buy American, was saving a few hundred bucks at the time worth not being able to do anything but work at wall Mart now was it worth the mortgage payments you can't meet today? People used to work for the American dream but now they slave for the corporation with no future but FEMA camps.</p><p></p><p>Start making things if you want to survive seriously because the elite think that getting rid of employment means getting rid of the unemployed.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Thoth93, post: 152175, member: 7866"] Well yeah they tried to grow themselves too big with all these locations housing all kinds of books that nobody is ever going to read when they should have scaled down to small magazine kiosks and focusing on magazines callenders and best sellers like the latest DrPhil or Harry Potter. Then they should have made deals with the airports and they would be sitting well right now. See I have a buddy who studied and economics and he knew that the whole system was designed to benefit only those at the top and the idea that anyone can become rich is a quiet lie because there are too many restrictions and the only way our country is going to get back on its feet is through local production and local distribution. By cutting out as much shipping costs and overhead as possible and rather than having two or three giant Monopoly corporations having hundreds of independent stores across the country like back in the old days when a guy working at a soda shop could afford to buy a house. People could afford to go out and do things with each other and have a social life. It used to be that manufacturing would happen all over. Down the road from town they make shovels and further down the road they make plumbing pipes and fittings. So everybody in town has a job at either the shovel factory or the pipe factory and those factories supply the general and hardware stores of 3 states. Then Glutton economics happened and the shovel company moves to China all those workers loose their jobs and so they can't afford to go to the soda shop so then that guy gets laid off and next thing you know there is all this wealth all this production but only a small few are benefiting from it. So now you have a jobless society flooded with second rate shovels designed to break so you have to buy another one and in the long run you end up buying four or five shovels over the course of a few years and since each time you buy it, it seems cheaper than the good shovel you don't notice that over a 10 year period you end up spending 3x the amount of money for a shit product anyhow and nobody in the US benefits from the sale. The guy who sold it to you works for minimum wage for the Walmart reminiscing about the old days when he used to own the local hardware store selling the shovels and pipefittings that used to be made down the road. I say get in your kitchen or garage and start making things then sell it to your neighborhood family and friends and sell it for a fraction of the price of the big companies. Say for example you make laundry detergent in your kitchen and sell it for a 1.50 a gallon to your neighborhood. It's fee of toxic chemicals and cheap for them and you make an extra 50 bucks every two weeks. Sell it right out of your garage on the weekend or deliver it. But the main thing now is that citizens get creative and use the mass of information on the web to slowly cut out big corporations from your life and replace them with local goods. We said it back in the 70's buy American buy American, was saving a few hundred bucks at the time worth not being able to do anything but work at wall Mart now was it worth the mortgage payments you can't meet today? People used to work for the American dream but now they slave for the corporation with no future but FEMA camps. Start making things if you want to survive seriously because the elite think that getting rid of employment means getting rid of the unemployed. [/QUOTE]
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