Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On what planet is saving a couple dollars to buy preservative filled slop food at a trashy discount clothing store worth it? Have some dignity for goodness sake.
So different then buying preservative filled slop food from the grocery story..
Wait, I thought American chocolate was garbage and the European stuff was much better? But if it passes through the doors of a discount store, it becomes tainted, somehow?
How much chocolate do you consume that you need to buy it on discount from TJ Maxx? I mean seriously. If you enjoy chocolate, treat yourself once in a while to good, high quality stuff. Not garbage on the floor at TJ Maxx, after it sat in warehouses, boats, trains, and long-haulers for years.
DP. TJ Maxx does not sell expired food, so it’s been in transit about as long as the same stuff at CVS or the grocery store or wherever you choose to buy it.
But it sits there much longer since most people don’t go there to buy “food”
DP, but why do you keep making up stuff? This isn't true, and places like tjmaxx actually turn much faster than a lot of other retail stores. So no, it's not sitting on boats and warehouses for years, and no, it's not sitting on the sales floor for very long. Take several seats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On what planet is saving a couple dollars to buy preservative filled slop food at a trashy discount clothing store worth it? Have some dignity for goodness sake.
So different then buying preservative filled slop food from the grocery story..
Wait, I thought American chocolate was garbage and the European stuff was much better? But if it passes through the doors of a discount store, it becomes tainted, somehow?
How much chocolate do you consume that you need to buy it on discount from TJ Maxx? I mean seriously. If you enjoy chocolate, treat yourself once in a while to good, high quality stuff. Not garbage on the floor at TJ Maxx, after it sat in warehouses, boats, trains, and long-haulers for years.
DP. TJ Maxx does not sell expired food, so it’s been in transit about as long as the same stuff at CVS or the grocery store or wherever you choose to buy it.
But it sits there much longer since most people don’t go there to buy “food”