Wolfenbarg said:
zfactor said:
Wolfenbarg said:
zfactor said:
Salt grinder.
Totally useless. Peper grinder, useful. Peper is a seed that loses its flavor over time. It tastes best when freshly ground. Salt is mined from million year old deposits of dried up lakes. It never goes bad. And don't post anything about sea salt as being fresher or better or whatever. Because it happens to be salty by eroding said million year old deposits (or other rocks) and dissolving it into the water. So sea salt is as old as normal salt.
It's hard to find unbleached salt in a crushed form. When you buy a bag of sea salt, it's typically a bag of rocks. Therefore, the grinder is completely necessary.
It's not really a product, but pennies. Because of inflation over the last few decades, there is nothing you can buy with them, and the metal in them won't have any inherent value unless society as we know it crumbles around us. It should be some kind of trading standard that all prices end in a five or a zero (barring digits that are above cents).
Pennies cost about 1.7 cents in zinc and copper to make. I have bunches in a jar because nobody else bothers to pick up change anymore. Without pennies I wouldn't have an extra $5 lying around. And I dislike the 5 or 0 ending thing for other reasons...
And what reason would that be? How would having prices change from ridiculous numbers like 11.99 or 5.39 to their rounded equivalents make things any worse for more than 90% of Americans?
How would you round it? Would you round the base price (technically changing the base price to a 0 or 5 ending)? Then taxes would still give you obscure totals, but this is fine with me. Round the taxes too? Now you are paying an extra 0-4 cents per purchase. And who would get the extra money anyway? The government? The store? The manufacturer? So now we have to pay a "rounding fee?" What about payrolls? Would those be rounded down or up? So every time you are paid or buy something you pay (on average) 2 cents more.
Besides, it's a marketing thing. You see 1499.99 and the average person rounds up and believes they just outsmarted the system. Or they don't like seeing 0s. If you see $1500.00, the average person thinks "Shit, that's a lot of zeros..." and is less likely to buy it. And the first option is 1 cent cheaper. Which is a bunch of money if you are adding about 2 cents for every purchase you ever made or will make.
And it could result in people getting rid of the 5s too. Why round to the nearest 5 or 0 cents when you can round to the nearest 0? Or we can just abolish cents completely!
EDIT: OK, I just noticed a massive pun in my last statement... LOLZ