Posted on 07/18/2019 2:36:52 PM PDT by Red Badger
Suze Orman wants young people to stop peeing away millions of dollars on coffee. Last month, the personal-finance celebrity ignited a controversy on social media when a video she starred in for CNBC targeted a familiar villain: kids these days and their silly $5 lattes. Because brewing coffee at home is less expensive, Orman argued, purchasing it elsewhere is tantamount to flushing money away, which makes it a worthy symbol of Millennials squandered resources.
Ormans not alone in this view. The old guard of personal finance has spent years turning the habit of buying coffee into a shorthand for Americans profligacy, especially that of young Americans. Dave Ramsey, a finance personality who hosts a popular radio show on getting out of debt, says that forgoing lattes is one of four keys to saving thousands of dollars. Kevin OLeary, one of the investors on the entrepreneurial reality show Shark Tank, once told CNBC, I never buy a frape-latte-blah-blah-blah-woof-woof-woof. Even the official Twitter account for Chase Bank has gotten in on the fun, intimating via meme that a failure to brew at home is why young people dont have any money.
In the face of coffee shaming, young people usually point to things like student loans and housing prices as the true source of the generations instability, not their $100-a-month cold-brew habits. Nonetheless, coffee endures as a personal-finance flash point because it provides such a tidy intersection of generational tensions. A cup of coffee embodies changes in everything from how younger Americans eat to where they live and how they approach their finances. For young people who buy one each morning, the walk up to the barista can be a shame-tinged tug of war.
(Excerpt) Read more at theatlantic.com ...
Costco.com? Youd have to decide if its worth it...
“Says the clown that misspells comprehension. I caught more than you did, dumbass. Just what we need, another nazi telling us about something we dont need. They do that with guns, too. Why do you need that? None of your damn business.”
When you find yourself too deep, best to stop digging.
“Says the clown that misspells comprehension.”
Only a ja would make a big deal out of a typo and falsely say it is a spelling error.
” Just what we need, another nazi telling us about something we dont need. “
Check the mirror!
“Ja” is not a word.
“Ja is not a word.”
Take a guess.
No idea, I don’t speak millenial and I don’t care to research their “humor”. Honestly, I don’t see what you’re getting so pissed about.
“No idea, I dont speak millenial and I dont care to research their humor. Honestly, I dont see what youre getting so pissed about.”
Spelling anyone?
Dittos for me. I get the generic K cups, not the buck a cup brands, and it's very handy. I don't hate Starbucks coffee like some here, but don't do business with them because of their politics. I used to get gift cards sometimes, and the medium regular coffee is something like a buck fifty. Heading out of town with my daughter once, stopped at a Starbucks cause I had a $10 gift card, and asked her if she wanted anything. Got me a coffee and whatever she ordered, and it was around $9. That's when I realized what people were talking about with someone wasting money at Starbucks.
Part of the move towards socialism is that a lot of people are being raised to think if something is necessary, it should be free. School lunch, medical care, housing and transportation are all necessary. My parents and I sweated that stuff. Today, many people think necessities should be provided and income is to be spent on frivolities like tattoos, coffee sweets, and entertainment.
No Costco within a hundred miles of me!............
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