Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Economy and shopping in SD
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August 11, 2011 at 10:30 PM #719297August 12, 2011 at 9:23 AM #718234briansd1Guest
[quote=bearishgurl]
Great Chinese tour link, btw :)[/quote]BG, you’ve said before that you like to take car trips to see the USofA.
Those Chinese tours are incredibly cheap.
You could not book the hotels and drive yourself for the same price. And even if you drove yourself, you would not have time and energy to see all those sites in the amount of time.
I really recommend that you try them once just for fun and for the experience.
I have a friend who is married to a Chinese woman and they have relatives and friends coming all the time. They’ve taken nearly all the tours already.
August 12, 2011 at 9:23 AM #718326briansd1Guest[quote=bearishgurl]
Great Chinese tour link, btw :)[/quote]BG, you’ve said before that you like to take car trips to see the USofA.
Those Chinese tours are incredibly cheap.
You could not book the hotels and drive yourself for the same price. And even if you drove yourself, you would not have time and energy to see all those sites in the amount of time.
I really recommend that you try them once just for fun and for the experience.
I have a friend who is married to a Chinese woman and they have relatives and friends coming all the time. They’ve taken nearly all the tours already.
August 12, 2011 at 9:23 AM #718920briansd1Guest[quote=bearishgurl]
Great Chinese tour link, btw :)[/quote]BG, you’ve said before that you like to take car trips to see the USofA.
Those Chinese tours are incredibly cheap.
You could not book the hotels and drive yourself for the same price. And even if you drove yourself, you would not have time and energy to see all those sites in the amount of time.
I really recommend that you try them once just for fun and for the experience.
I have a friend who is married to a Chinese woman and they have relatives and friends coming all the time. They’ve taken nearly all the tours already.
August 12, 2011 at 9:23 AM #719077briansd1Guest[quote=bearishgurl]
Great Chinese tour link, btw :)[/quote]BG, you’ve said before that you like to take car trips to see the USofA.
Those Chinese tours are incredibly cheap.
You could not book the hotels and drive yourself for the same price. And even if you drove yourself, you would not have time and energy to see all those sites in the amount of time.
I really recommend that you try them once just for fun and for the experience.
I have a friend who is married to a Chinese woman and they have relatives and friends coming all the time. They’ve taken nearly all the tours already.
August 12, 2011 at 9:23 AM #719436briansd1Guest[quote=bearishgurl]
Great Chinese tour link, btw :)[/quote]BG, you’ve said before that you like to take car trips to see the USofA.
Those Chinese tours are incredibly cheap.
You could not book the hotels and drive yourself for the same price. And even if you drove yourself, you would not have time and energy to see all those sites in the amount of time.
I really recommend that you try them once just for fun and for the experience.
I have a friend who is married to a Chinese woman and they have relatives and friends coming all the time. They’ve taken nearly all the tours already.
August 12, 2011 at 9:31 AM #718239briansd1GuestEating out is the new normal. Just like having a smart phone is the new normal. Just like leasing a car for the cheap monthly payment is the new normal.
Even designer clothe is the new normal. We now have a prolifiration of designer brands.
People expect all of those things as minimal. I believe they’d rather default on their houses before cutting back on those things.
August 12, 2011 at 9:31 AM #718331briansd1GuestEating out is the new normal. Just like having a smart phone is the new normal. Just like leasing a car for the cheap monthly payment is the new normal.
Even designer clothe is the new normal. We now have a prolifiration of designer brands.
People expect all of those things as minimal. I believe they’d rather default on their houses before cutting back on those things.
August 12, 2011 at 9:31 AM #718925briansd1GuestEating out is the new normal. Just like having a smart phone is the new normal. Just like leasing a car for the cheap monthly payment is the new normal.
Even designer clothe is the new normal. We now have a prolifiration of designer brands.
People expect all of those things as minimal. I believe they’d rather default on their houses before cutting back on those things.
August 12, 2011 at 9:31 AM #719082briansd1GuestEating out is the new normal. Just like having a smart phone is the new normal. Just like leasing a car for the cheap monthly payment is the new normal.
Even designer clothe is the new normal. We now have a prolifiration of designer brands.
People expect all of those things as minimal. I believe they’d rather default on their houses before cutting back on those things.
August 12, 2011 at 9:31 AM #719441briansd1GuestEating out is the new normal. Just like having a smart phone is the new normal. Just like leasing a car for the cheap monthly payment is the new normal.
Even designer clothe is the new normal. We now have a prolifiration of designer brands.
People expect all of those things as minimal. I believe they’d rather default on their houses before cutting back on those things.
August 12, 2011 at 9:34 AM #718244poorgradstudentParticipantThere’s a lot of good data that in economic downturns people don’t necessarily shop less, they just spend less when they do. In fact, they may actually spend *more* time physically shopping, searching for better deals and going to more stores to stretch their dollars further.
August 12, 2011 at 9:34 AM #718336poorgradstudentParticipantThere’s a lot of good data that in economic downturns people don’t necessarily shop less, they just spend less when they do. In fact, they may actually spend *more* time physically shopping, searching for better deals and going to more stores to stretch their dollars further.
August 12, 2011 at 9:34 AM #718930poorgradstudentParticipantThere’s a lot of good data that in economic downturns people don’t necessarily shop less, they just spend less when they do. In fact, they may actually spend *more* time physically shopping, searching for better deals and going to more stores to stretch their dollars further.
August 12, 2011 at 9:34 AM #719087poorgradstudentParticipantThere’s a lot of good data that in economic downturns people don’t necessarily shop less, they just spend less when they do. In fact, they may actually spend *more* time physically shopping, searching for better deals and going to more stores to stretch their dollars further.
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