u/SomePeopleTellMe

Image 1 — Free sectional couch in Long Beach - pickup only
Image 2 — Free sectional couch in Long Beach - pickup only
Image 3 — Free sectional couch in Long Beach - pickup only

Free sectional couch in Long Beach - pickup only

Hey, I’m leaving my place at the end of June and if anybody wants this nice sectional couch you can have it. Pick up only and must be able to move it out (I will help).

Edit: forgot to add my location. Alamitos Beach Area

u/SomePeopleTellMe — 1 day ago
▲ 151 r/economy

So many Americans complain about the prices of food, toys, cars, and everything else… but they keep feeding the same corporations that raise them.

Why is it so hard for Americans to change their lifestyle just a little bit?

I see Americans complaining about the price of low quality junk food and soda.. like why not just stop buying those products?

A bag of chips is $5. I can get a pound of ground beef for $5-$6. Why not buy real food instead of overpriced junk food? Like is it that hard to make little changes?

Why are Americans loyal to corporations that truly don’t care about them? I understand, It’s nice to have a bag of chips or some ice cream once in a while as a treat but when stuff is so expensive it’s not worth it to buy that stuff all the time.

I hear Americans complain all the time about the price of soda? And it’s like then stop buying it.

Edit: I live in the USA. I cook 90% of my meals and mostly buy unprocessed food. It is so much cheaper than processed food. Meat, vegetables, fruit, etc is actually cheaper than prepackaged meals, let alone the nutritional value is so much better. I grocery shop 1-2x a week. I see the prices.

reddit.com
u/SomePeopleTellMe — 10 days ago