Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is for the person buying it THAT day. If you take and don't use it you screwed some one else too. Don't be stingy.
This. Is the item in a little tray on the shelf? Take. If the item is attached to the specific item? Of course you do not take.
But I'd bet that the people who remove the coupon from the attached item are also the same people who don't bring back their shopping carts.
Is there a law that says I have to return the shopping cart?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is for the person buying it THAT day. If you take and don't use it you screwed some one else too. Don't be stingy.
This. Is the item in a little tray on the shelf? Take. If the item is attached to the specific item? Of course you do not take.
But I'd bet that the people who remove the coupon from the attached item are also the same people who don't bring back their shopping carts.
Anonymous wrote:This is for the person buying it THAT day. If you take and don't use it you screwed some one else too. Don't be stingy.
Anonymous wrote:Imagine you’re at a store, and a merchandiser has attached coupons to some of the product on display, say laundry detergent. You don’t need laundry detergent today, but you will need it within the window of validity of the coupon, so you take the coupon to use at a later date. Is this wrong? Are the coupons meant for immediate purchase of the item, or for anyone to use at any time?
Anonymous wrote:You are a pretty awful human. The fact that it's attached to the item on the shelf and not found in a store coupon book means that it's for use when purchasing the item it's attached to.
Taking a coupon book from the store and using the coupon later is a whole different story.
Anonymous wrote:If it’s a coupon attached to a specific item, you do NOT take the coupon. That coupon belongs to the item and whoever is going to buy it. If the coupon is on display next to the shelf where the item is, then of course take the coupon.