LMAO
It seems like those check out clerks are underwater and moving at the speed of death.
2007-05-07 04:42:29
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answer #1
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answered by yuntaa_dba 4
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definite each and every from time to time I even have. I decide those fat ladies in abdomen shirts and denims 3 sizes too small with a muffin perfect that makes the Goodyear Blimp look skinny. I decide the folk who KNEW there became no cost ticket on an merchandise and have been too lazy to seek for the comparable merchandise with a tag to deliver with them to the checkout and reason an excellent backup. I do decide persons that have 2 finished carts of groceries and are using the self checkout lane. purely a lots i'm specific people decide me as I yell at my teenagers that in the event that they do no longer cease crying i'm gonna provide them something to cry approximately. Or as quickly as I even have 15 products interior the ten products or much less lane. Or as quickly as I have interaction in a friendly communique with the checkout woman just to make her smile whilst she is obviously under pressure at each and every of the morons yelling at her rather of taking their situation to the chief.
2016-12-17 06:27:34
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answer #2
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answered by bustamante 4
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In all seriousness, it's one of those corporate
decisions that defies logic.
Essentially, their reasoning is that as
long as the quick line doesn't seem to
be moving any faster, people in the
longer lines are
less likely to voice objection or go
elsewhere.
It also creates a sense of what's
known as, "purchase defeatism,"
a truly sneaky business secret.
(Did you ever think about just how
we've been conned into accepting
that we're labeled as consumers, and
not individuals, in escalating contexts?)
Purchase defeatism is simply the
overwhelming--though in a subtle
way--sense of feeling inexplicably
numb, when in a buying role.
It magnifies in direct proportion to the
size of the superstore or warehouse
style confines you're in. Combine that
with the enclosed element resulting
from countless strangers in your
immediate space. It's almost as
if it's us "consumers" in competition
with one another.
Too, in order to encourage the slow
checker--and usually it's the new ones--
to learn to muster speed.
But I'm with you entirely--few of them
seem like they'd want to try. For that
matter, many seem to be defiant, as
in, 'Well, you're on MY turf, now, so
just wait.'
Defiance has its place, unequivocally.
Just not at the checkout, thanks.
2007-05-07 05:14:20
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answer #3
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answered by rockman 7
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LMAO, so true it's always the ones that take hours to count out your change and scan the barcodes. I never use the express checkouts, it's better to queue up behind a family of 5 on their weekly shop.
2007-05-07 04:45:24
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answer #4
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answered by scattycat06 4
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Same reason why they give people who can't speak english well the microphone at the drive through.
Anyways, I have just opted to stay off the 10 or less line. It's slow AND there's always those people who can't count how many things are in their cart.
2007-05-07 04:46:45
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answer #5
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answered by loki t 2
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Ah. Excellent question.
2007-05-07 04:41:53
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answer #6
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answered by diannegoodwin@sbcglobal.net 7
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