If you are going to tell me what i can and can't do, then please let me return the favor.
You can do anything you want, it just wouldn't be a legitimate argument.
I'm not cherry picking examples. I'm remembering my trips to the store and library on bicycle when I was 12 years old and other trips I took around that age, and what the prices were.
You're either cherry-picking examples, or by coincidence you're picking cherry-pickable examples. I can't read your mind, and if you indeed chose the examples for that reason, it's just a coincidence that you chose examples that are very inapt. But they're still inapt. Comic books specifically, as well your other examples of gasoline and college educations, have gone up in price a lot for well-understood reasons that are unrelated to the fact that things in general go up in price.
There is simply NOTHING in my recollection that was more expensive then than it is now
That slice of pizza is only "more expensive" because of inflation. Same for your T-shirts and bus rides. And if all you're saying is that prices have gone up according to inflation, then of course they have. But by the standards of the post you were replying to, and almost anyone else, that means that pizza hasn't gone up in price at all--that was about price compared to income and income has gone up because of inflation too, so prices have not increased relative to income.
.>You have probably literally a million things you could choose from to check their prices and you don't bother finding even one?
That million things only went up in price because of inflation, which doesn't count.
Comic books (and gas and college) are different because they have gone up faster than inflation, and thus really are "more expensive", but they're more expensive for specific reasons.
But by the standards of the post you were replying to
You misread it. Eugine is right.
Rationality quotes time!
The usual rules: