This is a sign of things to come. Stores have essentially "stores of stores" which are massive secondary warehouses. This is how they handle surges on demand and keep prices from fluctuating. There's even stores of stores of stores. What's happening is they're depleting these stores first in hopes they prices normalize. Now they have no choice but to buy at spot price. They'll likely also struggle to stock certain constrained foods.
What does it cause? Think. It hits everybody. Most of Europe, and much more of the globe. On top of the much higher energy bills. Now where is that out? That population will get angry. It has been already. So what do they do? Because it will get violent, it has been in COVID. Do they keep squashing the peasants? Or does it incite them into conflict. Look over there.
I don't like one little minute about today. None of it. It feels like another rerun. Been there done that, but this time it's happening all over again. Yet all we've got is peak stupidity forcing it. And speaking about the big huge writing on the wall, has been squelched and ignored by a bunch of cunts suppressing all logic on the social media platforms. Where a little stupid band plays its dumb fucking tunes, lulling them right off a cliff.
No it got violent in COVID in Germany and in Holland and France. This time there will be real anger. The price has bottomed out. How much more will they keep suppressing the peasants for their dumb games?
Historically it only leads to the same place. Conflict.
It controls that population in protest turning that anger on an enemy and only then can cuts truly be justified.
Nobody else is buying shortages they're sooner in violent protest threatening power.
Or are you suggesting the peasants won't. Tell me when does the last straw break their backs.
It was Austerity, mass immigration, COVID, now it's peak inflation. Come on. You must be blind to think this ends with unicorns. It doesn't it goes to conflict. It has faster collapsed.
This article cites Reuters but links instead to a tweet from "First Squawk." My searches for Reuters articles about German food retailers don't find anything like this.
Multinational companies can have completely different pricing when selling in different markets. In fact, it's one of the advantages of being multinational.
This is a sign of things to come. Stores have essentially "stores of stores" which are massive secondary warehouses. This is how they handle surges on demand and keep prices from fluctuating. There's even stores of stores of stores. What's happening is they're depleting these stores first in hopes they prices normalize. Now they have no choice but to buy at spot price. They'll likely also struggle to stock certain constrained foods.
De Beers Diamonds.
What does it cause? Think. It hits everybody. Most of Europe, and much more of the globe. On top of the much higher energy bills. Now where is that out? That population will get angry. It has been already. So what do they do? Because it will get violent, it has been in COVID. Do they keep squashing the peasants? Or does it incite them into conflict. Look over there.
I don't like one little minute about today. None of it. It feels like another rerun. Been there done that, but this time it's happening all over again. Yet all we've got is peak stupidity forcing it. And speaking about the big huge writing on the wall, has been squelched and ignored by a bunch of cunts suppressing all logic on the social media platforms. Where a little stupid band plays its dumb fucking tunes, lulling them right off a cliff.
BWAHHAHAHA !
Double BWAHAHHAHAHA !
I'll tell you what they will do. They will bleat while they honk ... Probably even without the honking . FUCK MOST PEOPLE !
No it got violent in COVID in Germany and in Holland and France. This time there will be real anger. The price has bottomed out. How much more will they keep suppressing the peasants for their dumb games?
Historically it only leads to the same place. Conflict.
It controls that population in protest turning that anger on an enemy and only then can cuts truly be justified.
Nobody else is buying shortages they're sooner in violent protest threatening power.
Or are you suggesting the peasants won't. Tell me when does the last straw break their backs.
It was Austerity, mass immigration, COVID, now it's peak inflation. Come on. You must be blind to think this ends with unicorns. It doesn't it goes to conflict. It has faster collapsed.
This article cites Reuters but links instead to a tweet from "First Squawk." My searches for Reuters articles about German food retailers don't find anything like this.
Wonder how this will all affect the ALDI stores in the US
Multinational companies can have completely different pricing when selling in different markets. In fact, it's one of the advantages of being multinational.
GOOD !