The DUmbasses commiserate with one another over the crushing poverty they've discovered since the jug-eared muslim brought them hope and change:
Kennah (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-15-11 12:04 AM
Original message
Yardsales: A Simple Sign Of The Times
Wife and I had a yardsale a few weeks ago, and it sucked royally.
We couldn't give away the kids clothes until we hit $1 each item, and these were in pretty great shape. Even then, we did not move them all.
Every weekend, I see sign after sign for yardsale after yardsale. NEVER have I seen so many yardsales.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=439x1494119This reminds me of all those posts by DUmmies at the height of the Great Bush Prosperity, where they would discuss how
the shopping malls seemed to be deserted, and the few people there weren't buying anything. This was during a period of the lowest
unemployment rate since WWII.
msongs (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-15-11 12:09 AM
Response to Original message
1. cheap imports slammed yard sales, desperate ppl dumping stuff has killed them off....
used to be a yard sale was a good way to move out quality old stuff, then the onslaught of US corporations importing cheap junk made price at yard sales a tough go. now there are so many people selling stuff to make ends meet, yard sales patrons would rather buy cheap trash at the 99 cent store than pay their hurting neighbors a decent price.
I've never been to a yard sale. People used to call them "rummage" sales, which sounds a lot like "rubbish" sales.
sammytko (894 posts) Fri Jul-15-11 12:13 AM
Response to Original message
2. We usually have a couple of yardsales a summer - price items very low
Kids stuff a quarter or so. People will not pay much more than that even in good times. Target is no more than 10% of original price.
A quarter is more like it. I'll go a quarter for some kid's castoffs if they're good for a dust rag, or a single-use rag to wipe excess grease off my trailer hubs.
jwirr (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-15-11 12:21 AM
Response to Original message
3. Most yard sales are to get rid of excess item you no longer need.
If you want that then it is best to price things really cheap. I have only been to several sales this summer and I noticed that the prices have gone up. As Kunstler says, " living off each others rummage sales". Buyers are looking for bargains. If we do not find them we do not buy.
In other words, rubbish.
SoCalNative (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-15-11 12:38 AM
Response to Reply #3
6. Exactly
I'm having one in a week just to clear out excess crap I no longer need. Whatever doesn't sell is getting donated.
Now, the DUmbasses have established that this rubbish will not sell for over a buck, and that the fair market price to move it
is about a quarter per article.
I wonder what value per article this donated rubbish will have when this greedy DUmbass lists up his itemized deductions.
Now DUmmy NYC_SKP will give us a preview of the democrat 2012 campaign theme. Sounds like a winner:
NYC_SKP (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-15-11 12:23 AM
Response to Original message
4. There's a bright side to all this, seriously.
the last few years have seen a decrease in energy use, and consequently, less greenhouse gas emissions.
more people buying and selling used clothes is more sustainable, fewer useful goods going to the landfill, fewer new items imported and purchased.
our economy, our lifestyles, have been unsustainable for generations, in fact they've become increasingly so.
The future will look a lot like yardsales, and it won't all be bad.
cutlassmama (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-15-11 12:27 AM
Response to Original message
5. I noticed the onslaught about a year ago. MANY, many yard sales
and it's sad all the people "downsizing" and trying to get fair price for their stuff.
People only want bargain basement priced stuff or they don't buy.
If taxes were raised on billionaires, people would be willing to pay premium prices at rubbish sales.
grasswire (1000+ posts) Fri Jul-15-11 12:41 AM
Response to Original message
7. neighborhood sale last weekend
Observations:
Almost every person who came over to look at my stuff was a dealer looking to buy stock for resale. I am a dealer too. Shoppers aren't going to find the extreme bargain at my table that they can make money on. I already know what it's worth.
No one was a collector. I had vintage and antique postcards and ephemera, and linens.
But as a dealer I found things that *I* could make a profit on. Old German blown glass xmas ornaments. $1 a box.
I bought books from other sellers. I can almost always spring for a book.
Well, splash one pie shop. Gone down in flames.
I just wonder how someone who's lived in a former friend's bonus room for the past two or three years can be a junk collector.
Where does she keep it?
And now that she's told us about her eviction, its even harder to believe.
Maybe she's like one of those old guys with the long beards that American Pickers find, back in a hollow with huge heaps of rusting
old junk.