My local Goodwill is INSANE

Demolition Man

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I was just at my local Goodwill (Coon Rapids, MN) a few days ago and noticed in a glass case a copy of "Simpsons Season 5." At first I swore the price tag on it said $9.99 which got my interest. So I reached my hand over the counter to grab it when suddenly I noticed an extra number on the tag... the real price....


$39.99.

For a fucking USED copy of "Simpsons Season 5." Needless to say I put it back and walked away. I wonder how long it will be before they either mark it down or it gets stolen, as anyone could easily walk off with it as the glass case is literaly next to the exit of the store.

That is just nuts tho... $39.99 for a used copy when it goes NEW for that. I don't know about you but that is just fucking wrong.
 
yeah well goodwill stores have young employees workign in the back and know how much stuff is worth, they always try to get as much as they think they can get off n e thing imaginable!!! you should know that, but yes true that 39.99 is a crappy price for a used copy of the simpsons season 5 at a goodwill store, but is to be expected... But ya know what people always do, they take a sticker off of one thing and stick onto another and make the price change. Those people never memorize what prices are, it's a thrift store no one would be the wiser, heheh....
 
I go to Goodwill almost daily with my wife to find books for her classroom. I've been appalled with Goodwill's prices since Dec 02' when I saw a fisher price doll house w/ a few accessories was going for $99.99. Ever since then I occasionally walk out with a SNES/Genesis cartridge without paying. I grew up in a one parent house hold sometimes barely getting by and this was a prime spot for many items in my home. Now I'm older and it pisses me off to see how low income families are being robbed. Granted Goodwill is helping people w/ disabilities obtain employment, but that is no need to charge prices new prices on used merchandise. The only time that prices are were they should be is during the occasional 50% sale, which usually draws big crowds here. One more thing while I'm on my soapbox, that is the attitudes from cashiers. Goodwill has weekly color coded 50% off sales and whenever my wife takes stacks of books to the front w/ specified colored sticker they treat her as if she was stealing. I'm glad companies like Goodwill/Salvation Army are around, but robbing from the poor is asinine. Thanks for allowing me to vent...hahaha

happy gaming
 
When I saw the title of this thread, I thought it was going to be some incredible find, like a $5 mint copy of Suikoden II or Rez or Disgaea or something, or maybe a series of such finds.

Quite the opposite, I see.
 
I love Goodwill . . . mine is mostly reasonable and I've scored very big with a lot of stuff that I've sold on ebay (a $2 Game and Watch sold for over $30)

Sometimes their pricing is high . . . but I've got things like an NES complete in box for $10!
 
About 15 years ago I worked for our city's trash collecting department as a summer job. Goodwill was our first stop on Monday mornings and you wouldn't believe the things that would get thrown away. Some of the guys I worked with would think it was Christmas. Most of it would still have the original price tags on them and were brand new. Anything from toys to women's clothing. I'd love to know who runs the local Goodwills.
 
I would. After talking with someone who worked for them part time I learned why they did that. 1) If they didn't have room they pitched it. 2) If they received anything that seemed too "upper class" they figured their so called "lower class" shoppers wouldn't but it. I remember an E-Z Bake Oven still in the box being in the dumpster one morning and the guy I worked with was so damn excited to take it for his daughter. He made me ride hanging off the back of the truck the whole day so the box would fit in the front. Ahh those were good times. NOT!
 
[quote name='neudog']Ever since then I occasionally walk out with a SNES/Genesis cartridge without paying. [/QUOTE]

So what you see as unfair pricing justifies stealing? From someone who also grew up in a single parent home and relied on Goodwill too, did you ever think that morals should play a part in your day to day actions? Guess not.
 
goodwill is a profit based company not a not for profit

i know this because they are one of my clients and spend alot of money on my tv station.

marking prices that high is just them trying to make a profit.
 
[quote name='mmercer13']About 15 years ago I worked for our city's trash collecting department as a summer job. Goodwill was our first stop on Monday mornings and you wouldn't believe the things that would get thrown away. Some of the guys I worked with would think it was Christmas. Most of it would still have the original price tags on them and were brand new. Anything from toys to women's clothing. I'd love to know who runs the local Goodwills.[/QUOTE]


Well, I was going to post a reply about neudog's thievery, but others have already posted about that, so I'll respond to you. Do you think maybe people put stuff in the goodwill dumpster thinking it was a donation bin?
 
Quote:
Ever since then I occasionally walk out with a SNES/Genesis cartridge without paying.
[...] but robbing from the poor is asinine.

i read it the first time and thought he was saying that he got games for a buck or something cheap. but no, this guy is stealing from GOODWILL. i mean for crying out loud. it's a charity, you donate stuff, you don't steal the stuff someone donated. this my friends is what we call a newbie in life
 
[quote name='fireball343']Quote:
Ever since then I occasionally walk out with a SNES/Genesis cartridge without paying.
[...] but robbing from the poor is asinine.

i read it the first time and thought he was saying that he got games for a buck or something cheap. but no, this guy is stealing from GOODWILL. i mean for crying out loud. it's a charity, you donate stuff, you don't steal the stuff someone donated. this my friends is what we call a newbie in life[/QUOTE]

I hope I'm misinterpreting that, but if correct I can honestly say that's one of the crimes which makes me most sick. I remember sitting at my local Dairy Queen a few days ago enjoying some much deserved ice cream, and watching these people stealing from the donation bin for the Salvation Army that was just across the street. It literally made me sick to watch these people sit in their car as someone drove up and dropped off a box for what they thought would be charity, only to have some pathetic organ sack take the box and stick it in their trunk. I'm not surprised that people steal from charities that help the mentally disabled (Salvation army, Goodwill), but I never cease to be repulsed.
 
I go to Goodwill almost daily with my wife to find books for her classroom. I've been appalled with Goodwill's prices since Dec 02' when I saw a fisher price doll house w/ a few accessories was going for $99.99. Ever since then I occasionally walk out with a SNES/Genesis cartridge without paying. I grew up in a one parent house hold sometimes barely getting by and this was a prime spot for many items in my home. Now I'm older and it pisses me off to see how low income families are being robbed. Granted Goodwill is helping people w/ disabilities obtain employment, but that is no need to charge prices new prices on used merchandise.

Wow, you're a fucking idiot. Where do you think the money goes when you buy something? To the CHARITY you fucking moron. All you are doing is ripping off the poor yourself, what an asshole.

Goodwill has weekly color coded 50% off sales and whenever my wife takes stacks of books to the front w/ specified colored sticker they treat her as if she was stealing.

How ironic, since her husband IS stealing. :roll:
 
No, sorry to say, it wasn't mistaken for the donation bin. Some mornings they would still be carrying things out as we arrived. What I never understood was that the Salvation Army was 3 short blocks away. They could have called them to come get anything they didn't want.
 
[quote name='neudog']I go to Goodwill almost daily with my wife to find books for her classroom. I've been appalled with Goodwill's prices since Dec 02' when I saw a fisher price doll house w/ a few accessories was going for $99.99. Ever since then I occasionally walk out with a SNES/Genesis cartridge without paying. I grew up in a one parent house hold sometimes barely getting by and this was a prime spot for many items in my home. Now I'm older and it pisses me off to see how low income families are being robbed. Granted Goodwill is helping people w/ disabilities obtain employment, but that is no need to charge prices new prices on used merchandise. The only time that prices are were they should be is during the occasional 50% sale, which usually draws big crowds here. One more thing while I'm on my soapbox, that is the attitudes from cashiers. Goodwill has weekly color coded 50% off sales and whenever my wife takes stacks of books to the front w/ specified colored sticker they treat her as if she was stealing. I'm glad companies like Goodwill/Salvation Army are around, but robbing from the poor is asinine. Thanks for allowing me to vent...hahaha

happy gaming[/QUOTE]

Dude!!! Did you actually admit to stealing fom GoodWill in your post. WTF
 
Im a Social Worker and I gotta tell you that you wouldnt believe where people steal from. Its so unreal that people would rip off businesses/family/friends/children like they do, unfortuanetly thats the society we live in.

On another note, the goodwill in the town I went to high school in has a SNES bagged w/wires and 5 games (the 2 I could see were Lagoon and Tetris 2) for $15. When they have 50% off thats going to be mine.
 
[quote name='mmercer13']About 15 years ago I worked for our city's trash collecting department as a summer job. Goodwill was our first stop on Monday mornings and you wouldn't believe the things that would get thrown away. Some of the guys I worked with would think it was Christmas. Most of it would still have the original price tags on them and were brand new. Anything from toys to women's clothing. I'd love to know who runs the local Goodwills.[/QUOTE]

yeah, goodwill with throw out almost anything: in fact it is pretty much commonplace that they throw out the nes systems with the blinking screen problem :whistle2:(

as for the guy who is stealing from goodwill:

it is possible he is on some terms with the management of the goodwill store that let him snipe things from the back before they end up in the dumpster or get priced to go out ont he floor, that isnt unheard of, but it sounds like he is just stealing,

IF he had permission to snag items(snes games that were headed for the dumpster) then that is one thing, but simply stealing from a charity organization is just wack.
 
[quote name='filldoh1']goodwill is a profit based company not a not for profit

i know this because they are one of my clients and spend alot of money on my tv station.

marking prices that high is just them trying to make a profit.[/QUOTE]

I don't think you understand what a non-profit means.

From their website.

Goodwill Industries is all about people working. We are one of the world’s largest NONPROFIT providers of education, training, and career services for people with physical, mental and emotional disabilities, as well as those with disadvantages such as welfare dependency, homelessness, and lack of education or work experience.

We believe in work. We have witnessed its power to transform lives. Work helps build self-confidence, friendship, independence, creativity and trust. Everyone deserves a chance to have these things in life. Goodwill provides that chance.

How We Operate

Donors play a pivotal role in our ability to fulfill our mission. Goodwill collects donated clothing and household goods, then sells these items in over 2,000 retail stores throughout North America and abroad, and on our Internet auction site, shopgoodwill.com.

Goodwill also generates revenue by helping community-based businesses fill gaps caused by labor shortages, time constraints and limited space or equipment. We train and employ industrial and service contract workers to fill outsourced needs for packaging, assembly, mailing, custodial work, groundskeeping, and more. General Motors, Briggs & Stratton, and the U.S. Navy, Marines, Air Force and Army are among those who’ve tapped into our services.

More than 84 percent of Goodwill’s total revenues are channeled into education and career services, as well as other critical community programs.

Goodwill Industries organizations worldwide operate independently in the communities they serve. Goodwill Industries organizations collectively reported the following for 2004.
 
I feel your pain, demoman. The Goodwills around here are really starting to suck big time. If you want another great Northtown Goodwill story (which is now my local Goodwill too, since the one in Brooklyn Center just closed), when I was there a few weeks ago, they had a boxed, good condition copy of Battle for Middle Earth, complete with 2 manuals, 2 disc 3s and no disc 4, for the low, low price of 9.99 :roll:
 
A good Goodwill (like mine) makes an effort to keep the stock fresh . . . rather than stacking merchandise on top of merchandise they often just do a clear out of stuff on the shelves. Mine deals in a really heavy volume . . . much of the stuff changes within days and if something doesn't sell they must dump it. I agree that they could share with other charity stores . . . but I think it is hard to separate out the "good" stuff from the junk.

It is true that some stuff is too "high-brow" for their customers. I've gotten some nice high-end educational toys . . . the kind that well-meaning grandparents give and many kids never play . . .

I go in about 4 times per week and the number one item I buy is kid's books. They sell most all for .49 . . . oftentimes I get like-new hardcover picture books and my kids love them.

One day when we were in as a family for about and hour (usually I stop for 10 min.), I noticed about three items that I thought were cool or had some value but wasn't going to buy . . . as we checked out I noted that all of the items were being purchased.

I do get gaming stuff frequently but it must go fast at my store!
 
[quote name='neudog'] Ever since then I occasionally walk out with a SNES/Genesis cartridge without paying.

happy gaming[/QUOTE]


....
No one is forced to buy anything there. You are a worthless shoplifter.
 
I got a wax box of 1989 Donruss baseball cards for $1.99 in Tally a few weeks back. They had around 10 saturn games for $3 but they were along the lines of Ghen War, Tomb Raider and the like. The Salvation Army in Tampa had a slew of good Saturn games, however they all mysteriously disappeared when I came back in a few days with money (the area they were in was all cleaned out).
 
Yea I went to a Goodwill before some months back and the prices were terrible IMO. I use to go there with my dad as a kid around 6th grade and under then I quit going for some years and come to find all these overpriced stuff. I loved when I was little I find some of the Target donation stuff whatever and get them for cheap.

Ah how I remember all these Goodwills.. White Bear, Como, Apple Valley, Robert, Rpseville. Mmmm I think there was another one I use to go to, but eh.
 
I was at Goodwill the other day just to see if I could find any deals since I have heard some people got some awesome finds. The only gaming item I saw was Madden 2004 for PS2 for $11, it looked new but considering EB has had it for $4.99 for months and Best Buy had it for $4.99 (free w/ coupon), $11 seemed expensive.
 
[quote name='Zman310']I feel your pain, demoman. The Goodwills around here are really starting to suck big time. If you want another great Northtown Goodwill story (which is now my local Goodwill too, since the one in Brooklyn Center just closed), when I was there a few weeks ago, they had a boxed, good condition copy of Battle for Middle Earth, complete with 2 manuals, 2 disc 3s and no disc 4, for the low, low price of 9.99 :roll:[/QUOTE]

Sorta like the "Return Of The King" WS DVD that had only a disc 2 for the low price of $14.99. :lol:

I swear I wonder if the new management of the Northtown Goodwill must be smoking crack in the back. Trust me, I could easily keep you folks busy with my Goodwill stories from when I worked at Northtown several years ago - especially ones involving the backroom pricing manager (who thought he was some all mighty and powerful entity).
 
I take my Goodwill on balance . . . I bought 5 Genesis RPGs (like Shining Force most with case and instuctions) about a month ago for 99 cents each. All the auctions brought in about $80 on ebay . . .

Then again they had two PS2 HDs . . . new in box that were in a case for months priced at the low price of $99 each.

For casual shoppers . . . only high-priced games or crap will sit around for long. Good deals will move fast. So, a single trip dosen't tell you much.
 
That is very true schultzed, from my 1.5 year employement with Goodwill I can atest to how fast good values moved off the floor while high price stuff just sat and sat and sat around until we marked it down or threw it out.

The best thing Goodwill ever did for me was just being a stepping stone to my current employer Circuit City (which in turn will do the same thing for me eventually). I still stop by my Goodwill at least once a week but I can say that indeed the new management that has taken over as of right now is very clueless with pricing.
 
[quote name='schultzed']Then again they had two PS2 HDs . . . new in box that were in a case for months priced at the low price of $99 each. [/QUOTE]

Heh, are those things still sitting there?
 
The Goodwill and Salvation Army where I live have assholes running them. I went to both stores with several boxes of high-quality clothing. Not just some cheap crap, but actual high-dollar, high-quality, excellent condition items. Pants, jeans, T-shirts, Polo Shirts, Nike sneakers, shorts, socks, blankets, sheets, jackets, you name it. Plenty of sizes and variety, for both men and women. Thousands of dollars worth of stuff. They were things that my family outgrew or didn't use anymore, so I figured that there were a lot of less fortunate folks who could use them.

When I got to the Goodwill:

They look at the things, and they say, "We don't want any of this stuff. Do you have anything useful, like furniture, electronics, or televisions, etc.?" I got mad and left. This didn't bother me as much as what happened next, since I figure that Goodwill is more about trying to sell items cheaply, and not about giving away necessities.

At the Salvation Army:

"We don't want any of this stuff. Do you have any good stuff, like couches, chairs, tables, TVs... stuff like that? We don't need clothes." They don't need clothes, huh? Then why are they always complaining that they need lots of clothing for the children and homeless people? There is plenty of stuff for them to give to those who need it in those boxes I took.

It just disgusts me. I think that having clothes is much more important than having a TV, don't you?

Thankfully, I was able to find a friend who was able to give the clothing to people who really needed it.
 
Actually, in general, there is such an overage of donated clothes that the thrift stores just can't deal with them. It's sad, really, because they're too heavy/expensive to ship anywhere too...
 
[quote name='demomanTNA']I was just at my local Goodwill (Coon Rapids, MN) a few days ago and noticed in a glass case a copy of "Simpsons Season 5." At first I swore the price tag on it said $9.99 which got my interest. So I reached my hand over the counter to grab it when suddenly I noticed an extra number on the tag... the real price....


$39.99.

For a fucking USED copy of "Simpsons Season 5." Needless to say I put it back and walked away. I wonder how long it will be before they either mark it down or it gets stolen, as anyone could easily walk off with it as the glass case is literaly next to the exit of the store.

That is just nuts tho... $39.99 for a used copy when it goes NEW for that. I don't know about you but that is just fucking wrong.[/QUOTE]

It might just be in our area, but the Goodwill stores mark merchandise with different colored labels, and every day a a different colored label is 50% off. Like, Mondays, yellow tags are half off, Tuesday orange tags are half off, et cetera.

So...having a $40 price tag on a season of DVDs might make sense, considering the next day it could be $20. They've got to pad the retails a little to make a decent margin on half-off days.

And yes, I'll agree that shoplifting from a Goodwill store earns you an aisle seat on your trip to hell.
 
On behalf of all the negative responses, I sincerely apologize and want to delve deeper into the truth. I only took one SNES cartridge (DKC2) out of anger at what I saw. Does the high prices justify this thievery, not at all, but non profit or not Goodwill robs the poor. As for you Mr. Answer, maybe you need to travel the country and annotate average prices at Goodwill are. By cutting and pasting an organizations mission statement does not make them just in their actions. Also I've contributed countless items to the organization to help, knowing that ultimately profit is being earned and not using any of it as a tax right off like many donators do. Now I'm placing a blanketed label on the whole company based on my local store, but if one store can jack up prices what stops others. As I stated in my original post I realize and I understand why organizations like this exist, but you can't refer to yoursel as a "Robin Hood" company when you're truly "Prince John". Once again I apologize if i upset or offended anyone. I was not just in my actions at the time, but I don't want this comment to label me as a "bad" person within the CAG community. I'm sorry
 
[quote name='neudog']On behalf of all the negative responses, I sincerely apologize and want to delve deeper into the truth. I only took one SNES cartridge (DKC2) out of anger at what I saw. Does the high prices justify this thievery, not at all, but non profit or not Goodwill robs the poor. As for you Mr. Answer, maybe you need to travel the country and annotate average prices at Goodwill are. By cutting and pasting an organizations mission statement does not make them just in their actions. Also I've contributed countless items to the organization to help, knowing that ultimately profit is being earned and not using any of it as a tax right off like many donators do. Now I'm placing a blanketed label on the whole company based on my local store, but if one store can jack up prices what stops others. As I stated in my original post I realize and I understand why organizations like this exist, but you can't refer to yoursel as a "Robin Hood" company when you're truly "Prince John". Once again I apologize if i upset or offended anyone. I was not just in my actions at the time, but I don't want this comment to label me as a "bad" person within the CAG community. I'm sorry[/QUOTE]

Do you wrote the following statement for fun?
"Ever since then I occasionally walk out with a SNES/Genesis cartridge without paying"

Occasional, and SNES/Genesis ... hmmm
 
[quote name='neudog']On behalf of all the negative responses, I sincerely apologize and want to delve deeper into the truth. I only took one SNES cartridge (DKC2) out of anger at what I saw. Does the high prices justify this thievery, not at all, but non profit or not Goodwill robs the poor. As for you Mr. Answer, maybe you need to travel the country and annotate average prices at Goodwill are. By cutting and pasting an organizations mission statement does not make them just in their actions. Also I've contributed countless items to the organization to help, knowing that ultimately profit is being earned and not using any of it as a tax right off like many donators do. Now I'm placing a blanketed label on the whole company based on my local store, but if one store can jack up prices what stops others. As I stated in my original post I realize and I understand why organizations like this exist, but you can't refer to yoursel as a "Robin Hood" company when you're truly "Prince John". Once again I apologize if i upset or offended anyone. I was not just in my actions at the time, but I don't want this comment to label me as a "bad" person within the CAG community. I'm sorry[/QUOTE]


I think you missed the point. Goodwill's goal isn't primarily to provide affordable goods to the poor, it is to train people to be functional members of society. If you disagree with that then donate somewhere else. I worked at the Catholic Charitees Furniture Warehouse, for example, and they basically gave away things to people in need, with only a small charge for those who could afford it.
 
The last time I went to Goodwill they had nothing even remotely related to gaming. About 90% of the store was devoted to clothing, and at the very back was a little cart with books, a shelf filled with old cassette tapes, some novelty kitchen items, candle holders, 'Precious Moments' figurines, and old lampshades.
 
[quote name='neudog']On behalf of all the negative responses, I sincerely apologize and want to delve deeper into the truth. I only took one SNES cartridge (DKC2) out of anger at what I saw. Does the high prices justify this thievery, not at all, but non profit or not Goodwill robs the poor. As for you Mr. Answer, maybe you need to travel the country and annotate average prices at Goodwill are. By cutting and pasting an organizations mission statement does not make them just in their actions. Also I've contributed countless items to the organization to help, knowing that ultimately profit is being earned and not using any of it as a tax right off like many donators do. Now I'm placing a blanketed label on the whole company based on my local store, but if one store can jack up prices what stops others. As I stated in my original post I realize and I understand why organizations like this exist, but you can't refer to yoursel as a "Robin Hood" company when you're truly "Prince John". Once again I apologize if i upset or offended anyone. I was not just in my actions at the time, but I don't want this comment to label me as a "bad" person within the CAG community. I'm sorry[/QUOTE]

just change your avatar and all will be well
 
[quote name='schultzed']I love Goodwill . . . mine is mostly reasonable and I've scored very big with a lot of stuff that I've sold on ebay (a $2 Game and Watch sold for over $30)

Sometimes their pricing is high . . . but I've got things like an NES complete in box for $10![/QUOTE] I found a new copy of mario Rpg snes for only 2.00 once
 
[quote name='demomanTNA']That is very true schultzed, from my 1.5 year employement with Goodwill I can atest to how fast good values moved off the floor while high price stuff just sat and sat and sat around until we marked it down or threw it out.

The best thing Goodwill ever did for me was just being a stepping stone to my current employer Circuit City (which in turn will do the same thing for me eventually). I still stop by my Goodwill at least once a week but I can say that indeed the new management that has taken over as of right now is very clueless with pricing.[/QUOTE] so u used to work there???? are u handicapped? just wondering
 
My girlfriend and I are always appalled by the stuff "rich people" donate to the goodwill stores. Chipped coffee mugs (freebie ones that say Jim's insurance...), shirts that smell like BO that have holes in them, khakis with stains on them, Air supply cassettes that are well worn. I can just imagine what these people are thinking when they decide to donate this stuff, "I won't wear it but some poor person will buy my old holey shirt and my stained khakis to wear at church or a job interview." Or what is the price guy/gal is thinking when they stamp $.75 on a chipped (on the lip) coffee mug.

Or the rich guy that sends his couch to the Goodwill that has wine stains on the white couch that is selling for $75. Don't donate shit to the Goodwill. Help out a poor person with nice stuff not shit.

If you want to see greed in America go to your local Goodwill and see what the "well off" are donating.
 
i was at my goodwill the other day, i was looking in the case and I saw a sega genesis core system, as for the price tag, all I could see was a 6. I thought, hey for 6 bucks I'll get another genesis, but then the lady moves the stuff out of the way, there is a 0. $60 for a sega genesis. I asked the lady if it was a mistake and she said nope, thats how much they go for on ebay. I just gave her a blank stare and walked out.
 
prices at goodwill come with a HUGE YMMV, sometimes they are crazy, 20 bucks for a genesis with no cables... and other times great, i found legend of zelda 1 and 2 complete for 2 bucks each... so there is really no way to say that goodwill sucks or doesnt suck, just the store you go to... in either case, stealing is by no means justified just because you think its overpriced
 
[quote name='Gregory Kimball']The last time I went to Goodwill they had nothing even remotely related to gaming. About 90% of the store was devoted to clothing, and at the very back was a little cart with books, a shelf filled with old cassette tapes, some novelty kitchen items, candle holders, 'Precious Moments' figurines, and old lampshades.[/QUOTE]

Keep checking back, you'll eventually find something. It's a little surprising to read that you didn't even see any Genesis stuff, though. 98% of the time I visit a thrift store, I see at least one Sega Genesis item - it could be a loose console, a third party controller, overpriced sports carts, etc.
 
The messed up pricing works out to be either good or bad . . . good when you get Mario RPG for $2 (man that is cool) bad when a Genny is priced at $60 . . but the 2 pricings are linked by the clueslessness of Goodwill.




[quote name='Trakan']Heh, are those things still sitting there?[/QUOTE]


Trakan,

I'll check for the PS2 HDs next time I'm there . . . honestly, I go there fairly often but I fly through (mostly looking for cart games) and those HDs were there for soooooooo long . . . many months actually . . . that I stopped "seeing" them.

What do you think of the new Oak Creek Goodwill? (27th Street) Stopped a few times but haven't seen much (but it is hit or miss).
 
[quote name='spoo']If you want to see greed in America go to your local Goodwill and see what the "well off" are donating.[/QUOTE]

Umm... Isn't donating the antithesis of greed?
 
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