Posted on 12/13/2011 9:06:38 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Apparently the same math method used for Climate change.
Too many negative connotations.
Go back to calling it, "The Day After Thanksgiving."
When Obama loses next November I predict a record Christmas buying season.
100%. Every single time. All of them.
I think I'm beginning to see a trend here.
But maybe it's just me...
I’m not betting he’ll lose. That would require an honest election, or for that matter, any election.
National emergency, dontcha know?
A couple of months ago, I noticed Big Media referring to a good stock market day as being “in the green” and figured the fix had already been in to rename Black Friday to Green Friday.
Maybe they had intended to after the sales figures backed up their projections.
later
The customary ‘unexpected’. We may even have moved from customary into formal ritual at this point.
Since the first Bush presidency, I have noticed that Christmas retail seasons are always touted to be below expectations when a Republican (or is it simply when a Bush) is president, while they always exceed expectations when a Demoncrat is president.
No, folks, no bias here.
Yeah. Anytime I hear Black Friday, I think of the 1929 crash.
RE: Hint: Stop calling it “Black” Friday.
I’m surprised the Jesse Jacksons and Al Sharptons of the world have not made an issue out of it yet...
The radio news readers were soiling themselves with glee over the record setting Black Friday as I was driving to a suburban Boston Costco the next day. This particular Costco is at the end of a very busy retail boulivard. There were cops on overtime at every intersection, standing around. As we went in to the store, I told my wife that I had NEVER seen any Costco that empty on a weekend afternoon in my 25 years of shopping there.
Just like the unemployment reports. Definitely a pattern....of deception.
I think of the Steely Dan song.
At least one retailer that I know about missed it’s Black Friday target, but made it up over the five day (Thanksgiving through Cyber Monday) shopping weekend by doing unexpectedly well online.
-——but not for price changes,-——
That is the meat and potatoes of the report.
The sales were greater because of inflation. the prices of stuff rose, not the volume of goods sold
In retail lore, it's the day that the books (store accounts) turn from red to black.
It's also the day the stock market crashed in 1929.
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