..When you pry it from my cold, dead hands!
Since several of us mentioned this issue over at CS in a thread about movie theatre rules, I thought I would bring it over here.
I really, really hate it when stores try to make you surrender anything you're carrying. Yeah, I know it's to prevent theft and all, but unless they've got something akin to a secure nightclub coat check for people's stuff, I just don't feel comfortable handing over my belongings, to be left "behind the counter".
Sometimes I need to carry things like my camera- no way in hell am I handing over a very expensive piece of property. And other times, even if my sketchpad isn't terribly valuable from a financial point of view, it's irreplacable.
If a store insists I surrender my property while I'm shopping there, are they liable if something should happen to it?
A friend of mine had something of his stolen in this manner- he checked the package he was carrying when he went into a store, and the clerk left it laying on the counter. A group of teenagers came in, and walked off with it. The clerk basically told my friend to suck it up, that the store was not responsible for anything.
I remember going into a record store in San Francisco which shall remain nameless- their posted rules about bags left me with a bad taste in my mouth, because of the way they were written- some of them were aimed specifically at "the ladies" and perhaps they were trying to be funny with comments like "Leave the luggage at home", but it came across as snarky.
Somebody on CS mentioned a theatre that tells people to "leave your bags in your car". What about those of us who don't have cars, hmm? I may not carry as many bags around as a friend of mine (she looks like a pack mule), but when I go out for the day, I need at one for stowing purchases in, or the like.
Yeah, I have turned right around and walked out of stores when somebody demanded I hand over the one bag I carry. It's the store's choice to make the rules,that's fine. But it's my choice not to patronize places that treat me like a thief or insist on taking control of my belongings.
Since several of us mentioned this issue over at CS in a thread about movie theatre rules, I thought I would bring it over here.
I really, really hate it when stores try to make you surrender anything you're carrying. Yeah, I know it's to prevent theft and all, but unless they've got something akin to a secure nightclub coat check for people's stuff, I just don't feel comfortable handing over my belongings, to be left "behind the counter".
Sometimes I need to carry things like my camera- no way in hell am I handing over a very expensive piece of property. And other times, even if my sketchpad isn't terribly valuable from a financial point of view, it's irreplacable.
If a store insists I surrender my property while I'm shopping there, are they liable if something should happen to it?
A friend of mine had something of his stolen in this manner- he checked the package he was carrying when he went into a store, and the clerk left it laying on the counter. A group of teenagers came in, and walked off with it. The clerk basically told my friend to suck it up, that the store was not responsible for anything.
I remember going into a record store in San Francisco which shall remain nameless- their posted rules about bags left me with a bad taste in my mouth, because of the way they were written- some of them were aimed specifically at "the ladies" and perhaps they were trying to be funny with comments like "Leave the luggage at home", but it came across as snarky.
Somebody on CS mentioned a theatre that tells people to "leave your bags in your car". What about those of us who don't have cars, hmm? I may not carry as many bags around as a friend of mine (she looks like a pack mule), but when I go out for the day, I need at one for stowing purchases in, or the like.
Yeah, I have turned right around and walked out of stores when somebody demanded I hand over the one bag I carry. It's the store's choice to make the rules,that's fine. But it's my choice not to patronize places that treat me like a thief or insist on taking control of my belongings.
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