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parda brush, perfume, Dayquil, airbourne, aspirin of some sort,cough drops, gum, wallet, pen, compact, lipstickgloss, tissue; it starts taking up alot of room.Maybe there more medicine with me than normal, because I just shook off a cold?!How much are Chanel handbags?Apparently I wrong in my thinking that handbags are the same as purses. Can someone explain to me how they are different? My sister says that purses are on the shoulder while handbags you carry. Is she right?Are the handbags that they let you rent on the internetLouis Vuitton, Dooney Bourke, Coach, Prada, Gucci,etc, are they the real genuine thing? Or, are they knock offs?? Of course they claim that the bags are "genuine". Does anyone know?What good are expensive handbags if they don have a Wi Fi transmitter, phone charger, MP3 player, and other embedded electronics? Why can they have more features than the cheaper off brands?How luxury lost its luIn September 2005, the Federal Emergency Management Agency began distributing $2,000 debit cards to Hurricane Katrina's neediest victims. The cards carried a note saying they were not to be used for alcohol, tobacco or firearms. But the cards said nothing about $800 monogrammed handbags."We've seen three of the cards," an employee of a Louis Vuitton store near Atlanta told the New York Daily News soon after the cards were issued.Opinion pages and blogs tore into the Vuitton fans like outlet shoppers at a bargain bin. The Daily News called them "profiteering ghouls." Apparently, some things were OK to buy with the recovery money, such as bottled water and TV dinners. And some things were not OK, such as purses priced at 13 times the production cost.But the bag ladies of Katrina should take heart: these days it's tough for anyone to be a virtuous consumer.Among the excesses of our age is a plus sized literature on the vast wasteland of human consumption, of full closets and empty souls.Titles such as Born to Buy: The Commercialized Child and the New Consumer Culture, The Overspent American: Why We Want What We Don't Need, and Affluenza: The All Consuming Epidemic, point to an insatiable market for books that berate us for buying them.In Deluxe: How Luxury Lost Its Luster