Pennyguy23
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2006
- Messages
- 1,635
Nice Thread
Way to help people out. You must be a glass half empty type of person?
Way to help people out. You must be a glass half empty type of person?
Way to help people out. You must be a glass half empty type of person?
Nice Thread![]()
![]()
Way to help people out. You must be a glass half empty type of person?
![]()
)Nice Thread![]()
![]()
Way to help people out. You must be a glass half empty type of person?
![]()
The gloom and doom is not helpful. It adds to the anxiety.
Please continue to follow the advice of "good" economists - manage your debt, look for good investments, and keep your appropriate level of spending. The WORST thing that can happen to the economy right now is if everyone picks up their money and goes home - it will be worse.
If you stop spending money at the local furniture store, the owner has to lay off their workers. If they lay off the worker, they stop going to the clothing store. The clothing store owner lays off their worker, who had planned to go to Disney. Disney sees a decline and lays off their worker. That worker stops going to out to eat, which causes the local restaurant to close. The owner of the local restaurant was about to buy their wife a new living room furniture set. The local furniture store now sees a further decline and closes shop... repeat cycle until you have a serious recession.
And by the way. We are NOT in a depression. We are not even technically in a recession yet by definition. Those who even mention depression are fanning flames and attempting to create a self-fulfilling prophecy. Its pathetic, and in my opinion the so-called experts and pundits out there saying this should be investigated and face legal consequences equivalent to yelling "fire" in a crowded theater. Give me facts please. And the facts prove this level of talk is unfounded.

Watching the local news this morning, there was an economic expert on who basically said the US is screwed financially. We are currently over 400 BILLION in debt, and we will continue to be in debt for the next several years. He said this will be a long, difficult road back to recovery.
Look for the resales to go through the roof. There will be a gradual but steady decline of DVC sales, and other than foreigners, look for Disney to start losing tourists. The recession has now become a depression. All of our excessive spending has finally caught up with us.
We will have to work our way out of this over the next 10 - 15 years.
Good luck everyone.

I live down here in Texas.....where we make it. If I go by the factory I can get stale 2 day old gas for half off on tuesdays and fridays.
Cant.breathe!
I just came to this post so it might have beeen mentioned already, but in California the school districts are not doing well at all. Many teachers are getting laid off and if you are just graduating you won't be finding a job anytime soon. Due the housing decline people aren't moving into the area and thus so many schools are not needed. You school district must be doing very well.Where is gas $3.04?? I am moving. I can't stand almost $4.00/gallon anymore. Although, on Disney property it is cheaper than it is closer to Orlando, by about $0.20...one thing Disney offers cheaper than anywhere else near me - gas.
PS. I am not panicking. I got laid off from work, so I went back to school to get a degree in something I know is always needed where I live - teaching!
Anyone who thinks we're in a depression needs to seek out someone who lived in the depression. It's an insult to what they went through to compare what we have going on to then.![]()
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I don't think this thread pertains to DVC at all, nor did the OP intend it that way. I vote for it to be moved the community board where it will grow exponentially out of control and the fighting will cause it to be locked down. LOL.![]()
To be fair to the OP, if he was born in 1981 and is age 26 or 27, this may be the first time that he has experienced what many of us who are older have been through before, and will go through again.
He most likely does not remember the 1980's or much of the 1990's, and may only know a life of relative ease in the United States of the last several years.
I can imagine that for young people who are coming of age this is most likely a shock to them, if they only knew relative privelege or well being growing up, and never witnessed their parents having to struggle (although their parents may well have struggled in the 70's/80's/90's)
Many people really only become aware of such things in their teens, not their childhood, so he simply may not remember that far back.
Edited: ok, I just saw that OP is not the age that I thought, so don't know why the panic, but I do know that many people do get very wound up by the media. My advice is to turn off the TV, or at least watch/listen to a broad range of programming, and not just America-focussed. BBC World is I believe available in America and gives a global viewpoint in a rather calming fashion.
Of course I have the benefit of a European spouse and in-laws that lived through WWII in Europe.
Tell me you're joking...I'm just ignorant.... Right?

i think that was a joke....STALE GAS????![]()
What happens to it to make it stale? I never knew gas had an expiration period. I think we are always getting stale gas since the refineries are no longer in NJ. Lucky you in Texas. But it's hot, right? NOT so in the North East. It's a nice crisp fall day here in NJ.