#OCCUPYXMAS begins
This years’ Black Friday was a resounding success. Fifty-five billion dollars chimed through cash registers across the USA. Two hundred and fifty-thousand people went into the malls and spent on average 400 hundred dollars each, the biggest shopping day ever. Some notable purchases included ten limited edition Ferraris with matching luggage from Neiman Marcus’s exclusive holiday catalogue, $395,000 each, gobbled up in under an hour.
We in the 99%, alongside our sympathetic friends in the 1%, need to challenge this “normal” way of doing Xmas and come up with a new normal. The holidays need another paradigm.
So what are we occupiers going to do different this season? For starters, we’re going to take the personal plunge and move our money. We’re going to take it away from the big banks and put it into our local credit unions. And that will be the one great first step in breaking beyond the encampments and into the new Xmas imagination.
112 comments on the article “#OCCUPYXMAS begins”
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CynthiaG
Christmas is in the air. People are rushing now to the shopping centers to buy gifts and other things they need for this holiday. Most shops are expecting to gain more profit this season than the other months of the year. A lot of retailers offer their own in-house charge card and say that people get a discount for using them. Stay away, because that “discount” is type of misleading. Instead of saving money, you might end up having debt. People doing their Christmas gift shopping are going to hear this a lot. Many stores offer them, and the attraction of savings can make it seem like a good idea to get one of these cards, but ultimately it is best to avoid store or retail credit cards. You would be safer using personal loans to help with the holiday season. http://personalmoneynetwork.com/moneyblog/2011/12/06/retail-credit-cards/
CynthiaG
Christmas is in the air. People are rushing now to the shopping centers to buy gifts and other things they need for this holiday. Most shops are expecting to gain more profit this season than the other months of the year. A lot of retailers offer their own in-house charge card and say that people get a discount for using them. Stay away, because that “discount” is type of misleading. Instead of saving money, you might end up having debt. People doing their Christmas gift shopping are going to hear this a lot. Many stores offer them, and the attraction of savings can make it seem like a good idea to get one of these cards, but ultimately it is best to avoid store or retail credit cards. You would be safer using personal loans to help with the holiday season. http://personalmoneynetwork.com/moneyblog/2011/12/06/retail-credit-cards/
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