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Why NOT to shop at Casual Male…

Well, now I know why everything is so expensive at Casual Male!  They give free clothes to NBA players and we have to pay for it!  Can you BELIEVE this:

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In a lawsuit filed Wednesday, a Chicago clothing store — Casual Male — alleges New York Knicks center Eddy Curry ran up a tab of more than $41,000 on clothes, and two years later it remains unpaid. Gulp.

Kara Spak of the Chicago Sun Times reports:

”It’s just a matter of him buying clothing he didn’t pay for,” said Edward Margolis, the attorney representing Casual Male and Jared M. Custom Clothing, a business popular with professional athletes that once was owned by Casual Male. […]

Purchases on Curry’s shopping trips, which occurred between January and April 2006, included $22,000 in suits, eight sweaters ranging from a $750 wool crew-neck to a $1,390 cashmere V-neck and more than $3,700 in ties.

The company also wants an additional $5,424 in interest.

And yes, before you ask, Casual Male is the largest specialty retailer of big and tall men’s apparel, with over 520 store locations throughout the United States, London, England and Canada.

Big and tall. Eddy Curry. Go nuts.

I wonder what $41,000 in clothes looks like? How much closet space do you need for that much clothes? I wonder how much of it was Made in the USA?

Holiday Cheer! We Can Make A Difference

The news about jobs and the economy have been overwhelmingly bad for the last couple of months and it can give one a feeling of helplessness but I did come upon a little bit of information that I found to be quite eye opening and very optimistic. Here it is:If every man, woman and child in the United States would just shift $20 dollars a month of their existing monthly expenditures from imported goods to Made in the USA goods we could create 5 million new jobs.That’s 5 million new jobs that did not require any effort on the part of the government or that required any extra ordinary effort on the part of anyone other than to become conscious of what we purchase and where these purchased goods are manufactured. No one is being asked to purchase anything of lesser quality and or value.No one has asked us to purchase more or to sacrifice quality but rather just to shift $240 dollars of our annual current purchases from imported goods to domestically produced goods. This amount does not represent an automobile or anything of that nature; $240 does not represent a major purchase by any means but it could result in some dramatic changes in our country.What if we then took this concept one step further and made a conscious effort to purchase these goods from locally owned businesses we could also:

Top Ten reasons to Think Local - Buy Local - Be Local

Buy Local — Support yourself: Several studies have shown that when you buy from an independent, locally owned business, rather than a nationally owned businesses, significantly more of your money is used to make purchases from other local businesses, service providers and farms — continuing to strengthen the economic base of the community.(Click here to see summaries of a variety of economic impact studies; these include case studies showing that locally-owned businesses generate a premium in enhanced economic impact to the community and our tax base.)

Support community groups: Non-profit organizations receive an average 250% more support from smaller business owners than they do from large businesses.

Keep our community unique: Where we shop, where we eat and have fun — all of it makes our community home. Our one-of-a-kind businesses are an integral part of the distinctive character of this place. Our tourism businesses also benefit. “When people go on vacation they generally seek out destinations that offer them the sense of being someplace, not just anyplace.” ~ Richard Moe, President, National Historic Preservation Trust.

Reduce environmental impact: Locally owned businesses can make more local purchases requiring less transportation and generally set up shop in town or city centers as opposed to developing on the fringe. This generally means contributing less to sprawl, congestion, habitat loss and pollution.

Create more good jobs: Small local businesses are the largest employer nationally and in our community, provide the most jobs to residents.

Get better service: Local businesses often hire people with a better understanding of the products they are selling and take more time to get to know customers.

Invest in community: Local businesses are owned by people who live in this community, are less likely to leave, and are more invested in the community’s future.

Put your taxes to good use: Local businesses in town centers require comparatively little infrastructure investment and make more efficient use of public services as compared to nationally owned stores entering the community.

Buy what you want, not what someone wants you to buy: A marketplace of tens of thousands of small businesses is the best way to ensure innovation and low prices over the long-term. A multitude of small businesses, each selecting products based not on a national sales plan but on their own interests and the needs of their local customers, guarantees a much broader range of product choices.

Encourage local prosperity: A growing body of economic research shows that in an increasingly homogenized world, entrepreneurs and skilled workers are more likely to invest and settle in communities that preserve their one-of-a-kind businesses and distinctive character.

While we realize that it is not always possible to buy what you need locally and or and so merely ask you to Think Local and Made in the USA FIRST!

For a mere $20.00 we could be investing in ourselves, our communities, our country, and building a much brighter future for our children!  A little good news this holiday for everyone!

Here are two great resources to begin making a difference:

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Make A Difference: “Made In The USA”

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There is no doubt that our economy is in the tank right now and all of us are worried about the future of our country and our own personal future.  But, lets channel this concern into something POSITIVE!  I think this holiday season the big and tall community needs to lead the way by looking for the “Made in USA” label in all the products that we buy as gifts and or we need to focus our shopping on locally owned retailers!  When you buy “Made in USA” products you are keeping American companies in business and you are keeping Americans employed!  I think this article pretty much sums it up:

‘Made in America’ must make a comeback

By Paul Sedan, November 28, 2008

Charlotte, N.C. – One thing the financial crisis shows is that the United States is in trouble because Americans have stopped making stuff.

It used to be that we made a lot of stuff: televisions, clothes, washing machines, radios, typewriters, shoes, telephones, and furniture. And we also used to make the stuff out of which stuff was made: steel, aluminum, plastic, rubber, glass, and electrical components. Today that’s largely made overseas. They send us their stuff and we send them our money.

It also used to be that Americans liked to make stuff. Think of all the things Thomas Edison invented. Or consider Henry Ford, who made the car affordable, perfected the assembly line, and paid workers a decent wage. Countless others, such as my grandfather, worked as toolmakers and machinists because they liked to work with their hands. Today we rely on people around the world to do that innovation for us.

To be sure, outsourcing has some benefits, but the danger in abrogating our desire to make things is that, in doing so, we forget what made America great. It wasn’t manipulating money; it was hard work and persistence. It wasn’t “flipping houses”; it was having a dream and being patient and self-sacrificing to achieve that dream. It wasn’t speculative gambling; it was belief in a line of labor that rewarded honest risk. Forgetting that contributes to America’s deterioration.

Nowadays, young people want to work in the financial industry (at least until recently). While money managers may be worthy occupations – we do need capital to meet payroll and buy the goods and machinery used to make stuff – focusing solely on such jobs removes us from the mainstream of making useful things, which, in turn, provide jobs and help to make everyday life more enjoyable and productive.

This is where we have to start questioning what’s at stake. Are we truly satisfied with letting someone else make everything we need? If so, when the time comes for repair and maintenance, who will do the work?

Young people today are not encouraged to work with their hands. It’s thought to be demeaning. But working with your hands to create something new is energizing and rewarding. It boosts self-esteem. Even better, it helps you see how something can be improved. Let’s not forget that Ford and the Wright brothers were mechanics before they became innovators. They saw first hand how things worked so they could make them work better.

Historically, young people were encouraged to learn a trade. This not only taught them the value of hard work, it also gave them a sense of self-reliance and community. The farmer could not only plow the ground, he could also fix the plow and help his neighbors.

Today’s schools must help teach our young people the value of manual labor and help us take advantage of the greatest place to be for innovation. A Japanese neighbor visiting a US factory told me once that he envied Americans because they did not accept cultural limitations in improving the way something is made. He said that you could never go against the grain like that in Japan.

The US just can’t afford to squander this perfect climate for jobs and progress by not placing value in innovation or the act of working with one’s hands.

This current financial mess brings with it a lot of challenges: energy, housing, crumbling infrastructure – to name just three. But the “can-do spirit” is still alive in America.

We just need to encourage it in our young people. We can begin by testing students for a mechanical aptitude. Those who show promise should be encouraged by a coalition of schools and industry to work on real-world projects. That step alone will help place the value back in making stuff and pave the way to return to innovation at a time when we need it most.

So, lets make a difference: Buy “Made in the USA” and lets support our locally owned retailers! If you need to search for goods that are proudly “Made in the USA” then check out these two websites:

www.stillmadeinusa.com or

www.madeinusaguide.com

Welcome to the BIG N’ TALL NATION!

I am 6′10″ tall and I weigh 270 lbs and I have been tall all my life! 

Which means that I could never fit comfortably in anything, I could never find clothes to fit, and I can draw attention to myself no matter what I do and or where I am at.  I just never quite fit in!

The purpose of this blog is to share information that is beneficial to people who are accustomed to not fitting in! 

We will cover the gambit from clothing and personal items to travel and facilities…if it affects the BIG N’ TALL (and plus size women and or women who are tall and thin) then it is open game for us!

Welcome and we hope that you join the BIG N’ TALL NATION!

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