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One of the things I buy is a case of washer fluid, which will usually last me about 6-8 months, with another for the winter. Normally, they have boxes of the standard blue stuff everywhere, but today there was none. Even the good Rain-X stuff was just about sold out, and the other shelves of just odds n ends were looking a little barer than normal.

It looks like supply lines have never recovered from last year's lie, and if they do it again things like that may become unavailable. It may be nothing, but it's just an observation.

One of the things I buy is a case of washer fluid, which will usually last me about 6-8 months, with another for the winter. Normally, they have boxes of the standard blue stuff everywhere, but today there was none. Even the good Rain-X stuff was just about sold out, and the other shelves of just odds n ends were looking a little barer than normal. It looks like supply lines have never recovered from last year's lie, and if they do it again things like that may become unavailable. It may be nothing, but it's just an observation.

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[–] 0 pt

I bought a old tractor as investment.

Don't hold onto cash

Instead by items that hold value

Older cars for example. They are already new devalued and now value grows from scarcity and parts availability and ease of maintenance

[–] 0 pt

Yeah, that's true. Diphit above was clearly pretending everyone only buys cars as investments and not as necessary transportation though, which is what my comment was aimed at.

[–] 0 pt

Fair enough.

My first car was a mark three Cortina. I paid $800 for it. Did it up and sold it for three thousand to buy my fiance a ring.

Worth $30 thousand today. Doh.

Still I had had a stable adulthood to have kept a project car with me.