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Di Leo: Who's Minding the Checkout Line?
American Free News Network ^ | December 29, AD 2023 | John F. Di Leo

Posted on 12/30/2023 10:43:55 AM PST by jfd1776

Try to buy anything these days – at a grocery or department store, at a discounter or specialty shop alike, from low end to high end – and you will likely have the same experience, especially in the busy hours of lunch hour, the early evening after work, and of course the weekend:

You are going to stand in line longer than you remember from before the so-called pandemic of 2020.

Why the difference? Why has so much changed in just a few short years?

We all have the same experience – more often in blue states than in red, more often in some types of stores than others, but across the country, by and large, it’s the same: The lines are longer than we remember. The stores have cash registers sitting unmanned, perhaps two out of four occupied, perhaps three out of eight, sometimes even four out of twenty. Why, we ask?

The questions are the same from coast to coast, but we usually can’t help asking ourselves in silence, or even muttering loudly enough for our fellow shoppers to hear, and to commiserate.

And we know the answers, though we may not admit them to ourselves, let alone say them out loud for our fellow shoppers to hear. Perhaps we ask the cashiers, but they usually hold their tongues rather than answer, for fear of offending.

So, most of the following Q&A experiences happen in silence, if at all:

Q: “Why don’t they open another register?”

A: “They don’t have any more cashiers.”

Q: “Why don’t they hire more cashiers?”

A: “We try; people won’t take the jobs.”

Q: “Why don’t they pay more?”

A: “We keep raising the pay scale; no matter what we pay, we still can’t get people to work.”

Q: “That can’t be true; I’ve seen new people in here!”

A: “Yes, sometimes we get somebody, then they’re overwhelmed because they’ve never really worked before – or they haven’t worked in so long, they’ve forgotten how – and they quit in a matter of weeks, or days, or even hours.”

Q: “Why is this cashier so slow?”

A: “Because he (or she) is still learning the ropes. People are new. They aren’t staying like they used to.”

Q: “Why does the cashier need his phone to make change from a $20 bill?”

A: “Because you’ve spent the last forty years voting for school boards that have banned real math and grammar textbooks in their districts, and wasted twelve school years on political poppycock, resulting in undereducated adults who can’t do basic arithmetic or carry on a conversation.”

Of course they can’t deliver these answers out loud, but you know that’s why.

The same few questions are asked, in hundreds of thousands of checkout lines, hundreds of thousands of times a day, from coast to coast. And with few exceptions, the answers are the same.

This writer went to one store today, in the Chicago suburbs, and was assaulted by no fewer than four big signs before even being fully inside the building: three announcing “Now Hiring, both full time and part time, $16/hour”… and one announcing “Hiring stocking associates, 5AM to 8AM, $18/hour.” The signs are always up; they are always hiring.

Or trying to, anyway.

The problem we suffer isn’t completely new; it’s been coming for decades. But until 2020, people could make excuses along these lines: “They don’t pay enough, they don’t have the right benefits, the hours aren’t flexible enough, they need healthcare, they need to offer discounts.”

The employment crunch of 2020, along with some political changes that were already underway beforehand, largely wiped out this list of excuses.

A virtual doubling of the minimum wage in many areas, either by law or by market pressure, has resulted in surprisingly high wage rates for entry level roles, in both retail and manufacturing. Still they suffer the difficulties of getting workers who are actually willing to work.

Retail almost always offers employee discounts, which can be extremely valuable in difficult economic times. Whether buying food for the household or school clothes for the kids, that twenty-percent-plus employee discount, often on sale items too, can be as valuable as the hourly wage itself.

And these places are so desperate for employees now, they can be incredibly flexible about which hours you work. You only have twenty hours to give us? Okay! Only ten? Okay! Only on these two specific days each week? Fine, we’ll make it work!

To anyone who was in the workforce just a decade ago, it’s shocking how flexible today’s employers will be for a good employee today.

And it’s not enough. Still, they can’t find enough decent help. Still, applicants are staying away in droves.

So, maybe it wasn’t the salary level after all?

Maybe there just aren’t enough people who want to work.

Consider:

In retail, you need to know your product and be able to converse about the product with your clientele. You need to be able to do math in your head so you can double-check the discounts applied by sales and coupons, and so you can give correct change. The young people coming up often can’t do math, or are afraid to talk to people, or don’t have the social skills and comfort with our formerly-common language to talk with the public. So they aren’t drawn to these jobs.

Retail used to depend on students in local high schools and colleges, looking for evening and weekend hours. Today, as kids either go away to college or skip college entirely, perhaps they don’t think they need the money badly enough to work during prime video game time, or movie time, or bar time. The jobs that depended on such students go unfilled.

Retail used to employ lots of part-time housewives and part-time retirees, looking for a sanity job or spending money on top of a pension. Such people flee Illinois for Florida, flee New York for Texas, flee California for Arizona. They are no longer here to apply for that job.

Retail was rarely a great career for most people, but it was always a great first job, a great part time job in school, a great second job when saving for a car or starting out in your main career. And for some, a small percentage, but still some, it’s a great career if you stick with it, because it can mean store manager, regional director, operations expert, buyer, distribution manager. There are a ton of good jobs in retail that can begin with a stint as a cashier.

Ask someone in retail today, however, and they will tell you that the bloom is off the rose, even after acknowledging that that bloom was always somewhat limited. Retail is good for an economy; the flexibility of retail jobs is great for a certain segment. When retail suffers, we all suffer.

As we look ahead to an election year, we must ask the hard questions. What exactly is making it harder now than years before?

In a nutshell, it’s undeniably that people don’t want to work. More people than usual. More people than historically.

Either people are happy with living in their parents’ basements, or living in public housing, or simply living with less.

Americans used to be – we were FOUNDED to be – ambitious, hard-working, energetic, entrepreneurial. Some certainly still are. Maybe the Left would put a negative spin on that, and say we were greedy, status-seeking, wealth-focused. But even if we were, to an extent, it worked. The ambition of an individual to climb from poverty to middle class, and from middle class to wealth, was good for the whole country. Our nation prospered because individuals worked hard to prosper.

And it is true, as Jack Kennedy said, that a rising tide lifts all boats. The broad workplace energy of past generations paved the way to America’s place as a world leader, and to our great grandparents’ rise from being destitute immigrants at Ellis Island to tenement dwellers in the city, to finally become happy homeowners in the suburbs by the end of their lives.

Raising kids in the American school system of old helped do that. Raising kids in the woke, anti-three-Rs school system of today does not.

A century ago, raising immigrant kids to be assimilated into the nation envisioned by our Founding Fathers helped do that; importing millions of foreign gatecrashers each year who don’t know or care about our language, history or culture does not.

And coming up from the bottom, giving everyone that same wonderful shared experience of working harried weekends in a Christmas season at the mall, helped prepare people for better jobs later in life. Simply importing millions of ingrates from abroad and handing them government checks does not.

What can we do to fix all this? Some of it is obvious and easy; some of it is complex and challenging.

But some things, at least, are clear: putting leftists in charge of our schools, our borders, our tax code, our public health departments, and our business world, for so many years, has done incredible damage to our society, and it’s going to take generations to recover from it.

It’s especially clear in the blue states.

Q: “Why aren’t there enough cashiers?”

A: “Because a hundred thousand people are fleeing this state every year, and the ones with a work ethic are not the ones masochistic enough to stay behind.”

Copyright 2023 John F. Di Leo

John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based international transportation and trade compliance professional and consultant. A onetime Milwaukee County Republican Party chairman, he has been writing a regular column for Illinois Review since 2009. His book on vote fraud (The Tales of Little Pavel) and his political satires on the current administration (Evening Soup with Basement Joe, Volumes I, II, and III), are available in either eBook or paperback, only on Amazon.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Education; Miscellaneous; Politics
KEYWORDS: employment; grocery; labor; retail; schools
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1 posted on 12/30/2023 10:43:55 AM PST by jfd1776
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To: jfd1776

And then they want you to wait in line to get your receipt checked (Walmart).
I refuse this illegal search.


2 posted on 12/30/2023 10:49:25 AM PST by Kenny500c ( )
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To: jfd1776

This is BS. First off at $16 or $18 an hour you’re not gonna hire anyone of quality who can stay because that’s not enough to pay the bills. For a long time work, companies need to be paying probably $25-$40 an hour nowadays.


3 posted on 12/30/2023 10:54:01 AM PST by Reno89519 (It's war. No one murders and takes Americans hostage. Time to act. Declare war on Islamic Hamas.)
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To: Kenny500c

there are some places where no one has to stand in line at the checkout or at the exit door. most of them are shutting down though.


4 posted on 12/30/2023 10:57:14 AM PST by Qwapisking ("IF the Second goes first the First goes second" L.Star )
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To: Kenny500c
"And then they want you to wait in line to get your receipt checked (Walmart)."

Which you got by being an unwilling employee for them as a cashier to get out of there. So where's my employee discount? It's not just a search at the door, it's detainment.

5 posted on 12/30/2023 10:57:58 AM PST by mikey_hates_everything
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To: jfd1776
It’s especially clear in the blue states.

“Why aren’t there enough cashiers?”

“Because a hundred thousand people are fleeing this state every year, and the ones with a work ethic are not the ones masochistic enough to stay behind.”

The blue states provide enough benefits without working that young people "prefer" not to work. Often they live rent-free in their parents home and have been taught that it's "honorable" to be poor. I blame permissive parents who don't have the balls to say "No" to their kids and a failed educational system.

6 posted on 12/30/2023 10:59:12 AM PST by econjack
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To: jfd1776

Too many people don’t want to work and think they should get everything for free.


7 posted on 12/30/2023 10:59:27 AM PST by metmom (He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.)
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To: jfd1776

Work is for suckers.

Join welfare, get more stuff and 100% free time.


8 posted on 12/30/2023 11:02:27 AM PST by Uncle Miltie (Objective: Permanently break the will of the population to ever wage war again.)
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To: Qwapisking

Fine to check receipts at warehouse clubs, after all you signed for it on your club application. Not other places, if you are suspected of shoplifting that is an entirely different scenario.


9 posted on 12/30/2023 11:03:48 AM PST by Kenny500c ( )
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To: jfd1776

I recently saw a sign in a restaurant reading, “the whole world is short-handed.” And here in California, it’s going to get a lot worse in a couple of days, when the $20-per-hour minimum wage kicks in.


10 posted on 12/30/2023 11:05:52 AM PST by Fiji Hill
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To: mikey_hates_everything

You are right it is an illegal detainment, it has already been litigated and Walmart lost. This is the reason they never even question you if you skip this line.


11 posted on 12/30/2023 11:11:39 AM PST by Kenny500c ( )
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To: jfd1776
The young people coming up often can’t do math, or are afraid to talk to people, or don’t have the social skills and comfort with our formerly-common language to talk with the public.

Very true and frightening at the same time, When my Wife and I go out to dinner we constantly see yutes sitting at Tables texting back and forth because they literally can not formulate sentences and carry on conversations with each other or with anyone. I own my own business and am fairly successful, in the last 2-3 years I have been offered Jobs by some of customers to TALK ON THE PHONE to their customers, and they were willing to pay me $150K-$200K to do it. When I asked why, the answer is the same, None of the Smart College Kids could have a meaningful conversation with their customers and it just pissed off everyone they spoke to. Oh they can text,tweet,email,sign,... but speak in a common language to express their thoughts and concerns to another human, NOT A CHANCE.
12 posted on 12/30/2023 11:12:01 AM PST by eyeamok
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To: jfd1776

Unemployment benefits pay more than these jobs. Change that and people will go back to work. F’ing simple really.


13 posted on 12/30/2023 11:14:27 AM PST by Jonny7797
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To: mikey_hates_everything

“It’s not just a search at the door, it’s detainment.”

Lol.

At our local (whitopia) Walmart the employees know many of the customers.

The only “detaining at the door” is the Walmart employees talking about their kids activities with customers on the way out the door.


14 posted on 12/30/2023 11:15:24 AM PST by cgbg ("Our democracy" = Their Kleptocracy)
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To: cgbg

And checking receipts while doing this small talk.


15 posted on 12/30/2023 11:20:48 AM PST by Kenny500c ( )
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To: jfd1776
I've noticed a few things at the Fred Meyer store and the fast-food places near me:

1. Apart from the self-service lines, typically only about three of the seven or eight checkout stands are open.
2. I'm seeing more older people working in the store - people who are clearly past retirement age.
3. Security has increased from no guards a few years ago, to a Walmart-style "greeter," to one uniformed security guard, to two uniformed security guards at each door. The guards now check your receipt as you leave the store.
4. About 90% of the fast-food workers are young Hispanics, and many have heavy accents as if they haven't been here long.
5. There has been a dramatic increase in "people of color" in my area over the past 30 years. When I moved out here to the suburbs in 1987, it was probably 85-90% white. Now, it seems to be barely 50% white. The great replacement, indeed.
6. There has been a huge increase in abandoned shopping carts along the street in the past seven or eight years. It used to be that you'd see one every few weeks. At the peak about four years ago, I counted as many as 40 in one three-block stretch. Since then, FM introduced carts with wheels that lock if you try to take them too far from the store, so now I typically see "only" seven or eight carts a day. There has also been a huge increase in roadside trash, including abandoned furniture and other household items. Also, there are usually three or four old RVs parked along the road.
16 posted on 12/30/2023 11:20:52 AM PST by Steve_Seattle
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To: Kenny500c

“checking receipts while doing this small talk”

Pretending to check receipts while doing this small talk...

Gotta make the shift supervisor think they are working...


17 posted on 12/30/2023 11:23:05 AM PST by cgbg ("Our democracy" = Their Kleptocracy)
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To: Fiji Hill

Gee, in 63 my minimum wage job while going to college was $1 per hour as a fill in teller. By that standard today’s part time tellers should be making, on a yearly basis, 40 hrs per week times 52, times 20 ...40K with the pension, vacation, and the year end 10% bonus. There was no medicare deduction and SS was like 3%.

Of course the real wage came five years later for me, $100 a day once a month as an E1.

I wish today’s whinners had something to whine about.


18 posted on 12/30/2023 11:24:20 AM PST by Mouton (US Home to one party rule)
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To: jfd1776

No biggie. There are scads of folks pouring across the southern border, anxious to fill those empty spaces. Oh wait...that’s right! They’re too busy going to the bank to pickup their checks from Uncle Sugar.


19 posted on 12/30/2023 11:24:24 AM PST by moovova ("The NEXT election is the most important election of our lifetimes!“ LOL...)
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To: Steve_Seattle

Please, what state are you in and which chain has armed guards checking receipts?


20 posted on 12/30/2023 11:26:14 AM PST by Kenny500c ( )
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