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teacherone
11-29-2009, 06:44 AM
Written by a statist liberal but nonetheless inspired.


Here's a simple plan that will bring Big Banking to its feet: Use Cash.

For decades Big Greed has been selling us the idea that markets are just perfecto! Don't regulate them. Don't even bother chasing down fraud. “The Market” (Angelic Voices: Ahhhhh!) is so beautifully simple even scams cannot long survive.

Let's take the “Wisdom of The Market” stick it up Big Banking's rectum, twist, turn and otherwise shove vigorously and often.


Face it, the cavalry is not coming to the rescue if your name is not Goldman Sachs.

Government of the people, by the people, and for the people is temporarily out-of-order, like a soda machine that is taking dollar bills from customer after customer but relinquishes not one quenching 12 oz. can.

No legislation or regulations are in the offing to cap the rising tide of usury interest rates, curb punishing banking fees on debit cards or curtail demonic payday loans.

Here's the bill of fare:

Credit Card Interest: 30%
Merchant Credit Card Fees: 3.5 - 5%
Merchant Credit Card Receivables Loan: 36 – 97%
Payday Loans: 100 – 500%
Debit Card Overdraft Fees,
Over limit Fees, Late Payment Fees, etc:
Interest Equivalent to 12% - 300% and otherwise unlimited

Throw stones – millions of them. Every plastic transaction denied is a slice in the skin of Big Banking.

As a buyer: Use Cash. It's going to save you money verses paying with credit card or making a mistake with a debit card.

As a merchant: Discount 5% for Cash. It's going to save you money in reduced merchant charges and days waiting for credit card receivables. It's also an advantage against the Big Box stores and Big Food restaurants.

Think about it. Who would you rather have that 3.5% you give to Big Plastic on every credit or debit card transaction: Your customer or Big Banking? Isn't that worth the extra 1.5% in the discount?

But it gets better. It's guerilla warfare. It's a simple insurgency. Avoid the banking system to bring it to its knees. Use Cash.

How low-tech is this? How unstoppable? How inconvenient? Yes. But worth it!

Put it on bumper stickers. Make it your email signature. Pass the word in whispers to everyone who works for a living. Write it in magic marker on T-shirts. Design a flag and boldly embroider. Print up window signs. Post it on every blog you visit. Tweet it from the highest mountain. Two simple words: Use Cash.

http://www.opednews.com/articles/A-Simple-Plan-to-Screw-the-by-Chaz-Valenza-091127-741.html

Chester Copperpot
11-29-2009, 06:46 AM
dont borrow money overall would do well to hurt the bankers.

lynnf
11-29-2009, 12:37 PM
might work for awhile.... until they take cash away....


lynn

Pants
11-29-2009, 12:39 PM
I have several companies that charge me an extra $1.00 if I pay in person with cash. (electric, gas, cell phone). But if you pay using another method (credit card, money order, or check) you are not charged $1.00.. AT&T Wireless is one that comes immediately in mind. If I go to the AT&T store and pay with cash they add an extra dollar to the bill. It appears in the next billing cycle.

Pants
11-29-2009, 12:50 PM
I would borrow from a payday loan place over a bank. If you are going to overdraft, and have no other method to cover it.. GO to a payday loan place and borrow for a couple of days. Paying $5, $10 or $20 interest is a lot less than 2, 3, or 4 Overdraft fees.. Yes payday loans are a rip off. But if you bounce a $125 check, that is about 1800% interest you are giving to the banks for a three day loan. If you take a cash advance out of a credit card, and only make the minimum payment for the next 15 years.. That $125 check will probably cost you about $2 grand in interest if you always run a balance... cash advances are the last thing the credit card company deducts. Purchases are deducted first when you make a payment.. I think in February the rules on that change.


Also consider the consequences of taking a $200 cash advance out of your credit card and then only making the minimum payment over the next 16 years.


dont borrow money overall would do well to hurt the bankers.

Working Poor
11-29-2009, 12:58 PM
I have several companies that charge me an extra $1.00 if I pay in person with cash. (electric, gas, cell phone). But if you pay using another method (credit card, money order, or check) you are not charged $1.00.. AT&T Wireless is one that comes immediately in mind. If I go to the AT&T store and pay with cash they add an extra dollar to the bill. It appears in the next billing cycle.

Well that just shows you that these companies are not worthy of your business. ATT has too much competition to be doing that. They charge a lot for their services. I am sure if yo shopped around you could find a better deal somewhere else.

Kludge
11-29-2009, 01:01 PM
Pfffff, Paypal offers 1% cash back on purchases made with a bank-linked debit card. The government would bail out the banks, anyway.

Austrian Econ Disciple
11-29-2009, 01:15 PM
Don't use cash. Use Silver or Gold! Using cash takes no power away.

angelatc
11-29-2009, 01:27 PM
I have several companies that charge me an extra $1.00 if I pay in person with cash. (electric, gas, cell phone). But if you pay using another method (credit card, money order, or check) you are not charged $1.00.. AT&T Wireless is one that comes immediately in mind. If I go to the AT&T store and pay with cash they add an extra dollar to the bill. It appears in the next billing cycle.

There might be a class-action lawsuit in there.

james1906
11-29-2009, 08:53 PM
There might be a class-action lawsuit in there.

I think these new credit card regulations make it illegal to charge a 'convenience fee' for paying by phone. This might fall under it too.