Is it PotG?
Thrifty non-licker
and some people are a lot more fashion conscious than you are.
Sauce?
and some people are a lot more fashion conscious than you are.
It's not really the same though. You can still buy milk and newspapers as easily as the days of milkmen and the days when everyone had newspapers delivered. There was no real impact on people's lives except it's made the Father Ted "Speed" episode look somewhat dated.A sad example of this is a prominent figure from my childhood (maybe even my father), the trusty milkman, has all but disappeared.
The romantic image of the man delivering all sorts of good to your doorstep has long since moved on in the name of progress. It's sad, as is the demise of the High Street, but it's going to happen alas.
Same as cheque books going, cash free etc etc, it will never end.
It's not really the same though. You can still buy milk and newspapers as easily as the days of milkmen and the days when everyone had newspapers delivered. There was no real impact on people's lives except it's made the Father Ted "Speed" episode look somewhat dated.
We have all looked at the demise of the milkman, shrugged, thought "bit of a shame" and moved on. That won't be happening when there is literally nowhere to buy something you desperately need before the day is out.
1)
Clearly shopping habits have changed, but the real question is "how much to we value our high streets?". If the answer is "we don't, let them whither" then of course doing nothing is the right way to go.
A sad example of this is a prominent figure from my childhood (maybe even my father), the trusty milkman, has all but disappeared.
The romantic image of the man delivering all sorts of good to your doorstep has long since moved on in the name of progress. It's sad, as is the demise of the High Street, but it's going to happen alas.
View attachment 138170
Same as cheque books going, cash free etc etc, it will never end.
What are you on about? The friendly man from the grocers delivers all our shopping, three times a week!
Thank you Captain Obvious. Clearly purchasing habits have changed as a direct consequence of the fact that online shopping is cheaper because of fewer overheads. It can also be more convenient but not necessarily. If you need something today, you can't go online. If you need to try something on, you can't go online.
When there are no shops on the high street except charity shops, pound shops, mega supermarkets and betting shops, people will stop and think "why can't it be like it was?" and the reason for that is that no government has bothered to consider the consequences of letting Amazon get away with paying no tax, and the wider idea that IMO there really ought to be a levy on all online purchases that subsidises the high street, because if that doesn't happen then our high streets are going to be grim, soulless places to see.
A sad example of this is a prominent figure from my childhood (maybe even my father), the trusty milkman, has all but disappeared.
The romantic image of the man delivering all sorts of good to your doorstep has long since moved on in the name of progress. It's sad, as is the demise of the High Street, but it's going to happen alas.
View attachment 138170
Same as cheque books going, cash free etc etc, it will never end.
You forgot Greggs from your High Street leftovers list, those ****ers aren’t going anywhere!
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I'm not sure there is a need to save it anyway. Things – including shopping habits – evolve and sometimes you can't stop it
1) The money would come from a levy on all online purchases.
2) Because there are some things that can't be bought from home. If you need something now or if you need to try things on. Plus what about those stores who bring things to market in a shop, only to see people walk away and then buy it cheaper online? They need protecting IMO. Oh and those without internet access would be screwed. And if you think that is a laughable notion, then why did so many Tory voters scoff at Corbyn's suggestion that internet access needs subsidising for the poor?
Clearly shopping habits have changed, but the real question is "how much to we value our high streets?". If the answer is "we don't, let them whither" then of course doing nothing is the right way to go. But we need to be answering that question seriously, because once it's gone, it might well never come back.
Yes, Amazon etc should be paying their fair taxes though. The way they got away with it was so fundamentally wrong.
expect lots of people who never use the shops to lament their loss.
Our high streets are being decimated so badly that the government needs to step in with a plan to save it.
But that seems too much like hard work so I won't hold my breath.
The issues with that are that there probably aren't enough things that people need that day to sustain a high street store. Need food or drink? Go to the supermarket or an 'express'-type shop. Same for clothes, kitchenware, soft furnishings, medicines etc, etc. Need DIY tools? Go to an out of town DIY shop. Most other things aren't spontaneous purchases.
The need to try things on is negated by companies offering free returns – they can afford to do that because they don't have the overheads of a physical presence. Or even if there is a charge, it's often easier/still cheaper than going online. I totally get what you're saying, I just don't think the demand or appetite is there for people to come flocking back to the high street. Certainly not to have them as busy as they used to be.
I'm not sure about an online levy. How/why would you do that? Just to potentially save an industry that is in decline? I don't see the point.
You make some good points there for sure. I think you're right, the high street won't ever bounce back to where is was in its heyday. However, when recognised high street brands continue to go under (not so much Gap which is American, but BHS, Burtons/Dorothy Perkins, Woolworths and Debenhams) they leave enormous gaping holes in the high street that I am convinced will be sorely missed because the bigger stores attract people into the high street and thus into smaller shops.
The online levy idea is only going to work if people value the high street. If they don't, then an online levy is not a good idea. Personally I feel that we will miss the high street when it's turned into a desolate place with only the handful of crappy shops I talked about earlier. It is far too easy just to shrug and say "that's the market" as if it's already a fait acompli.