The difference between European countries and America is becoming so stark. Anyone reading or watching global news has to see how backwards this country is and that it’s only getting worse.

  • @regul@lemm.ee
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    6710 months ago

    Can you imagine an American grocery store chain letting its cashiers sit down?

    • Tony N
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      2810 months ago

      What cashiers? We have to check ourselves out.

          • @Lesrid@lemm.ee
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            810 months ago

            Bingo, if these bananas are only going up in price then you’re going to pay someone to punch the code in for me.

        • @CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.ml
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          1110 months ago

          Seriously, there are a lot of things to hate but self-checkout is not one of them. Not having to interact with humans, being able to make sure everything is scanned correctly yourself, and being able to scan at your own pace is great. The only problem is when they don’t have enough self-checkouts. Sure beats having a one or two conventional checkout open out of the 25 or so they have in the store. I would prefer they pass the savings on to the consumer, but that’s the only fault I can find with self-checkout, well, that and the stupid weight sensor but more and more stores aren’t requiring that stupid “place item in bagging area” thing anymore.

          • Trantarius
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            710 months ago

            Well it’s all fine and dandy until you try to buy some spinach, fumble around on the touchscreen for a while until you figure out how to add something manually, then can’t find spinach anywhere and finally ask for help, feeling like a total idiot who can’t use a touchscreen interface that a boomer soccer mom could figure out, but then you figure out it was listed under “leafy green spinach” so now you’re mad at both at yourself and whoever decided that was a good idea.

            • @IonAddis@lemmy.world
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              410 months ago

              Stuff like that has never been unique to self-checkout. I remember in my teens in the 90s you’d run into things like the credit card system being down or the check-checking system being down when you went through the line with a physical cashier, or some barcode not scanning because it’s some niche product that didn’t make it into the system. Or you only had a $50 on you and the cashier was struggling to make change because it was too early/too late in the day, so you had to hold on while they flagged down someone who could help them open another register to break it. Or there was a coupon being weird, or, or or…there was always something now and again. If not for you, for someone ahead of you in line.

              Basically, minor inconveniences always happen now and again regardless of your method of checkout or payment. Feeding your own anxiety by stressing out whether you look stupid because a touchscreen has stumped you for this or that reason is unproductive.

              Like–yeah, I get it. I’ve felt frustration too. I have felt the same things you talk about.

              But I consider my own feelings a “me” thing? I’ve always felt that was a thing I had to overcome in myself, my own impatience, my own frustration over an everyday minor blunder. My own fears that I look “stupid”.

              Blaming the world around me (such as the self-checkouts) for being imperfect is…unrealistic, to me? There will always be minor things, minor delays–it’s just a facet of life that will never change.

              So it’s always seemed to me that it’s more productive to be zen about it. Especially when looking at my own memories I remember just as many minor checkout “upsets” when going through a line with a physical cashier as I have encountered in the self-checkout. Small errors happen regardless of system, so why not learn to flow with it?

        • Saik0
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          510 months ago

          If I’m paying the same costs for things… Why wouldn’t I want someone who’s better at scanning the shit than I am to do the job? Why do I want to fumble with knowing the vegetable codes? Or waiting 8 minutes for an employee to come over when the scanner freaks out because the 3 oz item isn’t in the bag… even though it’s definitely in the fucking bag. I also have to wonder if theft goes up considerable with more self-checkouts in play. That means that costs can actually go up over time… no?

          They can be an okay experience… But a lot of times they’re not.

          • @mxcory
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            210 months ago

            This was only an experience one time, but I was waiting in line to checkout at Walmart and listed to the registers’s beeps. I could hear about one beep per second from 3 or 4 registers combined. (all the ones they had staffed.) I could scan faster than a single register that day.

            That being said, I hate the turn to self checkout. A conglomerate like Walmart has no excuse to not pay and staff properly. Or give me a discount for providing my labor.

        • @grayman@lemmy.world
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          210 months ago

          The machines ALWAYS bitch about not putting something in the bag or putting something in the bag not scanned. The system is too slow. I hate how slow I have to scan stuff.

    • @codenul@lemmy.ml
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      1810 months ago

      One reason I shop at Aldi’s. Their cashiers sat down. I respect that. I shop there.

      American

    • @AssholeDestroyer@lemmy.ml
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      1010 months ago

      The Fred Meyer (Kroger) in my neighborhood has 4-5 armed and body armored security guards stationed at the entrance and exits. They ask to check your receipts at the exit and search all your bags.

      Its actually illegal to force someone to stop since its not a private club like Costco, so you can just tell them no and keep walking. Thats not well known though so you have stormtroopers checking old ladies papers and searching all their belongings.

      Oregon allows off duty officers to moonlight as armed guards so a lot of them are cops from various departments. During the 2020 protests there were a few Federal Protective Service agents patrolling the store.

  • Baron Von J
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    3610 months ago

    US grocery chains all push their own brands, and if they called out shrinkflation they wouldn’t be able to get in on it themselves.

  • BigFig
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    3110 months ago

    Should probably post the actual article title

  • @CrowAirbrush@lemm.ee
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    2810 months ago

    I worked at Albert Heijn in my teens and they stopped selling coca cola as they couldn’t agree on a price.

    Cola wanted to increase the consumer price to €1,35 for 1.5 liter bottles.

    It took quite some time before the store had coca cola in stock.

    I bought a bottle a couple weeks ago as we had some friends over and i laughed so hard out of misery. That same fucking bottle now costs €2,49 at Albert Heijn.

    Store brand is 89 cents, which is what we used to pay for original cola .5 liter bottles.

    Guys, it’s just water with a bit of flavouring in it. We should all just collectively stop buying these famous brands and watch them burn. Lol

  • @SheeEttin@lemmy.world
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    2510 months ago

    Walmart is the only one that does, but they only do it to bully them into selling at almost no profit.

        • @camelCaseGuy@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Because, in case you didn’t realise, we don’t think that waging wars, hoarding nukes and “exporting freedom and democracy” is a good international policy nor a wise use of tax payers’ money.

          But what do I know, right? I just have low crime rates, an affordable university system and don’t have to sell my kidney for a ride in an ambulance. All the while having 1 month paid vacation and a minimum salary that allows me to not live in the streets.

          Sorry, I’m out of line.

          • @zepheriths@lemmy.world
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            110 months ago

            Egypt 1956 Cyprus 1974 Indonesia 1964 Cyprus 1956 4 interventions in Chad from 1969 to 2014 6 interventions in the DRC from 1964 to 1978 2 interventions in the CAR in 1979 3 interventions in the Sahel from 2013 to 2015 8 interventions in the Syrian civil war from 2014 to today

            “WeDoNTThINKwAGiNGwARiSaGOoDiNtERnATioNaLPoliCy” bro stfu you do it to

            It’s absolutely wild that an ethnicity homogeneous country has a much more stable time than one like the us with vary sizable minorities (I am not blaming minorities however nations like Japan, France, Germany, ect all have very significant percentage of a single group and are more stable, in my experience of reading through history you should try to homogenize your country, gets a bit war crimey)

            I know this is going to sound weird but you can get government healthcare if you are unable to get it in another way, it’s called Medicaid.

            Insane that dispite college being expensive the US has one of the highest rates of college graduation.

            As for crime. Scientific studies have linked more crime to higher temperatures. And guess what the US is often significantly warmer than Europe.

            Crazy what happens when you stop parroting talking points and look into it. Oh don’t worry when I am old enough I will be running on a campaign for solutions to these, but America is not Europe, those solution you had need change to work here

          • @zepheriths@lemmy.world
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            110 months ago

            Ok… look, having a currency tied to a metal does bad things, If it really is a problem I am sure a nation would have brought it back. The gold standard would have given the US more power because at some point if it had stayed the us would have required all gold reserves… that doesn’t sound that good does it?

    • 👁️👄👁️
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      510 months ago

      Yeah I’m trying to filter them out as much of it as I can. The Europeans are so toxic here. We live rent free in their head. It’s a pretty futile effort to break their circlejerk, just like I know they’ll downvote and probably give a toxic reply to this comment as well. They think what they read online is reality in America.

  • @badbytes@lemmy.world
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    1210 months ago

    “French supermarket chain is using ‘shrinkflation’ stickers to pressure PepsiCo and other suppliers”

  • originalucifer
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    910 months ago

    a lot of us frogs have been pointing out the warming waters to the ridicule of everyone else.

    ‘just vote!’ they say, meanwhile our 2 choices have been conservative or asshole conservative for the last, oh 50 years.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    310 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    “Obviously, the aim in stigmatizing these products is to be able to tell manufacturers to rethink their pricing policy,” Stefen Bompais, director of client communications at Carrefour, said in an interview.

    Carrefour CEO Alexandre Bompard, who also heads French retail industry lobby group FDC, has repeatedly said consumer goods companies are not cooperating in efforts to cut the price of thousands of staples despite a fall in the cost of raw materials.

    In this he is backed by French finance minister Bruno Le Maire, who in June summoned 75 big retailers and consumer groups to his ministry urging them to cut prices.

    “Lindt & Sprüngli increased its prices groupwide on average by 9.3% in line with local cost structures,” a company spokesperson told Reuters.

    France, like other European countries, has been trying for months to ease consumer pain in the face of a surge in the cost of living, strong-arming big business to freeze or cut food and transport prices — with mixed results.

    Le Maire said last month that consumer goods companies and retailers had agreed to bring forward annual price negotiations — which would normally have taken place next year — to September.


    The original article contains 549 words, the summary contains 195 words. Saved 64%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @Schlemmy@lemmy.ml
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    210 months ago

    Sure, Colruyt group just stops stocking certain brands from time to time. It’s weird to see because they keep the spot empty until the issue is resolved.