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I do not do business with businesses that employs tactics that reinforces classism and elitism


               
2022 Jun 30, 8:39am   451 views  9 comments

by Tenpoundbass   follow (10)  

That goes for express lines, and curbside pick up two things that will turn me off from your business.
Like Universal and Disney lines would go at least 1/3 (Or more!) if not for the express lines.

Then another thing that kills me is the "Curbside pick up" in the most ridiculous businesses, where their patrons would do good to get the exercise to step in the store and browse and buy at the register. They always reserve the best parking often taking away Handicap parking spots, which always sit empty. Nobody is doing curbside pickup for a pair of Second and Irregular Levi's at Ross.

Not really a business but the same mentality and level of stupidity.
The most dumbest thing every though of by humanity, the express lanes on highways, that the only reason they passed, because people erroneously assumed they would save gas. When in reality those two to three new lanes(in some cases no new lanes were created they were taken from regular lanes) was just what the current highway needed to ease up traffic congestion, those express lanes double the gridlock load, and most often those express lanes end up in a slow crawl, as folks up at the front need to exit the lanes, or are just slow driving shits anyway. Pro express lane people assume everyone drives that their speed.

So Chick Filet has a drive through, but they are going to FastTrack those who want to pay a premium to fuck over and bypass their loyal customers. It just boggles my mind the mentality that would come up with this.

https://www.foxbusiness.com/lifestyle/chick-fil-a-tests-express-drive-thru-lanes?dicbo=v2-000c9e61ca6c9b318262c64d6aba52b2

Oh and people who try to shave time by doing little bits of a process prematurely out of order, most always fuck themselves over in the long run and screw up what ever they were trying to do to save time. Some folks will cut material now and measure later if they think it will save them time.

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7   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2022 Jul 2, 8:10am  

The neural programming that can be inflicted on the viewer of streaming services and internets can be subtle, but purposeful.

A very simple example:

A sitcom based upon the "average family" showing them, extrapolating from the studio sets, living in a well equipped, 4,000 sq. ft. mega mansion.

The message : This Is Normal. And as you don't have this, you must feel bad and work harder to achieve this.

Another simple example: The average luxury car ad showing models as owners driving to a multi-million dollar luxury pad. Yes, you can achieve this feeling by financing 70 grand large as you drive to your overly leveraged crapshack in the hood.

It is all neural programming, so in-your-face that people have no defensive shields anymore. IMHO, add marijuana to the equation, and for many, reality based scrutiny is defeated.

The same is applied to correct-think political view programming.

You think you've cut the cord? Not if you are watching streaming dreck or even professional sports. I am assuming no one watches or reads MSM propaganda anymore.
8   NDrLoR   2022 Jul 2, 9:15am  

WineHorror1 says


The movie theatre near me
I decided for the first time in I don't know how long to go to a movie last week, The Black Phone. I like suspense thrillers and there's just something about going into a theater on a blazing hot day into that dim, pop-corn aroma setting that I enjoy, plus I get a senior pass. It ostensibly started at 3:05, but what you do is not go until 3:30 because now there are now 30 minutes of previews "rated for general audiences" to sit through. I liked the movie because it had a good ending where the good guys won but had lots of surprises.

Al_Sharpton_for_President says


the "average family"
I think it was on this site that someone made the observation that there are lots of parallels between now and the 70's: shortages, inflation, high gas prices, everyone angry. There was that series in the summer of 1973, An American Family, which would have been a forerunner to today's reality shows. A camera crew lived with the Loud family in where else but California for the rest of the year and shot scenes of what were supposed to an "average" family. They had five children (this was a married to each other couple from the World War II generation), five sons and two daughters. Much of the focus was on Lance who was flamboyantly gay in an era before it was cool. During the show, Bill asks Patricia for a divorce and they split, fitting right into the culture of the 70's. In a retrospective in 2019, we learn that Bill died in 1996 at 97 but that Patricia is still living at 93. Lance became an icon of the LBGTQ123 community and not surprisingly died of AIDS in 2001 at 50.
9   Tenpoundbass   2022 Jul 2, 10:12am  

Al_Sharpton_for_President says

Another simple example: The average luxury car ad showing models as owners driving to a multi-million dollar luxury pad. Yes, you can achieve this feeling by financing 70 grand large as you drive to your overly leveraged crapshack in the hood.

It is all neural programming, so in-your-face that people have no defensive shields anymore.


Publix used to make homey commercials centered around middle class people in middle class settings.
Today they have people celebrating in a huge kitchen with a center island and the Anderson storm windows along the back wall of the family room over looking a lake in and exclusive neighborhood, cooking a dinner they bought with their SNAP cards. This has been the formula for them for well over 15 years at least. But now they are injecting Biracial and LBQ&*!@#$% nonsense as well.

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