- Local time
- 4:50 PM
- Joined
- May 27, 2015
- Messages
- 6,309
- Reaction score
- 24,085
- Location
- Gaston South Carolina
These people give dumpster divers a bad name.
Dang! Someone’s going to hell for sure. I noticed that they had brand new mopeds and plenty of cigarettes.Stealing from Goodwill or Salvation Army; and then selling on Facebook Marketplace?
You ought to find a cardboard box marked as NyQuil. Wrap up some rocks and place them in the box and then epoxy the flaps shut. THEN, place the box in the donation container and watch the fun!Dang! Someone’s going to hell for sure. I noticed that they had brand new mopeds and plenty of cigarettes.
I’m going to post them on the what’s happening in Gaston website.You ought to find a cardboard box marked as NyQuil. Wrap up some rocks and place them in the box and then epoxy the flaps shut. THEN, place the box in the donation container and watch the fun!
ANd had plenty of money for a tattoo.Dang! Someone’s going to hell for sure. I noticed that they had brand new mopeds and plenty of cigarettes.
Most likely the latest and greatest iPhone too!Dang! Someone’s going to hell for sure. I noticed that they had brand new mopeds and plenty of cigarettes.
This brings to mind a post in a different thread, where @Richard Cranium mentioned that many of us here had learned frugality from Depression era parents. Instead of rummaging for used clothing to re-sell in my teens, I wore it. Before owning the dealership, and my GTX, Julie Clark did the same, as one of eight kids in an immigrant family. My daughter grew up as a mainstream millenial, didn't get her act together until her 40s. Prosperity seems to be a bad start for future generations.A lot of millenials and most of Gen Z have no concept of value and their goals are to buy the things outlined in posts above, with no thought to what they will do in life or how they will live when they are 40 or 50 and start having health issues.
They have created this weird market to upsell junk, like some sort of rummage sale stock market lol, where items have worth so long as the next idiot gives them another buck or two more then they paid for it, and the "loser" gets stuck holding the bag when the idiots are used up.
Population centers are most definitely accelerating into some sort of dystopian future.
Same, and really that was sort of the whole point for the thrift stores to begin with, it was rummage sale stuff all in one spot. Wife and I went for home decor stuff when we first got married so the walls weren't empty. I used to watch for old stereo stuff, I have my home stereo, but I also have one for the garage now and the shop, and my son has a start on one for himself.... that stalled out because they all end up ebay bound now.This brings to mind a post in a different thread, where @Richard Cranium mentioned that many of us here had learned frugality from Depression era parents. Instead of rummaging for used clothing to re-sell in my teens, I wore it. Before owning the dealership, and my GTX, Julie Clark did the same, as one of eight kids in an immigrant family. My daughter grew up as a mainstream millenial, didn't get her act together until her 40s. Prosperity seems to be a bad start for future generations.
I wonder if people would be so willing to donate if they knew the items they dropped off were going to be flipped by a lazy youngster so they could buy another pack of smokes and not go to someone that wants it or needs it?