They want you to think this is normal. I’ve been cross-referencing receipts for 72 hours. DEVELOPING.
What I’m about to share may shock you. My Christmas shopping investigation began on December 23rd when I noticed something odd: several items I purchased cost less than I remembered from last year. Not more. Less.
The mainstream media has been telling us prices are up. Way up. But my receipts tell a different story. And when the official narrative doesn’t match the evidence, I start asking questions.
The Christmas Shopping Investigation Evidence
Let me walk you through what I found. Last year, I bought my nephew a specific video game for $59.99. This year, same game, same store: $39.99. Furthermore, a sweater I purchased for my wife (we’re “taking space” but I still bought her something) was marked down 40% from last December.
As I’ve documented before, patterns don’t lie. Something is happening. Additionally, my sources—I can’t reveal who—have hinted that retail pricing algorithms may be experiencing “irregularities.”
What Are They Hiding?
Here’s where it gets interesting. I called three major retailers to ask why prices were lower. Consequently, two hung up on me. The third said “it’s just holiday sales, sir” which is exactly what they’d say if they were hiding something.
My Christmas shopping investigation has now expanded to include:
-Receipt analysis from 2023, 2024, and 2025 (ongoing)
-Price comparison screenshots (247 and counting)
-A timeline of “coincidental” discounts (developing)
Follow The Money
The question I keep coming back to: who benefits from consumers believing prices are up when some prices are actually down? Additionally, why would the media push an inflation narrative while retailers quietly discount?
I don’t have all the answers yet. The Christmas shopping investigation continues. But I can tell you this: something doesn’t add up. And when something doesn’t add up, I add it up differently.
Screenshot this before they take it down.
DEVELOPING.