This surely has to be a 'photoshop' alteration.
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This surely has to be a 'photoshop' alteration.
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Thou shalt incur undying wrath if thou post anything, however true, that is negative (however so slightly) of the Democrats or of POTUS on this forum.
Has a good link to other 'similar' pictures that may be helpful to some on here :
'Instructional Diagrams for People Who Suck at Everyday Life'
http://www.cracked.com/photoplasty_1...day-life_p3/#8
Thou shalt incur undying wrath if thou post anything, however true, that is negative (however so slightly) of the Democrats or of POTUS on this forum.
The sign has been withdrawn because of the small number of patrons with three hands that have proved it to be ineffective.
Doesn't affect me. I boycott Wallmart.
I always consider asking people with too many items in the express lane "Is it that you can't read, or can't count?"
The reality is that the express lines are slower than the normal lines, because no one uses cash anymore, so the process of paying for the few items becomes the biggest unit of time in the movement of the line. Scanning is fast, and bagging is done by an assistant and then everyone stands around and waits for the machine to check with the bank or cc company to determine whether it will pay the bill.
I only use the express lane when there is noone else in it.
“We have tracked the economic health of the nation for a long time. The reason we track those things is that the government is full of economists, not psychologists. If we know money doesn’t buy happiness, why are we optimizing for money?”
Adam Kramer, PhD candidate, Psychology, U. of OR.
Photographer of sailing and sailboats
And other things, too.
http://www.landsedgephoto.com
So how many customers with more items in their cart tell the cashier thy can't count that high because they have only TWO hands?
Emily is right about the time for scanning items, compared to executing the plastic card PIN/signature routine. Perhaps there should be cash only lines; but then, have you ever waited for someone looking for that last penny in the bottom of a purse?
The real question should be, Do I care enough about—literally—a few seconds wait for the scanning of a few extra items for someone who is elderly or handicapped, or perhaps truly pressed for time? Especially if the alternative is for them to wait behind one or more people in another lane with two or three shopping carts each filled with multiple dozens of items?
Or to put a more delicate twist upon it: Do I care how much I force inconvenience or discomfort on others to avoid the waste of even a few seconds of my precious time? If they have forty items, maybe. A half-dozen over? Lighten up.
The grocery store where I shop has checkers who will often engage customers in a little idle chatter that sometimes slows down the line. It used to bother me, then I realized I would much rather wait a couple of minutes extra while people are being real live human beings to one another.
The doctrine of nonresistance against arbitrary power, and oppression, is absurd, slavish, and destructive of the good and happiness of mankind.
Personal failures are too important to be trusted to others.