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Hey All - I thought Bitcoin does a great job of cutting out the nonsense on the individual and societal level. Many people are starting to wake up to what isn't worth it and what is a ripoff, especially as economic conditions tighten further and further.
I recently saw a picture taken by "AmitIsInvesting" on X of how people aren't buying overpriced hoodies/t-shirts with the Nike swoosh on them. Furthermore, there is a large movement by GenZ and younger to opt out of wearing logos altogether.
As times get tougher people opt in for the bare essentials. They don't care about the logo, the brand, or any of that. Times are tough now, so Nike isn't selling(stock is down 30% from ATH). This also got me thinking about Bitcoin because I only buy what I absolutely need to. Very rarely do I buy a designer item because then that means less hard money and sats for me? I tend to notice this with other Bitcoiners also where they dress very simply - playing into the ethos of staying humble or stack sats. Whether it is people doing this out of hardship, or people doing this to optimize their investment allocations - I think we are at the dawn of a lot of these name brands losing their sense of importance/significance over people.
Have you ever been one to go out of your way to buy brand-name things? Since you got into Bitcoin, have you been more sensible in your approach to buying name-brand products? I would love to hear some thoughts on this!
243 sats \ 0 replies \ @k00b 30 Jun
I imagine most bitcoiners wanted logo-free clothes before it was cool. I've been buying blanks from wholesalers for a long time, but brands still play a role if quality matters.
Lightning Store turned me onto comfort colors so I've been buying my blank pocket tees from them.
Otherwise, I buy run of the mill Levis for pants and cotton Hanes hoodies. I've been on a pajama top kick for awhile and buy those used on eBay.
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I find myself going the opposite way, strangely, as I've always been a cheap ass that dismissed major brands out of hand as "you pay more for marketing"
Whether its just me that has flipped, or just fiat clown world impacts on the means of production, I'm not too sure... There's some paradox at play...
Goods in a sound money society should get better and cheaper all the time, but in fiat clown world this isn't the case, because manufacturers cut corners to slow cost increases... so it's bizarro fiat clown world where things get worse and the costs trend up.
There's also too much product arbitrage and not enough differentiation in fiat clown world, I can scroll all day on Amazon looking for polo shirts for example... and the only distinguishing characteristic between them is usually if it's a lindy brand or not.
I don't think a lindy brand is more capable of making a better shirt necessarily, but I do think they'll spend extra on the production side to keep a moat around that brand... so sorting by highest price first is the only filter I have to go on unless I want to scroll through chinese brand shirts for 3 days.
I'm definitely still a cheap ass, every dollar spent is a sat not stacked... so if I'm going to part with sats to buy something, I am ultimately investing in that thing to fill a need... that means buying the shirt I most suspect is not going to go to shit after a few washes.
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symbolism on brand-name clothing and really everything is a subtle form of mind control, which anchors the symbol onto an idea, concept, trend, or emotion - sophisticated "neuro-linguistic programming." people who are aware of this sorcery (social engineering) can be less influenced by it, but the people around them are still under mind control. accurate education and revelation will help break the spells.
just like in the movie "They Live, 1988" we can show people that symbolism and buzz words are nothing but indoctrination filling our attention span.
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It happened gradually from the moment I was orange-pilled... then suddenly. Absolutely true. I removed everything that is not strictly needed and essential. Brands and status symbols belong to the fiat culture, which incentivizes a high-time preference and wasteful consumeristic approach.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @galt 1 Jul
Doing both directions actually, not buying unnecessary and overpriced branded items and at the same time having a bigger focus on quality so that once it's bought it can last forever
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I've never been a person who looked at wearing designer clothes or anything like that, I've always been an austere person and I will continue to be no matter how much time or money I have.
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I don't wear clothes with large logos on them. I do not have confidence issues. Nike didn't pay me enough to advertise for them.
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They cost extra for logos? I don't think so. Quality is also different. It's also not about limiting one's needs on Bitcoin. It's about getting what you love. Otherwise, life is dull.
Congrats! This is top post for the day.
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At times but I get them at second hand stores, to save sats! Also do many of my hole maintenance for the same reason!
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The truth is that I am new to the Bitcoin world... I have only been there for a few months... but I must confess that since I have been learning and reading content from the economic field of marketing... Cryptoeconomics and these things my point of view has changed and the truth is I have never I have been buying brand name clothes... and of course it is true that instead of spending large amounts of money on a pair of shoes I prefer to stack my sats😊👍👍
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The market runs on demand and supply.
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I think this logo free has been going on for a while. It just hasnt caught on mainstream, yet. Bitcoiners and stackers dress simple because it is just that, simple. They take their brainpower and use it where it is more useful!
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personally i feel Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies often encourage a mindset of financial independence and scrutiny towards spending habits. This can lead to a more sensible approach to purchasing, including being more critical of buying name-brand products.
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Yeah I sold a lot of my designer shoes and clothes on poshmark and purchased sats with it.
Also I try to avoid buying imported clothing if I can and buy stuff made in America. If not America then I try to avoid clothes and shoes made in China.
I still believe in paying for good brands that have high quality materials. A few expensive brands I found are Rag and Bone and American Trench. Both are really expensive but their clothes are high quality. But I do find myself getting back to the basics. Solid colors with basic graphic designs.
I got a few pairs of shorts from Uniqlo not too long ago. Very basic only paid about $25 per pair after sale. While the shorts were made in Bangladesh (via a Chinese owner more than likely) I needed shorts and finding something American made locally is almost impossible these days.
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Yeah, I go further than that - I actively cover up the brand logos.
I just bought a pair of Sketchers sneakers recently that were very comfortable and exactly what I wanted except... I don't want to do advertising for them!
So I mixed up some acrylic paint to the right color, and painted over the Sketchers logo. It's still a little bit visitble, but you have to look very carefully. I like it better this way.
I read in a novel years ago, about a character who relentlessly removed any logo from her clothing, including filing down the little Levi rivets. I don't go that far, but the idea appeals to me...
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I’m also a blank shirt person, mostly. Not exclusively, but heavily. It’s just nice and simple
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For those who don't know where to find quality blank shirts, Next Level sells high quality blank shirt for 8 dollars.
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Same. Fashion changes around me, I stay the same.
Plain white dress shirt, linen black trousers. When fashion had wide baggy trousers, mine were unfashionably slim. When slim trousers came, mine were unfashionably wide. Now that normal cuts are in fashion, I accidentally am okay-ish in fashion. When logomania came I was unfashionable. Now that logos are going, I am accidentally okay-ish in fashion. The mid-trousers and logoless shirts will go, I will stay myself.
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I've always been drawn to minimalism and functionality. I would guess, same as k00b, that most bitcoiners had this inclination prior to finding bitcoin.
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Becoming sensible in buying shouldn't mean you stop buying what you need and what you love. The economy always and will always need support of demand. If demand isn't there, the market will collapse. No matter, it's a Fiat based economy or a Bitcoin based.
Buying or selling should remain as they are. The medium through which we trade must replace.
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stackers have outlawed this. turn on wild west mode in your /settings to see outlawed content.