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Day Spas in Colorado Springs – A Busy Woman’s Best Friend

Colorado Springs, nestled at the foot of majestic Pikes Peak, in addition to being a prime spot for skiing, is a hotspot for many luxurious day spas. Whether you’re vacationing in the area or are fortunate enough to be a resident, paying a visit to one of the local day spas promises to offer the perfect pampering experience to go hand in hand with the serenity found in nature around you.

There are many options in and around town for scheduling a relaxing massage, including Swedish, Aromatherapy and deep tissue. If you’re visiting a day spa in the cool of winter, a soothing hot stone massage may be just what you’re looking for to warm your body and soul. Another wonderful option for relaxation is the variety of body wrap treatments offered in many local spas, with results ranging from weight loss to detoxification of the body.

There are also a number of knowledgeable licensed aestheticians working among Colorado Springs Day Spas that can help you achieve a healthy, radiant glow on the body and face. You may opt for a calming facial or an anti-aging treatment to fight free radicals. A body scrub done in a spa is a great way to exfoliate and reveal younger looking skin. Many day spas in the area offer organic product lines using the most healthy, nourishing ingredients on the market.

While Colorado Springs Day Spas offer many services that will leave you feeling relaxed and pampered, many area spas also offer services to ensure that your experience leaves you looking as great as you feel. There are numerous spas that offer in house salon services, including hair removal by electrolysis or waxing, manicures and pedicures, hair cuts and coloring, personal grooming and makeup application. Tanning is also a commonly offered service and is a wonderful option during the winter season when the sun doesn’t grace our skin as much as some might prefer.

For many of us, taking the time out of life’s hectic schedule to unwind and be catered to just doesn’t happen often enough! The benefits we reap from visiting a spa on occasion is well worth the investment. Whatever services you may be looking for, there is sure to be a spa in the area to fit the bill.

Do you live in Colorado Springs, CO? Get your FREE consumer’s report, “How to Avoid Wasting Time & Money When Searching For The Best Day Spa in Colorado Springs” and get the facts. Go to http://www.ColoradoSpringsSpaGuide.com to claim your free guide written only for Colorado Springs residents. Don’t take your health for granted, visit now! http://www.ColoradoSpringsSpaGuide.com

What’s the main purpose of john bellamy foster’s monopoly-finance capital article?

Question by Roberto Alvarez: What’s the main purpose of john bellamy foster’s monopoly-finance capital article?
Capitalism?

Best answer:

Answer by BeachBum
You can find your answer from an interview with the author provided in the link.

Interview of John Bellamy Foster for Norwegian Daily, Klassekampen

Klassekampen: Is the credit crisis a symptom of overaccumulation of capital? It seems to me that investments worldwide, but especially in the United States, were funneled into the traditionally “safe” housing market following the bursting of the dotcom-bubble. This overinvestment in turn generated a new bubble, thus causing today’s havoc. Is this correct?

JBF: Yes, I agree that this is due to what might be called an overaccumulation of capital in a number of senses: an overbuilding of productive capacity (physical capital) in relation to a demand constrained by monopoly within what economists call the “real” (as opposed to financial) economy, an overamassing of profits and wealth at the top of society, and a hypertrophy of financial claims to wealth. In terms of the financial crisis itself, there has been a massive, highly leveraged expansion of money claims to wealth, creating a huge debt overhang, and forcing, at this moment, a massive devaluation of capital. All of this is related, however, to the breakdown of the capital formation process, accumulation proper, in an increasingly stagnant real economy. These are contradictions of what I have called the phase of “Monopoly-Finance Capital” (Monthly Review, December 2006).

The bursting of the dot.com or New Economy bubble in 2000 resulted in what has been dubbed “the great bubble transfer” whereby the bursting of the New Economy bubble compelled the Federal Reserve to lower the main interest rate it controls (the Federal Funds rate), leading to a new and more massive bubble based in home mortgages, the dangers of which were apparent early on (see “The Household Debt Bubble,” Monthly Review, May 2006). This involved an enormous expansion of consumer debt despite the fact that real wages had been stagnant in the United States since the 1970s creating an unstable situation. It also involved the need on the part of capital to book ever increasing profits from finance, achieved through securitization of every form of what had previously been individual debts — especially home mortgages. This in turn led to the extension of mortgage financing to riskier and riskier customers under the theory that new “risk management” techniques had devised the means (hailed — bizarrely — by some as the equivalent of the great technological advances in the real economy) with which to separate the weaker from the stronger debts within the new securities. These new debt securities were then “insured” against default by such means as credit-debt swaps, supposedly reducing risk still further. This was the ideology behind the housing bubble. (See “The Financialization of Capital and the Crisis,” Monthly Review, April 2008.)

What do you think? Answer below!