<![CDATA[Consumerist: Editorials]]> http://cache.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/consumerist.com.png <![CDATA[Consumerist: Editorials]]> http://consumerist.com/tag/editorials http://consumerist.com/tag/editorials <![CDATA[ "Financial illiteracy has reached epidemic ... ]]> "Financial illiteracy has reached epidemic levels." Author Braun Mincher has an editorial in the Austin American-Statesman on why every school in the U.S. should teach financial literacy. [Statesman]

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Consumerist-5051521 Wed, 17 Sep 2008 22:25:38 EDT Chris Walters http://consumerist.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5051521&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ NYT Editorial Board: Hey Congress, Textbooks Are Too Expensive! ]]> The New York Times editorial board called on Congress to make college textbooks more affordable. The measure they endorsed wouldn't do anything Soviet like directly cap prices, but it would require textbook makers to tell professors exactly how much books would cost impoverished students.

The bill would also ban textbook makers from jacking up prices by bundling unnecessary CDs and other extras. Finally, schools would be required to publish a list of required books long before the start of classes so students could avail themselves of the free market and ferret out the cheapest prices.

Faculty should also be doing their part. Instead of assigning two expensive books and using just a few chapters of each, professors should order custom books with only the chapters they intend to assign.

Congress, though, should do what it can, because mounting textbook prices are one of a number of factors that are pushing higher education further out of reach of many young people.

The board encouraged all students to step up and join the Campaign to Reduce College Textbook Costs. Be the change you want to see and all.


That Textbook Costs How Much? $200? [NYT]
Make Textbooks Affordable [Campaign to Reduce College Textbook Costs]
H.R. 4137 - The College Opportunity and Affordability Act of 2007 [THOMAS]
Write Your Senator
Write Your Representative
PREVIOUSLY: How To Write To Congress
(Photo: Getty)

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Consumerist-379109 Sat, 12 Apr 2008 14:10:36 EDT Carey http://consumerist.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=379109&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[ "Black Friday Is Obscene And Needs To Die" ]]> con_iambuyingalotofstuff.jpg SF Gate columnist Mark Morford hates Black Friday, and he's written an over-the-top Network-style screed against it, backing it up with some cringe-inducing YouTube clips of giddy, running Americans swarming into retail outlets last Friday morning.

I don't even know what Kohl's is. I'm guessing some sort of mass-crap superstore, like Best Buy or Target or T.J. Maxx or a weird amalgam of all of those and it doesn't really matter because last Friday they opened at 4 a.m. for the mad rush of Black Friday shoppers, because if there's one thing you want to do when your body is groggy and sleep tugs at your heart and your dreams have turned vacant and sad, it's grope cheap waffle makers before sunrise.
In the second half, Morford draws a loose connection between America's overwhelming consumerism and our hunger for oil, which is now leading petroleum companies to develop environmentally damaging bitumen extraction refineries in Canada in order to produce synthetic crude.
Until there's a profound shift in how we approach the world, in how we view the goods we buy, in how Black Friday and the rape of Canada are grossly, inextricably connected, we cannot effect much change. Much as I love the green movement and the Buy Nothing movement and the Slow Food movement and all the rest, in the face of the countless billions still to be made by raping the planet for oil, they're merely the equivalent of trying to water the rainforest with an eyedropper.
"Black Friday Die Die Die" [SF Gate] (Photo: Associated Press) ]]>
Consumerist-327572 Wed, 28 Nov 2007 14:27:43 EST Chris Walters http://consumerist.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=327572&view=rss&microfeed=true