Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a sign of good economy or low financial IQ that we are spending $12.2+ on Halloween and $700 million goes on pet costumes?
Americans are idiots.
Yup.Idiots like my MIL who buys my 16 year old Halloween socks and pencils and buys a Halloween themed bag to put them in. I’d rather she have put all the money that she spends on useless junk like that into a college fund. We’d have at least a semester tuition paid for that way.
Halloween socks are awesome. 55 yo man here.
One of my favorite memories from college was going to my mailbox around each holiday and getting a card from my favorite great aunt. In it was always a pair of holiday socks and $10 to buy vegetables. I loved those! You people on DCUM need to lighten up and have fun!
We moved out of DC over the summer. Halloween was awesome here. Kids everywhere. People dressed up, a full on haunted house in a neighbor's driveway. It was a ton of fun.
Anonymous wrote:Is this a sign of good economy or low financial IQ that we are spending $12.2+ on Halloween and $700 million goes on pet costumes?
Anonymous wrote:The inflatable things are tacky too.
Anonymous wrote:Is this a sign of good economy or low financial IQ that we are spending $12.2+ on Halloween and $700 million goes on pet costumes?
Anonymous wrote:Is this a sign of good economy or low financial IQ that we are spending $12.2+ on Halloween and $700 million goes on pet costumes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People spend on the little treats they can afford since home ownership and other middle class milestones are unfathomable.
This. Everything is terrible, so why shouldn't I dress my dog in a bear costume?
Honestly the Fed should get us all therapy and a GLP-1 prescription, that would fix the spending spree.
This made me smile. You should absolutely dress your dog in a bear costume.
It’s just all the home and lawn decorations that I think are over the top. It’s cheap plastic that will degrade, but not disappear sometime in the next 30 years. I try to limit the new plastic that I buy. My fake Christmas trees have anyways been used, etc. I hate the idea that my trash will still be in a landfill 200 years from now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People spend on the little treats they can afford since home ownership and other middle class milestones are unfathomable.
This. Everything is terrible, so why shouldn't I dress my dog in a bear costume?
Honestly the Fed should get us all therapy and a GLP-1 prescription, that would fix the spending spree.
Anonymous wrote:Is this a sign of good economy or low financial IQ that we are spending $12.2+ on Halloween and $700 million goes on pet costumes?