Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The shooting there caused a drop in business. People are afraid of that kind of trouble.
I knew the metrorail station would eventually bring in trouble makers.
The shooter drove.
Most of the shoplifters are coming in from dc. The posts supporting the early closings are sad and indicative of the lazy/entitled culture now prevalent in the US. Lack of integrity and work ethic. I understand OPs frustration. Customer service, in general, is gone. There are loads of people begging for cash on street corners where I live next to stores that are desperate for employees. It’s very concerning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m glad someone posted about this because it’s a peeve. I keep encountering stores that usually close at 7 or 8 closing 30-60 minutes early in a regular basis. If I’m trying to shop after work and on the night when my kids don’t have an activity or I don’t have evening work commitments, it can be almost impossible or take weeks of hit-or-miss attempts. There are plenty of things that aren’t easily ordered online or offer free in-store returns but expensive return shipping. I miss the pre-Covid hours.
We were recently in a part of Asia with a huge mall culture and stores were open until 9:30-10:00 pm even on weekend nights. It was more convenient to go to *another continent* for my usual cosmetics stock-up and the kids’ back-to-school shopping than to go to my walkable-from-home, massive outdoor shopping center in the US.
There’s a lot of drama in this post.
Seriously. If only poor, pitiful, put-upon PP had access to this magical place called The Internet, where shopping is open 24/7.
You cannot try clothes on online.![]()
Anonymous wrote:I moved from New York City, where most of the best stores open at 11 am and close at 7 pm. The sense of entitlement here is unreal. Should they advertise they are closing earlier? Sure. But are they required to be open later cause you prefer it? No.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you tried telling the store's manager? She may not know (and is losing money).
The managers know because they have an alamr report of when it was set. Did you people never work a job?
Anonymous wrote:Have you tried telling the store's manager? She may not know (and is losing money).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The shooting there caused a drop in business. People are afraid of that kind of trouble.
I knew the metrorail station would eventually bring in trouble makers.
The shooter drove.
Most of the shoplifters are coming in from dc. The posts supporting the early closings are sad and indicative of the lazy/entitled culture now prevalent in the US. Lack of integrity and work ethic. I understand OPs frustration. Customer service, in general, is gone. There are loads of people begging for cash on street corners where I live next to stores that are desperate for employees. It’s very concerning.
Anonymous wrote:
I agree with a PP that it's really ignorant of you to blame teens or young adults. This is likely a store manager decision.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I moved from New York City, where most of the best stores open at 11 am and close at 7 pm. The sense of entitlement here is unreal. Should they advertise they are closing earlier? Sure. But are they required to be open later cause you prefer it? No.
The problem isn't entitlement that they should be open extended hours. The problem is that they say they are going to be open until between X hours and then randomly open and close at different times.
I've been to stores whose website and front door state they open at 11, only to find that they open much later than that on a regular basis.
Anonymous wrote:I moved from New York City, where most of the best stores open at 11 am and close at 7 pm. The sense of entitlement here is unreal. Should they advertise they are closing earlier? Sure. But are they required to be open later cause you prefer it? No.
Anonymous wrote:Our local Subway now closes at 7. It’s not always the decision if the employees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The shooting there caused a drop in business. People are afraid of that kind of trouble.
I knew the metrorail station would eventually bring in trouble makers.
The shooter drove.