This Jimi, is exactly what I'm talking about.
I forgot how much eggs went up. Definitely threw a wrench in my go to Denver Omelet for breakfast. They've actually come back down recently. My wife wanted to get chickens but there are too many foxes in our neighborhood.I'm in the same boat. We literally bought chickens because it's cheaper to feed them than buying eggs![]()
Cmon CNN think people are that stupid. 90 Day “Prisoner” has fresh clothes hair cut, no poop in a cell.
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We have a lot of coyotes around but a cheap chicken wire and t post fence has kept our 5 chickens safeI forgot how much eggs went up. Definitely threw a wrench in my go to Denver Omelet for breakfast. They've actually come back down recently. My wife wanted to get chickens but there are too many foxes in our neighborhood.
It's not me. I'm talking to people in Florida, Texas, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Nebraska, Arizona, New Mexico, etc, I can't think of anybody who hasn't said something along the lines of groceries have doubled when the subject comes up. My buddies and Portland and Seattle seem to have gotten even worse than doubled. This is no different than Covid/C19 jab: you can't tell people X is happening when they can look around and see that X isn't happening and indeed it's Y that is happening.I'd say this site gives a pretty decent representation of what can be seen across the 'web when it comes to how the right reacts to info that paints Trump in a negative light.
I've pointed out a ton of stuff about him that is factual and easily verified. Supporters will fight to the virtual death to deny it, ignore it, or in some way push it the background.
Have the cries of "fake news" decreased? Maybe? Or have they been replaced?
I show a very clear instance of a Trump lie, and then someone blindly supporting that lie right on this site, and the response is that I'M the one with "TDS". I guess it's not calling it fake news, but is simply shouting "TDS" any different? Not so much.
That chart was actually the most popular cereals by purchase history. It was culled from Amazon Did they become most popular because the prices dropped? Not sure.
Did they reduce the size of the box by 70% do to shrinkflation? That would be a helluva change in order to get the doubling of price you are talking about.
That 18 ounce box of Cheerios would now have to be 6 ounces.
I referenced 2020 prices because they were actually the lower prices of the goods during Trump's term. I was giving him the benefit of a lower starting point to compare to today's prices. And the comparison still didn't yield a doubling of prices.
I knwo you are talking your personal price histories, but I am talking the country as a whole.
The stalemate is that you don't believe the data that is collected, compiled and presented to show what happens on average. Any discussion really becomes moot, as history is a lie and the only reality is what you pay today.
Before I read this part, I actually tried to look at a Walmart order I had from 2020. The system shows the order, then asks me to log in when I try to view details, then instantly times me out after I put in my super-secret 6-digit two-factor authentication code.
I'll try again later and post what I come up with, for shits and giggles.
He's using a 2 year span to say groceries haven't gone up...It's not me. I'm talking to people in Florida, Texas, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Nebraska, Arizona, New Mexico, etc, I can't think of anybody who hasn't said something along the lines of groceries have doubled when the subject comes up. My buddies and Portland and Seattle seem to have gotten even worse than doubled. This is no different than Covid/C19 jab: you can't tell people X is happening when they can look around and see that X isn't happening and indeed it's Y that is happening.
Again the cereal chart is rather useless, because we don't know what products they were using. They cite the most common products. If the most common product was the 4 pack of 16oz boxes and is now the 40oz bag, then I'm not too impressed with the reduction in cost, because there is a reduction in quantity. They could have given us a useful metric like the price/oz but chose not to. Maybe I live in some sort of inflation Nexus and everybody I communicate with lives in a similar inflation Nexus, but I doubt it. I travel to the surrounding states quite a bit, I'm not seeing different inflation trends there.
Unless you match up with the chart, you and everyone you know are just outliersMaybe I live in some sort of inflation Nexus and everybody I communicate with lives in a similar inflation Nexus
It's all sorts of weird data. The milk stood out to me. The 2020 commodity price was $3/gal, but I was routinely paying $2/gal, so the commodity price for that product has nothing to do with price in the store.He's using a 2 year span to say groceries have t gone up...
Nice and probably a higher quality egg compared to the $3.50/dozen eggs in the store. FWIW, $5/dozen in metro Denver. That's what I get for living in a big blue city.We have a lot of coyotes around but a cheap chicken wire and t post fence has kept our 5 chickens safe
We split the feed costs with the in-laws and we get about 30 eggs a week on on $30 food a month...so roughly 60 fresh eggs for $15 a month on my end...eggs are 3.50ish a dozen in the store.
Plus occasionally we sell a couple dozen here and there too
Not only are we outliers, but if groceries really only went up ~25% then where are all the people whose grocery prices either went down or stayed the same to offset all the people who claim prices have ~doubled?Unless you match up with the chart, you and everyone you know are just outliers![]()
They're good eggs and I'm a glutton for a 6 egg Denver OmeletNice and probably a higher quality egg compared to the $3.50/dozen eggs in the store. FWIW, $5/dozen in metro Denver. That's what I get for living in a big blue city.