Ya know what I find interesting is that the grocery giants in Canada who are worth billions, put out bins in their stores during the holidays for customers to contribute to food banks and help those in need when many of these customers struggle themselves to keep up with the rising prices of groceries across the country, but still contribute. How many times do these same customers while paying for their groceries get asked, would you like to donate to our charity? So customers give a little more even though they can't afford to. Then the grocery giant presents an oversize check to the charity to boost the image of the grocery giant by taking credit for the contributions and donations given by the customers and claim this on their taxes as a charitable donation for the tax break.
They also nag you for donations when checking out at the self checkout. I'm going to start calling the manager and soliciting them after every visit. If they are going to waste my time I'm going to waste theirs.
@@Mugwortcircle Yes they do, they have every angle covered to try and squeeze a little extra out of the customers. Calling the manager is not a bad idea and ask the manager to explain why customers are constantly solicited at checkout. I feel bad for the poor cashier who is making minumum wage and being pushed to solicit customers as part of their job. They are the ones who bear the brunt of angry customers when it should be management and higher.
@@WinstonSmithRoom101 Exactly. They have the financial means to support these charities without having to solicit customers. They use the holidays to tug on the heart strings of customers and they use their cashiers who are being paid minimum wage to do it.
Ya know what I find interesting is that the grocery giants in Canada who are worth billions, put out bins in their stores during the holidays for customers to contribute to food banks and help those in need when many of these customers struggle themselves to keep up with the rising prices of groceries across the country, but still contribute. How many times do these same customers while paying for their groceries get asked, would you like to donate to our charity? So customers give a little more even though they can't afford to. Then the grocery giant presents an oversize check to the charity to boost the image of the grocery giant by taking credit for the contributions and donations given by the customers and claim this on their taxes as a charitable donation for the tax break.
They also nag you for donations when checking out at the self checkout. I'm going to start calling the manager and soliciting them after every visit. If they are going to waste my time I'm going to waste theirs.
because none of these companies care one little bit, any charity is done solely for their image so they can make more money.
💯
@@Mugwortcircle Yes they do, they have every angle covered to try and squeeze a little extra out of the customers. Calling the manager is not a bad idea and ask the manager to explain why customers are constantly solicited at checkout. I feel bad for the poor cashier who is making minumum wage and being pushed to solicit customers as part of their job. They are the ones who bear the brunt of angry customers when it should be management and higher.
@@WinstonSmithRoom101 Exactly. They have the financial means to support these charities without having to solicit customers. They use the holidays to tug on the heart strings of customers and they use their cashiers who are being paid minimum wage to do it.
I wonder how much didn't make it to the proper destination
let them eat donuts - turdeau 2024
Eat ze bugs.