Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby MD » Mon 18 May 2009, 18:50:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Shannymara', 't')he48thronin, do you ever have problems with employees hassling you for taking photos in the stores?


I can answer that: Use a cell phone. Pretend you're talking on it. "honey these steaks might be good, here let me take a pic. Tell me if you want them"...etc.
Stop filling dumpsters, as much as you possibly can, and everything will get better.

Just think it through.
It's not hard to do.
User avatar
MD
COB
COB
 
Posts: 4953
Joined: Mon 02 May 2005, 03:00:00
Location: On the ball

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby the48thronin » Mon 18 May 2009, 19:16:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MD', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Shannymara', 't')he48thronin, do you ever have problems with employees hassling you for taking photos in the stores?


I can answer that: Use a cell phone. Pretend you're talking on it. "honey these steaks might be good, here let me take a pic. Tell me if you want them"...etc.


I use a headset almost every minute I am awake, As a full time driver talking on the phone holding it in your hand is a NO NO. as a participant in two talk shows and one partner in a pre launch ( for one more month) e-zine I am on that idiot phone all too many hours a day LOL.

So yes, I simply pull the cell phone out of my pocket and point and shoot.

At one wal-mart I was asked by an employee what I was doing ( later in the conversation she mentioned competitors and no picture rules) and I simply explained to her about the article I was writing about the failure of JIT distribution. That manager and I had a long talk. ( unfortunately it was before I started video capturing all my interviews) about the ADJUSTMENTS she saw in wal-mart distribution and the difficulties and expense of "dressing" the shelves using associates where local suppliers do not cover this task.

After that day I have seen more and more 'dressing" but I am aware of the changes being made and do not show problems that are temporary caused by the changes in stocking. The problems brought about by failure of JIT is what I am documenting.

Since I started this discussion, I have dropped the entire story about the failure of JIT from the soon to appear June issue of the e-zine a couple of us are launching. There are plenty of other stories in the que and I was putting too much of what I was researching into this thread and on my web site.

The importance of PEAK OIL to transportation is all to evident here in this failure even if the price is down for now. The absolute impossibility of JIT to exist in a global economy is an article I had worked 4 months on, I will probably use some of the videos and pages of research later, the topic is not going away but in fact will be ever more visible.

If you are bothered by an employee for taking pictures, tell the truth, that you are participating in an internet discussion of the failure of JIT distribution to serve the retail sales industry. Worst comes to worst they will ask you to stop taking pictures. The only way they get real upset is if you are working for a competitor and doing secret shopping.. something rumor has even Wal-mart engaging in....LOL
Malthusian Riders Member!

Courtesy and Courage Sincerity and Self-control Honor and Loyalty a Code to Live By!
What do the miners do when the canary dies? EVACUATE THE MINE not argue about the color of it's feathers or buy a parrot instead.

Where is my pitchfork and torch? I need them for a visit to the castle!
User avatar
the48thronin
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 871
Joined: Fri 30 May 2008, 03:00:00
Location: On the highway, or the water somewhere!

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby the48thronin » Mon 18 May 2009, 19:32:01

Oh yes to continue the thought that failure of JIT would reflect into restaurants and convenience stores etc.

I have had 3 conversations with restaurant managers in the last 2 days here in Reno, I eat at mostly the same places here and usually stay 2 to 3 days when I come here, so I have asked people who have seen me over years to sit down with my video camera and discuss distribution.

Produce is a problem, because most of it is imported, sea food also seems to suffer at times and much of it is also imported. Each manager did mention that they had gone outside their normal wholesaler for some day to day items on a random basis due to lack of supply, but none of them felt it was more frequent or more pressing than normally in the restaurant business except for one recurring theme. Special sale items, they all mentioned lack of sufficient supply for the resulting sales volume. So KFC isn't the only one running out of special sale items.

The restaurants I talked to were
1. A national franchise fast food sandwich shop.
2. A national franchise sit down dinner $15 approximate average meal plus drinks.
3. A local name non franchise higher end lunch and dinner restaurant in a casino. Approximate 20 dollar average meal plus drinks.

The food service supplier of both sit down restaurants was the same wholesaler. They each mentioned that they were being pursued franticly by that wholesalers competition, and mentioned that pursuit seemed much more intense.

edit added below;

Reading what I had posted and reviewing the notes I took, I saw that I had forgotten to mention one item that did cause my ears to pick up a little. Each of the sit down restaurant managers had a good deal to say about BREAD problems.. The orders being shorted mostly. Each of them had been using local grocery stores to cover the bread shortages. I asked if bread use was up, and each said no, that the wholesale bread guys ( different than the food wholesalers) were shorting orders for some specialty breads, ( English muffins and whole grains) due to nonavailability. That is a JIT failure.
Malthusian Riders Member!

Courtesy and Courage Sincerity and Self-control Honor and Loyalty a Code to Live By!
What do the miners do when the canary dies? EVACUATE THE MINE not argue about the color of it's feathers or buy a parrot instead.

Where is my pitchfork and torch? I need them for a visit to the castle!
User avatar
the48thronin
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 871
Joined: Fri 30 May 2008, 03:00:00
Location: On the highway, or the water somewhere!

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby JJ » Mon 18 May 2009, 21:02:35

My bosses son works up high in management of Walmart. he's going to ask him tonight if he's noticed anything. An elderly man came into our produce department today who works for WMart. He said he's never, ever seen the store so empty.
User avatar
JJ
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1422
Joined: Tue 07 Aug 2007, 03:00:00

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby alokin » Mon 18 May 2009, 23:42:06

I still cannot see any shortages in Australia (maybe I'm getting very short sighted?).
What I don't understand is that exactly when oil is cheap, when ships are waiting for cargo, commodity prices are down and demand is down as well there should be shortages??
I would have expected shortages last year when petrol prices were high and maybe trucks have stopped for this reason, when lots of corn was converted into diesel etc.
Why should JIT break down when oil is cheap, ships waiting for transport and there is lots of ideling factory capacity?
User avatar
alokin
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1255
Joined: Fri 24 Aug 2007, 03:00:00

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby Jotapay » Mon 18 May 2009, 23:42:19

In Austin, we are having zero supply issues. All stores are stuffed and most are still in business, although I've seen a few go out of business. Nothing to get too excited about yet. Groceries are plentiful. Store parking lots are full. I could buy a few tons of bulk dried goods at Costco if I wanted. I could buy a few dozen pounds of pork loin at Costco for $2.50/pound and ribeyes for about $8/lb. Vegetables out the wazoo. HEBs are full.

I know JJ is only about 1:30 from me, to the Northwest. But we have no supply issues here at all. Texas seems to be where they want to concentrate growth right now so we are being very well-fed. There are literally billboards on the side of the road around here that advertise the NAFTA Super-Highway (or Trans-Texas corridor) with the words "Growth" and "Jobs" in the same message.
Jotapay
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3394
Joined: Sat 21 Jun 2008, 03:00:00

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby JJ » Tue 19 May 2009, 07:44:46

ninety minutes...:)
User avatar
JJ
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1422
Joined: Tue 07 Aug 2007, 03:00:00

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby the48thronin » Tue 19 May 2009, 13:06:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('alokin', 'I') still cannot see any shortages in Australia (maybe I'm getting very short sighted?).
What I don't understand is that exactly when oil is cheap, when ships are waiting for cargo, commodity prices are down and demand is down as well there should be shortages??
I would have expected shortages last year when petrol prices were high and maybe trucks have stopped for this reason, when lots of corn was converted into diesel etc.
Why should JIT break down when oil is cheap, ships waiting for transport and there is lots of ideling factory capacity?




You are missing the point that ships are sitting waiting on loads because there is nothing to load on the ships, BUT the demand for sustenance items was a part of the entire global trade.

You also missed the reality that many food products are no longer packaged locally or even in this country ( cant say about Aussie-land I don't know about your food industry). Store brand food items are many times imported from far distant places. Here in the USA we passed over a decade ago a country of origin labeling law on food items, but the canners and distributors have (using political influence bought at the PAC level) avoided labeling each can and instead label only the case box which many consumers never see. Creative store management long ago devised a shelf stocking model that somehow conveniently cuts off the case box the country of origin stamp before placing the opened case on shelves. Many stores never put case boxes on shelves.

For another example it is unlawful to sell a Chinese grown chicken in the USA, but it is not unlawful to ship chicken carcasses to china and cut them into individual portions there and then ship them all over the world labeled product of USA.

The explanation for shortages NOW is not all that complex, but let me try to confuse you anyway ( LOL). Excuse me if I take advantage of this opportunity to rant a little.

Go back a year...( way back machine engaged....kaleidoscope visual... spinning motions).. click. OK we are back a year ago in our thinking.

The entire economic model used world wide is a constant growth in demand. Factories are springing up everywhere to meet the ferocious appetite of the worlds consumers for every type of item. Low wage "slaves" are engaged in everything from manufacture of toys to canning and meat cutting. Some products are even shipped as parts from higher wage countries to slave wage countries for assembly and packaging, or in the case of food products slaughtered carcasses are sent around the world for cutting and individual parts packaging to be reshipped back around the world for retail sale. In some cases slaves are encouraged to immigrate rather than factories moved.

The ruling classes are busy planning to move any type of labor from high cost areas to those willing slave owners the rulers of the developing economic powers.

Avoidance of government regulations that increase cost, avoidance of any semblance of worker pressure on wages, and building of complex paper empires to disguise financial trades from the risks involved are the three main legs of "successful business management".

The price of energy while elevated is factored into every decision as a marginal issue. Transportation to all parts of the world is a minor cost when compared to regulatory compliance with environmental, labor and financial laws.

For a decade the ruling class weakens the financial regulations, but they have little success with the environmental or labor issues so they practice avoidance.

POOF..... the entire model that almost every business was based on disappeared over night. Transport became expensive. The hydrocarbon energy supply failed to make the constant growth needed to remain a marginal cost.

At the same time the moral realities of slave overseers was brought to light in dramatic ways to the ultimate end user. The middle level slave overseers continue mindlessly proving their lack of morals and fortitude. This aspect of slavery has been the downfall of every civilization that has based itself on slave labor to elevate the elite from the dawn of history. But modern slaves are simply low paid workers in far away countries.

Manufacturing facilities in slave wage countries failed at the first sign of dropping demand. The slave overseers simply skulked off into the night literally climbing back fences and running for their lives at times. No one really noticed as the existence and conditions of those slaves are beneath the notice of most people, ( typical of all slave civilizations even global ones).


The paper constructions of finance unraveled revealing the truth about "guarantee in case of loss" insurance.

So today we live in the chastened world..

The disparate governments realize their constant attempts to cement their rule using "globalization" has failed even as they scratch their collective heads and wonder why. Their reactions are the exact wrong actions as they attempt to prop up the financial wizards that not only brought them to power, but own their careers and souls.


The entire basis for the constant growth economy was the consumer.

That consumer faced with rising hydrocarbon costs with little way to stop hydrocarbon use stopped buying. Like a boulder dropping in a small pond the resultant ripples of that decrease in buying spread out as a tsunami along the shores of the pond.



However with some exceptions, the system of global slavery depended on long distance transportation to market. That transportation depended on marginal cost hydrocarbons and constant use of capacity. The failure of EITHER doomed the transportation system to wreckage and ruin from either high cost or fluctuating capacity.

Today we are at the temporary stage of low cost hydrocarbon but low utilization of capacity. No one in the entire world believes if demand grows again that low cost hydrocarbons will continue. No one is making real efforts to replace hydrocarbons with some other VIABLE system to provide energy for transport.

No one in the power structure has the least idea how to fix what is broken without admitting both their guilt and their fraud.

They are unwilling to admit their house of financial cards was built on slave labor to the consumer who would be appalled if they understood that fact. They are unwilling to admit that they have stolen the future from those powerless to stop them through financial fraud. They are meddling in all facets of society and industry attempting to wrest control to cushion the fall from power the failure of globalism brought about.

JIT was an excellent system to provide low cost to manufacturers and retailers on a small chain of islands devastated by a war.
It was adopted as gospel by management and propagated as "the gospel" by business management courses in Universities all over the world. ( I was bombarded with it myself in business management courses in the very early 1980s). However those precepts were in fact flawed because they did not allow for anything but consistent or growth models.
Malthusian Riders Member!

Courtesy and Courage Sincerity and Self-control Honor and Loyalty a Code to Live By!
What do the miners do when the canary dies? EVACUATE THE MINE not argue about the color of it's feathers or buy a parrot instead.

Where is my pitchfork and torch? I need them for a visit to the castle!
User avatar
the48thronin
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 871
Joined: Fri 30 May 2008, 03:00:00
Location: On the highway, or the water somewhere!

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby TWilliam » Tue 19 May 2009, 14:41:28

I nominate the above for Post Of The Year.
"It means buckle your seatbelt, Dorothy, because Kansas? Is goin' bye-bye... "
User avatar
TWilliam
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 2591
Joined: Sun 28 Nov 2004, 04:00:00

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby vision-master » Tue 19 May 2009, 15:03:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TWilliam', 'I') nominate the above for Post Of The Year.


+1 :)
vision-master
 
Top

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby the48thronin » Tue 19 May 2009, 16:26:14

AAAW shucks he says as he hides his face behind his hands LOL

I have seen some pretty good posts here, Thanks anyway tho!
Malthusian Riders Member!

Courtesy and Courage Sincerity and Self-control Honor and Loyalty a Code to Live By!
What do the miners do when the canary dies? EVACUATE THE MINE not argue about the color of it's feathers or buy a parrot instead.

Where is my pitchfork and torch? I need them for a visit to the castle!
User avatar
the48thronin
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 871
Joined: Fri 30 May 2008, 03:00:00
Location: On the highway, or the water somewhere!

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby the48thronin » Tue 19 May 2009, 20:23:01

I have been asked to explain some of the terms I have been using and help someone else see the effects I have been pointing out. So I will try to explain shelf dressing.
Image

This is a picture taken today at a shelf that LOOKED full of English muffins. I was there just after the store clerk had dressed the bread shelves by taking English muffins that were there and stretching them along the shelf by placing them standing on end one deep along 6 feet of shelf and removing the price tags of the breads that did not exist. I pulled out one package and put my cell phone in behind to shoot this picture. Many of the freezer pictures I have been posting show 1 box deep stacking on shelves that would normally have 5 or 10 deep stacking, they even place boxes on edge to hide the empty space behind them.

In the lunch meat section they had restocked the items and replaced the Johnsonville brats back into their own area, BUT then I noticed were one brand of salami spread into the space 3 other products were supposed to occupy without even bothering to remove the different price labels on the shelves.
Image
Malthusian Riders Member!

Courtesy and Courage Sincerity and Self-control Honor and Loyalty a Code to Live By!
What do the miners do when the canary dies? EVACUATE THE MINE not argue about the color of it's feathers or buy a parrot instead.

Where is my pitchfork and torch? I need them for a visit to the castle!
User avatar
the48thronin
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 871
Joined: Fri 30 May 2008, 03:00:00
Location: On the highway, or the water somewhere!

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby timmac » Tue 19 May 2009, 22:22:26

[quote="Jotapay"]In Austin, we are having zero supply issues. All stores are stuffed and most are still in business, although I've seen a few go out of business. Nothing to get too excited about yet. Groceries are plentiful. Store parking lots are full. I could buy a few tons of bulk dried goods at Costco if I wanted. I could buy a few dozen pounds of pork loin at Costco for $2.50/pound and ribeyes for about $8/lb. Vegetables out the wazoo. HEBs are full.




Same here in Las Vegas, No shortage of anything, our stores are full and no dressing appears to be happening at all, I can go to Sams Club and stock up semi loads of food at any day of the week, in fact we bought $700.00 worth of cleaning supplies for our business and it did not make a dent, many in the store with shopping carts full and extra stuff on the floors because shelves were full, the Walmart next door was also full, people every where with carts full and trucks in the back unloading, our auto parts stores still have the same stock as always and I have ordered a special part for my motorhome and they can get it in 3 days, no delay, Vegas is having problems like every where else but why is our stores full and others say there's is empty, or are they just streching the truth.

When truly folks are going without and stores are closing because lack of delivers than I will eat my words, but I have not seen or heard of any real problems other than some stores are changing because of sells are down.

:mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:
User avatar
timmac
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 1901
Joined: Thu 27 Mar 2008, 03:00:00
Location: Las Vegas

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby wisconsin_cur » Tue 19 May 2009, 22:32:33

certain kinds of coffee @ one of our local groceries over the last few months. The dark roast I was drinking is gone and the two pound bags are only one deep across the shelf.

I am having a lot of interest in following this thread. I interpret it as reduced credit line for stores so they are walking closer to the JIT edge to keep their outlays low, but I guess time will tell.
http://www.thenewfederalistpapers.com
User avatar
wisconsin_cur
Light Sweet Crude
Light Sweet Crude
 
Posts: 4576
Joined: Thu 10 May 2007, 03:00:00
Location: 45 degrees North. 883 feet above sealevel.

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby threadbear » Wed 20 May 2009, 01:12:06

Clarity is Missing Link--Wall Street Journal:

For a man who sells the chip "brains" that power millions of TVs, cameras and other gadgets, Levy Gerzberg found himself surprisingly unplugged last fall. In just a few short weeks, business virtually stopped.

He still marvels at the speed of the collapse. "I think about it today, and ask, 'Why did it happen so fast?' " says Mr. Gerzberg, CEO of chip designer Zoran Corp.

The reason is now starting to become clear. The world's complex "just in time" manufacturing supply chains are making it increasingly tough for Zoran, and any other single link in the chain, to know what's going on just a few links away. Sometimes, Zoran itself doesn't even know how its own chips are used: One batch it thought was destined for DVD players instead turned up in digital picture frames.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124260855682928885.html
User avatar
threadbear
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 7577
Joined: Sat 22 Jan 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby alokin » Wed 20 May 2009, 05:54:50

But.... the Chinese slaves are sitting there eagerly waiting to make some money, and they are creative in doing so.
It could be that they produce something for their fellow slaves though. On the other hand side, if you produce chicken in the US and you are not able to ship it for whatever, then you might simply pack the chicken and sell it whole. This won't be bad for the American consumer, who needs cut up chicken anyway? Things might change but I guess as long as drought does not knock out your harvest and there's sufficient diesel to truck the stuff around you will still have food in the stores, but maybe it will look slightly different (maybe mince instead of ready made burgers).
User avatar
alokin
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1255
Joined: Fri 24 Aug 2007, 03:00:00

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby JJ » Wed 20 May 2009, 07:02:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('timmac', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jotapay', 'I')n Austin, we are having zero supply issues. All stores are stuffed and most are still in business, although I've seen a few go out of business. Nothing to get too excited about yet. Groceries are plentiful. Store parking lots are full. I could buy a few tons of bulk dried goods at Costco if I wanted. I could buy a few dozen pounds of pork loin at Costco for $2.50/pound and ribeyes for about $8/lb. Vegetables out the wazoo. HEBs are full.




Same here in Las Vegas, No shortage of anything, our stores are full and no dressing appears to be happening at all, I can go to Sams Club and stock up semi loads of food at any day of the week, in fact we bought $700.00 worth of cleaning supplies for our business and it did not make a dent, many in the store with shopping carts full and extra stuff on the floors because shelves were full, the Walmart next door was also full, people every where with carts full and trucks in the back unloading, our auto parts stores still have the same stock as always and I have ordered a special part for my motorhome and they can get it in 3 days, no delay, Vegas is having problems like every where else but why is our stores full and others say there's is empty, or are they just streching the truth.

When truly folks are going without and stores are closing because lack of delivers than I will eat my words, but I have not seen or heard of any real problems other than some stores are changing because of sells are down.

:mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:


I nominate Timmac as pollyanna of the year...
seriously. it is as if you go out of your way to prove its BAU. :)
User avatar
JJ
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1422
Joined: Tue 07 Aug 2007, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby jdmartin » Wed 20 May 2009, 11:13:45

This is a great thread.

A couple of weeks ago I went to Wallyworld to pick up a couple of my USA items that I can't get anywhere else - double-edged razor blades, shaving soap, and shoelaces. Razor blades had a few packs on the shelf, I bought two to be safe. Shaving soap was replaced by another version, more expensive, and country of origin unnoted (I'm guessing Chinese). Went back to get the shoelaces and there were literally about 10 sets total left on a double rack that a month earlier had been full (I bought them a month earlier as well for different shoes). I asked a salesperson and they said they hadn't come in for a while, they were switching over to a new brand also. So I'll go back this weekend and see what it looks like.

But thinking about this thread reminds me of other things. We feed our dog a "natural" diet consisting of fresh chicken and rehydrated vegetables. We buy a certain brand of chicken (no hormones/antibis), it's a popular brand and not at all a specialty item. For about the last 7 or 8 months it has been a pain to get the chicken - we end up buying everything they have when we see it, because 3 out of 4 times when you go into the store it's out of stock. I have noticed as well a lot of meat items out of stock at the butcher counter that used to always be there.

I'm sure part of it is just because of economics, people not buying some of the stuff so stores aren't stocking it. On the other hand, for things like the chicken, there's no good explanation other than not enough shipments because it's a popular product.
Last edited by jdmartin on Wed 20 May 2009, 14:50:32, edited 1 time in total.
After fueling up their cars, Twyman says they bowed their heads and asked God for cheaper gas.There was no immediate answer, but he says other motorists joined in and the service station owner didn't run them off.
User avatar
jdmartin
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1272
Joined: Thu 19 May 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Merry Ol' USA

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby Caffeine » Wed 20 May 2009, 11:26:01

One good sign: For a while now, there has been a farmer's market around here. Now there are MORE farmer's markets. I would guess that more total produce is being sold at these as a result.

I think that some genuine effort toward relocalization, with regard to fresh produce, may be occurring around here.
Caffeine
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 201
Joined: Wed 16 Jul 2008, 03:00:00

Re: Signs of the beginning of the breakdown of JIT distribution.

Postby timmac » Wed 20 May 2009, 19:25:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JJ', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('timmac', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jotapay', 'I')n Austin, we are having zero supply issues. All stores are stuffed and most are still in business, although I've seen a few go out of business. Nothing to get too excited about yet. Groceries are plentiful. Store parking lots are full. I could buy a few tons of bulk dried goods at Costco if I wanted. I could buy a few dozen pounds of pork loin at Costco for $2.50/pound and ribeyes for about $8/lb. Vegetables out the wazoo. HEBs are full.




Same here in Las Vegas, No shortage of anything, our stores are full and no dressing appears to be happening at all, I can go to Sams Club and stock up semi loads of food at any day of the week, in fact we bought $700.00 worth of cleaning supplies for our business and it did not make a dent, many in the store with shopping carts full and extra stuff on the floors because shelves were full, the Walmart next door was also full, people every where with carts full and trucks in the back unloading, our auto parts stores still have the same stock as always and I have ordered a special part for my motorhome and they can get it in 3 days, no delay, Vegas is having problems like every where else but why is our stores full and others say there's is empty, or are they just streching the truth.

When truly folks are going without and stores are closing because lack of delivers than I will eat my words, but I have not seen or heard of any real problems other than some stores are changing because of sells are down.

:mrgreen: :mrgreen: :mrgreen:


I nominate Timmac as pollyanna of the year...
seriously. it is as if you go out of your way to prove its BAU. :)



Well JJ why don't you come here to Vegas and go to the same stores I do and prove me wrong, I travel to Cali and back a lot and don't see the problems here posted, walmart, samclub, etc is always full like they have been for years around here, yes some items are gone but thats business, here today gone tomorrow.

Check out wallmart, samsclub, smiths, kmart and what ever hear in NW Las Vegas and take some pics of those empty/half filled shelves than I will eat my words.. They don't exist here or in the LA area... I report what I see.. :mrgreen:


JJ = Hubris
User avatar
timmac
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 1901
Joined: Thu 27 Mar 2008, 03:00:00
Location: Las Vegas
Top

PreviousNext

Return to Open Topic Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests

cron