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Consider Boycotting Holiday Shopping.

The biggest retail day of the year is this month, and it's time to resist the "buy" buttons that advertisers are trying to push and to join a consuming boycott.


Female shoppers, beware.
It's November and that means that Black Friday -- the day after Thanksgiving, the biggest shopping day of the year -- is lurking at the end of the month, raising the risk of a post-holiday debt hangover.

Twenty-three percent of Americans will not pay off their holiday debt until March or later, equaling $14.6 billion in interest-accruing debt, according to a Consumer Reports 2006 survey. Over one-quarter of Americans use credit cards most often when holiday shopping, contributing to the $63.6 billion charged on credit cards throughout the shopping season.

Since as much as 75 percent of retailers' profits accrue during the holiday season, Black Friday represents the point in time when retailers' account books shift from red (debt) to black (profit).

But black fades into red when we switch our standpoint to the consumer's perspective.

The money flowing into cash registers accentuates the red tide of consumer debt, which is especially toxic for women, whose bankruptcy filings have risen ninefold in the past 20 years, according to research published in the Brooklyn Law Review. Women Aren't Profligate

It's not that women are profligate in their spending, at the holidays or otherwise.

Yes, Women's Wear Daily may tell us that "yuletide bling" appeals to multiple generations of women and that "jewel-encrusted bras, camisoles embellished with feathers and silky crotch-less panties sold like hot cakes last year."

This could tempt you to think that women have become downright hysterical in their spending. But more methodical research tells us that when it comes to overspending our society has achieved a rare gender balance; both sexes do it to pretty much to the same extent.

Instead, overspending during the holidays is a women's issue in particular for a very simple reason: we can afford it less. That's because we continue to earn less -- 75 cents to the dollar on average -- and we are also less likely to have other financial safeguards such as jobs with good health care and pension benefits.

Much more often than men, women are using consumer credit to pay for life's necessities. Retailers Worried

Retailers, meanwhile, are clearly worried that spending will not match the double-digit sales gains of the last several seasons, which gets us to the real warning of the story.

In 2006 companies spent a staggering $209.74 billion on advertising. The results of all that money are, in their immensity, difficult if not impossible to either avoid or ignore.

Advertisers target women for a simple reason: We do about 85 percent of all consumer spending. The constant buzz of advertising is, as the economist John Kenneth Galbraith once put it, "relentless propaganda on behalf of goods."

The array of available goods grows daily, and so inevitably does the list of what we know we don't have. This induces a perpetual state of wanting, and millions of us heed the siren call of malls, department stores, upscale boutiques, downscale discounters and everything in between.

http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=...DdLQ5m1vxzVro%2FSc7p
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PBA -- believe it or not, I agree with you to a point, but not like you think...I try to buy things for my family over the course of the year (say July through November) because I detest the way that society has commercialized and shoved Christmas sales down our throats from Halloween on...I try to get one or two things for everyone but stay within a small budget...I want to remember the holidays for the time I've spent with my family and friends and not with how much money I spent...Not to mention, going to the mall or other stores during the holidays and dealing with the enormous crowds and what not -- it tends to ruin my mood...
I GOT UP AT 4:30 FOR SO MANY YEARS THAT ON WEEKENDS I STILL WOULD SLEEP IN AND GET UP AT AROUND 5. ONE FRIDAY AFTER THANKSGIVING I WENT TO WALMART TO GET ME SOME OF THEM HANGING LIGHTS LIKE FETCHIN GRETCHIN LEAVES UP ALL YEAR LONG. I WAS AT THE BACK OF THE STORE WHERE MENS CLOTHING IS AND I HEARD A NNOUNCEMENT FOR PEOPLE THAT WANTED A FURBY TO LINE UP AT MENS DRESSING ROOM. I HEARD SOMEONE SAY EXCUSE ME AND THE NEXT THING I KNOW I AM FALLING INTO A RACK OF CLOTHES. I WAS ANGRY AND FOLLOWED THE LADY THAT SHOVED ME TO THE LINE BUT CALMED BEFORE WE GOT THERE. SHE TRIED TO BREAK LINE AND WOUND UP BEING ESCORTED OUT BY THE POLICE. THEN I GOT PINNED IN A AISLE WITH NO OUTLET SO I HAD TO WAIT UNTIL SOME PEOPLE MOVED TO GET OUT. THOSE PEOPLE GOT SEVERAL BOXES OF THOSE LIGHTS I WANTED AND FILLED THEIR BUGGY UP BEFORE THE FORK LIFT STOPPED. THEY WERE CONGRADUATING EACH OTHER AND ONE OF THEM ASKED THE OTHER "WHAT DID WE GET?" I FINALLY GOT MY LIGHTS AND AS I LEFT I NOTICED THERE WERE STACKS AND STACKS OF THOSE LIGHTS LEFT. ONE THING I LIKE ABOUT WALMART IS THEY GET A LOT OF THE ITEMS THAT ARE ON SALE. A LOT OF THE STORES ONLY HAVE A FEW AND THAT CREATES A RUKUS.
I hate shopping. HATE it. Bleck. But I do love my family and try to come up with something special that they don't expect for Christmas. I do 80% of my shopping online, and I only go to a store if I can't find it online. Even then, it's in and out for me. I really can't stand the mall. I get very irritable in frenzied crowds of shoppers.
quote:
Originally posted by Sassy Kims:
If you catch me shopping on "Black Friday", please call an ambulance and have them bring one of those jackets that buckle in the back...because I will have lost my mind.

Otherwise, I have already done a lot of my shopping, and plan on continuing with the rest, which I pay for as I go.



Same here, Sassy!!!

I hear retailers are very afraid of their profits this year though. But I still ain't going!!!

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