I look at one in the mirror every day.
In answer to the question at post 1. I do.
Maybe they’ll eventually have Charmin in lots of public places!
Helluva name for that website.
Not me. My dumps are digital.
This is correct. I get emails from a company called Webstaurant. When the shelves were bare we simply ordered the larger commercial rolls from them. They don’t fit into your typical residential wall mount. It’s a two-handed unroll operation but, we have plenty on hand.
That commercial toilet paper is awful stuff...always hated it.
How many people do you know who take a dump at work?
I always did... might as well get paid to !!
That’s a very personal question. I’m sure a certain amount of such events happen at work.
You can still buy large commercial rolls and store. Large rolls can be converted to small rolls by using a drill and “spinning off” the larger roll. Or build a large roll dispenser for the bathroom.
I’ve saw people coming back from the store with enough to last a year.
Moi x 2...daily...sometimes 3.
I thought I read somewhere that the Sleepy Joe recommends recycling all our paper.
By extension ...
My niece is often late for family get-togethers. My sister-in-law explained it’s because her police officer boyfriend has to poop first when he gets home from work, lol.
Is it just me or there WAY too much information being shared on this thread?
My daughter ran out the other day and had to borrow some. My son, who lives not far from her found some at a store and got her taken care of.
It sounds like supply is trickling back.
If only idiot legislators would roll back their economically illiterate price gouging laws?
Brilliant. And refreshing to see someone demonstrate the ability to step back and question things that seem so obvious (like hording being the explanation).
Complete bullcrap. TP stocks did not slowly dwindle to empty over time, as if suddenly demand for home TP increased while commercial TP plunged. NO, the TP shelves went bare in 2 days time and have never been replenished. That is hoarding. A slow changeover such as the article is suggesting from commercial to home use would have allowed a much greater time span for TP manufacturers to switch over, and would not have disrupted the supply chain either.
The article is complete hogwash. Hoarding is why the shelves went bare in 2-3 days.
Not a lot of commercial demand right now.
Someone making 2 "downloads" per shift at 15 minutes each who makes $30 per hour is being paid 50 cents per minute to ride the hoop.
That's about what I made per hour when I was a kid.