$27.95 Original price was: $27.95.$19.95Current price is: $19.95.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
Dec 26
Dec 27 - Dec 29
Dec 30 - Jan 02
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Official Pft Commenter Ass Shirt
$27.95Original price was: $27.95.$19.95Current price is: $19.95.Standard U.S. Size Chart
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
The actual dimension of the product may be vary. 1 inch difference is advised.
Estimated arrival
Dec 26
Dec 27 - Dec 29
Dec 30 - Jan 02
The overall level of U.S. consumer prices fell in May for the Official Pft Commenter Ass Shirt In addition,I will do this second month in a row, a sign that the economic recovery remains weak. Normally, people call this monthly bulletin the “inflation report.” Now the consumer price index (CPI) shows deflation at least since January. To some forecasters, this signals the risk of a dip back into recession in the United States. Or, more likely, it means that central banks will be keeping interest rates low for many months to come — perhaps even into 2012. The problem: Unemployment is still high, hindering the growth of consumer incomes that would normally drive a post-recession recovery. A slack job market could depress wages, even as high consumer debt levels keep a lid on home prices and consumer spending. Such deflationary pressures could dampen confidence for consumers and businesses. A crisis surrounding European debt, meanwhile, has caused economists to scale back their forecasts for global growth. In turn, that pushed oil prices down in May. “Disinflationary and deflationary pressures among the major industrialized countries are gaining momentum,” says Brian Bethune, an economist at IHS Global Insight, in a report Thursday. “The Fed has a checkered flag to maintain an extremely accommodative stance on monetary policy.” He cites three indicators of the gap between labor supply and demand: the 9.7 percent official jobless rate, a “massive increase in the duration of unemployment,” and the rise in people who are working shorter hours than they’d like. Prices for many goods are falling In April and May, a drop in the cost of gasoline was one key reason for the outright decline in the consumer price index, reported monthly by the Labor Department. But prices for housing, furnishings, computers, men’s clothing and many food items have also fallen in the past two months. The price index fell 0.2 percent in May