Buying nice clothes is smart-- says study

Limmer boots.
Smartwool/DarnTough socks.
SportHill Terrain pants.
Western Mountaineering.... anything.

Merlin speakers.
(or Green Mountain Audio)
Vacuum Tube Logic electronics.
M.I.T. cabling.

Michelin "tyres"
platinum plugs
synthetic oil
(Hey. No magic here.)

And a microbrew IPA.


I don't ask for much. Worsted wool; Johnston&Murphy; fitted shirt.

Anything else? Nah.
Ramen noodles, generic peanut butter, and I'm good to go.

Generic peanut butter??! Tastes like a monkey chewed up peanuts spitting them into the jar. Its gotta Jif.
 
I believe there's a lesson in the bible about this topic; gluttony.:thumbsup:

On the opposite end of that spectrum....I'm thinking about someone like Warren Buffett...that guy doesn't appear to be materialistic, at all o_O ;)
He does and behaves like how any normal, blue collar working stiff would be like in spite of his tens of billions of dollars.o_O


People should all live like frugal Jews. Practice their religion and laws and ways. -- Heck, even convert...and your life will improve,

Warren Buffet does not live like a blue collar guy. It is just that he has done an excellent job portraying the image. He travels to Davos and Bilderberger on private jets and socializes with the richest, most famous people on Earth. He plays Bridge with Bill Gates.


I guess he makes millions from public appearances and selling books, but being your own CEO also provides a lot of perks that blue collar guys don't have.

Especially free clothes from Trands/Dayang..........
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Buffett is not the only admirer. Bill Gates and Chinese President Hu Jintao have also taken to wearing custom suits by Dayang, as have other Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB) executives, including Buffett's right-hand man Charlie Munger. The made-to-measure suits cost $700 to $5,000, depending on the fabric. Buffett says he is a "special" customer and has so far not received a bill, although he has asked for one
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http://archive.fortune.com/2009/09/23/news/companies/warren_buffett_dayang_suits.fortune/index.htm
 
The bigger the logo and flashier more colorful the clothes are often worn by and attractive to less wealthy people. While the truly wealty's clothes have very small logos and are not flashy at all but are extremely expensive.

That big, polo horse that Ralph Lauren uses on some of their clothes gets on my nerves.
I like the clothes, they are colorful; but I have never bought anything with the big flashy horse and never will.
 
having nice things makes you a mark for scammers and thieves, but you don't think about that until it's too late
You must be from an emerging market country like Brazil or something. In the US, there are too many people that are piss poor (or in the negative territory) that dress rich. That's what credit cards are for :)
 
You must be from an emerging market country like Brazil or something. In the US, there are too many people that are piss poor (or in the negative territory) that dress rich. That's what credit cards are for :)

if you're a thief, no matter the country, would you go after someone that drives a porsche and wears $500 shoes instead of a regular dressed guy that drives a civic? you attract the wrong type of attention and people when you're flashy
 
Generic peanut butter??! Tastes like a monkey chewed up peanuts spitting them into the jar. Its gotta Jif.
I have family from Mali and they are peanut butter connoisseurs. They grow them and use them for everything. It is high class stuff, but I bought some Peter Pan to make some woodpecker food and I tasted it and now I am hooked. It tastes nothing like real peanut butter. They should give it a new name. Real peanut butter is like real adult work. Peter Pan makes you feel like a kid again.
 
Generic peanut butter??! Tastes like a monkey chewed up peanuts spitting them into the jar. Its gotta Jif.
PG sold Jif (and Crisco)to JM Smuckers about 15 years ago for like 800 Million.
That was a friggin steal. #1 selling peanut butter in the world.

I bet Kraft Heinz would love to own Jif. And the price would be in the billions.
 
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