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Mrmiss2
 
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Default Why are people so RUDE at the grocery store???

Sheessh! Talk about rude! This is the rudest posting I've seen in ages. Knock
it off.
Californians are remarkably courteous in supermarkets. Friendly, helpful, all
you can ask for. Try a New York City market if you want rudeness and neglect.
This poster is obviously a cranky, middle-aged man who can't keep a woman.
Who would want him ?
Mrmiss
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>Subject: Why are people so RUDE at the grocery store???
>From: Steelehtta
>Date: 1/15/2005 1:45 P.M. Pacific Standard Time
>Message-id: <hf2ju01m11e2b04sbc2b715e1730851cbs@news>
>
>zyk wrote:
>
>>I see more rudeness and nasty behavior during the weekly trip to the
>>grocery store than just about anywhere else, except perhaps on the
>>road. Why are people so nasty at the supermarket???

>
>Yep, seen it all. Don't know where you live but here in Southern
>California people are too important and self-absorbed to be nice to
>anyone. When I was living in West Hollywood I can't tell you how many
>times I'd see some fool blocking up an entire aisle with his or her
>shopping cart parked sideways while they blurted into their cell phone
>that they'd been invited to the Oscars after party thanks to a friend
>of a friend of a friend of a friend of Brad Pitt or Jennifer Anniston
>or whoever. And don't even get me started on the porn stars at the
>Ralphs.
>
>>Yesterday I nearly lost it. After the usual attacks and getting run
>>down by shopping carts being driven by aggressive, power mad insane
>>shoppers I stood there ready to scream. What nearly sent me over the
>>edge was this fat breeder **** driving her little brat mobile
>>recklessly, nearly running everyone down. You know those shopping
>>carts with the little kiddie cab thing built into them. She was
>>speeding into and out of every corner of the store, expecting everyone
>>to move out of her way so she and her drooling one year old could do
>>their shopping, it's more important than everyone else's.

>
>Yep, seen them too. They usually have a crazed look on their faces as
>they zoom by you and don't look at anyone, as if they and their
>squealings are the only ones in the universe.
>
>>Then come the office workers doing their shopping during lunch hour in
>>their power suits and high heels running everyone down cuz they gotta
>>get back to the office.

>
>Most of them are jaded neurotic single women.
>
>>I won't even go into the 40 and 50 year old women wearing sports bras
>>and spandex shorts bending over in front of every guy that walks by.
>>So subtle. Sheesh!

>
>Ah, this is one of my favorites. You have to understand where this
>comes from. It all started with the women's magazines back in the
>feminist heyday of the 70s and early 80s. There were all these
>articles telling women that if they were over thirty and single their
>train had left the station and there was a greater chance of being hit
>by lightning than finding a man to marry them and impregnate them.
>They gave all sorts of off the wall advice to women who had put the
>careers first and their biological clocks were ticking so loud they
>were suffering from hearing loss to dress provocatively and throw
>themselves at men in public places. Two favorite ones were the gym
>and the grocery store. Designing Women had a hilarious episode on
>this. Ever since then the grocery store is considered a major
>cruising park for busy successful people (read: desperate lonely
>middle aged single people) whose battle gear seems to be bright
>spandex that strategically calls attention to their reproductive
>zones.
>
>>Somewhere along the line someone decided that social rules and
>>courtesy and respect were going to be forbidden when shopping at the
>>grocery store and forgot to tell me!
>>
>>Why are people so damn rude at the grocery store???

>
>It's the residue of the Baby Boomer "ME Generation". "It's all about
>me, me first, me always" that kind of mentality. Nothing you can do
>about it except to toughen up and learn to dish it out too. That
>stuff about being nice to others might work well in Omaha and the rest
>of flyover country, but if you're in the big cities on both coasts,
>it's eat or be eaten, unfortunately.
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