Anonymous wrote:At my old Costco in NC a woman was nursing her baby on the patio furniture display. Someone complained (perhaps they were shopping for furniture??) and she was asked to use their lactation room instead. Outraged that she was asked to move, she took to Facebook and recruited 100 other lactivists to come back and stage a nurse-in in the middle of Costco.
I'm all for breastfeeding, but surely most sane people can understand why a furniture display isn't the most appropriate place for it?
Anonymous wrote:At my old Costco in NC a woman was nursing her baby on the patio furniture display. Someone complained (perhaps they were shopping for furniture??) and she was asked to use their lactation room instead. Outraged that she was asked to move, she took to Facebook and recruited 100 other lactivists to come back and stage a nurse-in in the middle of Costco.
I'm all for breastfeeding, but surely most sane people can understand why a furniture display isn't the most appropriate place for it?
Anonymous wrote:aaAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. I don't go to Costco but it sounds like People of WalMart. I had no idea there was so much excitement at Costco. I always think of rich people as being very calm and unruffled.
only rich people shop at costco?
That's what I thought, because who else but someone rich would have the space for buying in bulk. Plus having to have a car to transport all the bulky items bought. PLUS having to pay a membership fee to shop there in the first place. I have a tiny studio apartment I share with my teenager. I can't afford a car and we don't have space for things.
I think the Costco is for rich people thought goes back to when you could only pay with Amex (which you have to pay off every month) or debit (so you have to have money in your account).
Costco is for Democrats; Sam's Club is for Republicans.
Freaky Deakies go to BJ's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC costco: multiple people only buying bottles and bottles of liquor and boxes of croissants.
Costco is the go-to supply run for office parties.
Gah. But why no cheese then? Or chips? Or pretzels? Just liquor and croissants?
I suppose we would qualify as the weirdos buying liquor and croissants. We live in MD, so our Costcos don't carry liquor. My DH will do a DC Costco run to stock up, and yeah, since you are going...bring me some croissants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. I don't go to Costco but it sounds like People of WalMart. I had no idea there was so much excitement at Costco. I always think of rich people as being very calm and unruffled.
I thought of people of Walmart, also. I've never been to Costco. I imagine the shoppers to be bargain hunters who have lots of storage space in their homes and who, apparently, enjoy food samples served on toothpicks as they shop.
Maybe there should be a people of Costco site?
Anonymous wrote:Please also provide the location of the COSTCO I am curious if inner city or close to city COSTCOs have more extreme issues
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. I don't go to Costco but it sounds like People of WalMart. I had no idea there was so much excitement at Costco. I always think of rich people as being very calm and unruffled.
only rich people shop at costco?
That's what I thought, because who else but someone rich would have the space for buying in bulk. Plus having to have a car to transport all the bulky items bought. PLUS having to pay a membership fee to shop there in the first place. I have a tiny studio apartment I share with my teenager. I can't afford a car and we don't have space for things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I saw a couple acting really shady in one of the deli/refrigerated areas. I looked closely and realized they had two 2-packs of quiche. One was spinach and the other was cheese, something like that. They opened the package - one of those clear plastic lid pieces that snaps into a black tray with a paper band around the whole thing - swapped the quiches so they would have 2 cheese and no spinach and returned the spinach one to the case.
Ew. You know someone bought the 2 spinach ones - not realizing that the package looked tampered with - and their quiches had been touched by god knows who.
Anonymous wrote:Re: rich people.
We are solidly middle class and shop once a month for certain items at Costco. I don't buy much, but I rarely leave without dropping at least $100-150.
It's common sense to know that people who are hovering near the poverty line can't shop at Costco. Aside from the membership, There's hardly a single item at Costco under <$10, and most are closer to $20.
I can buy chicken salad, some croissants, and some granola bars for $60, or a whole week's worth of groceries at Aldi.
Sure, I might save on things in the long run at Costco, but I can't buy the bulk toilet paper if it's half my weekly grocery budget.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. I don't go to Costco but it sounds like People of WalMart. I had no idea there was so much excitement at Costco. I always think of rich people as being very calm and unruffled.
only rich people shop at costco?
That's what I thought, because who else but someone rich would have the space for buying in bulk. Plus having to have a car to transport all the bulky items bought. PLUS having to pay a membership fee to shop there in the first place. I have a tiny studio apartment I share with my teenager. I can't afford a car and we don't have space for things.
Average HHI is $60k-$65k for a Costco shopper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once standing in the food line with my mom, a woman behind us kept being uncomfortably close to us. Extreme. Basically touching us. Repeatedly, we moved forward to give ourselves space. And she moved forward again, breathing on our neck. There was no line behind her/not a crowded area.
That's when I back up and say, "oh, sorry! Didn't mean to stand so close!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. I don't go to Costco but it sounds like People of WalMart. I had no idea there was so much excitement at Costco. I always think of rich people as being very calm and unruffled.
only rich people shop at costco?
That's what I thought, because who else but someone rich would have the space for buying in bulk. Plus having to have a car to transport all the bulky items bought. PLUS having to pay a membership fee to shop there in the first place. I have a tiny studio apartment I share with my teenager. I can't afford a car and we don't have space for things.
I think the Costco is for rich people thought goes back to when you could only pay with Amex (which you have to pay off every month) or debit (so you have to have money in your account).
Median HHI income of someone shopping at Costco is 100k - and that's true nationwide. While this will open up a whole DCUM debate about how nothing less than 500k is rich -- median HHI of 100k is MUCH MUCH higher than the incomes of people shopping at Target and Walmart.