Food & Drink8 mins ago
Is This Fair?
Or even sensible?
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /news/u k-wales -546627 95
Clothes are non essential for 17 days while presumably chilli sauce, for example, isn’t ...
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Clothes are non essential for 17 days while presumably chilli sauce, for example, isn’t ...
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.With the exception of fast growing children most people have clothes, it is the browsing that's the problem I noticed during the first lockdown after a few weeks the non food sections were busier than normal with very few people taking items to buy them. It was the wander and browse that was being satisfied.
It would be interesting to learn what percentage of transmissions shops (essential or not) are responsible for. I imagine it's pretty small. This seems one of the increasingly bizarre measures that spew forth almost daily. There four different lots of them at it and they are really making their mark - but possibly not in the way they imagine.
I wonder how far this will go? Many of the food items on offer in "essential" shops are not essential. You don't actually need doughnuts, lemonade, bottled water, cakes biscuits, and that's before you even get on to beer, wines and spirits. Are these shops going to have to split all their stock into "essential" and "non-essential"? Even in the darkest days of the first lockdown it was deemed lawful for shops which were allowed to open to sell "non-essential" goods (as Derbyshire Constabulary found out when they began checking the contents of shopper's shopping bags). If you're in the shop, you're in the shop and it scarcely makes much difference whether you pick up a tin of baked beans (which, strictly speaking, you could do without) or a new pair of socks. But it will make a difference when staff have to start arguing the toss with staff and management over what they can buy and what they can't. I think some of the thinking (if that's what it is) that is behind these schemes is bordering on a form of mental illness and urgent treatment is required for those involved. Unfortunately they won't receive it because they have not contracted Covid.
I wonder how far this will go? Many of the food items on offer in "essential" shops are not essential. You don't actually need doughnuts, lemonade, bottled water, cakes biscuits, and that's before you even get on to beer, wines and spirits. Are these shops going to have to split all their stock into "essential" and "non-essential"? Even in the darkest days of the first lockdown it was deemed lawful for shops which were allowed to open to sell "non-essential" goods (as Derbyshire Constabulary found out when they began checking the contents of shopper's shopping bags). If you're in the shop, you're in the shop and it scarcely makes much difference whether you pick up a tin of baked beans (which, strictly speaking, you could do without) or a new pair of socks. But it will make a difference when staff have to start arguing the toss with staff and management over what they can buy and what they can't. I think some of the thinking (if that's what it is) that is behind these schemes is bordering on a form of mental illness and urgent treatment is required for those involved. Unfortunately they won't receive it because they have not contracted Covid.
Other than the bizarreness of it, I don’t see how it achieves its object.
People who shop for what is wrongly called “nonessentials” in supermarkets, generally are people who go to supermarkets a lot. Meanwhile the people who go to the shops that now will close can simply shop online
As for browsing, have you ever noticed how long people spend loitering around and picking at the meat shelves, for example? And quite understandably too.
People who shop for what is wrongly called “nonessentials” in supermarkets, generally are people who go to supermarkets a lot. Meanwhile the people who go to the shops that now will close can simply shop online
As for browsing, have you ever noticed how long people spend loitering around and picking at the meat shelves, for example? And quite understandably too.