When I buy stuff, I generally buy what is best rather than what is cheap.
Generally when you let cost be your guide (rather than quality), you will
end up spending more in the long run than if you went out and bought the
most expensive item in the first place that was a higher quality product.

-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Munn [mailto:cfmuns...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Monday, April 11, 2011 17:58 
To: cf-community
Subject: Re: [Economics] Of the 1%, by the 1% and For the 1%


On Mon, Apr 11, 2011 at 3:20 PM, Casey Dougall
<ca...@uberwebsitesolutions.com> wrote:
>
> Every home in the getto with a $60,000 kitchen, is that what your saying?
> Don't forget that the average wage in America is $10 / hour.
>

I'm saying that we mandate investment in quality goods as a means of
creating a sustainable country. When the $15 kitchen gadget you bought on TV
breaks after a few weeks of use, the question you should be asking is how
you got suckered into buying a worthless product in the first place. Human
civilization made it 100,000 years without the Salad Shooter, why is it
suddenly we can't live without it?
Refrigerators were once luxury purchases on par with automobiles.
Rather than stay on the credit treadmill for the rest of our lives, why
don't we go back to saving and investing for ourselves? We might actually do
better, and we would give less of our money to the richest people in the
country - who make bank on our debt-driven society.



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