Asking
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

Better than Food Stamps? No proof of ID or low income needed . . .



Photo above: Coming to America? Russia has been phasing out state-run supermarkets. Mayor Mamdani thinks they could be the future of New York City

I have prayed for something like this my entire life. A government run supermarket with low-low prices which can’t be matched by Kroger, Target, or Piggly Wiggly (my local fave). As long as they don’t have those anti-theft wheel locks on the shopping carts, I’m in.

But I’m probably NOT moving to New York City to take advantage of their new plan. Mayor Mamdani, pivoting from his wife’s history of racist and antisemitic social media posts, has announced the opening of one official city run supermarket in each of the city's 7 boroughs. (see link below)

I have no doubt that certain blocks of NYC are a food desert. Even if they are a teeming jungle of liquor stores, nightclubs, and corner drug sales. Supermarket chains seem to be unreasonably picky about their neighbors. They prefer banks, pharmacies, and laundromats. So Mamdani’s plan to bring fresh produce to the masses isn’t a bad idea, on first look.

The inaugural location will be an abandoned “La Marqueta” store. Uncertain if the city-run chain will be rebranded consistently under something like “People's Democratic Republic of Fruits and Vegetables”.

I endorse what has Mamdani has disclosed so far. But the devil is usually in the details. Cashiers and baggers will probably need to be unionized municipal workers, with eye popping hourly pay, pensions, and health benefits. Hopefully the NYC sales tax (currently 8.875%) will not apply to city run grocery store purchases. Will credit cards be accepted without fees? Things like that.

In any case, government owned and operated grocery stores can probably expect a migration of shoppers from remaining supermarkets from Aldi and Zabar, to take advantage of these low-low prices. Which might reduce the sales and revenue at the surviving NYC supermarkets. Which might lead to further closures and vacant storefronts. Would this be called a vicious circle, or a negative feedback loop? In any case, this hasn't actually happened yet, so let's not go negative yet.

I hope New Yawkers appreciate and take full advantage of their taxpayer subsidized groceries. They won’t need ID, and there's no income eligibility hurdle. Win-win, for shoppers, whether they are citizens, visa holders, or otherwise.

Won’t somebody please think of los niños, and applaud this while it lasts?

I’m just sayin’ . . .



https://www.nbcnewyork.com/new-york-city/mamdani-grocery-store-city-owned-locations-la-marqueta-harlem/6489675/
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
wildbill83 · 41-45, M
government/state/municipal run grocery stores are nothing new, they've been done before; china, Venezuela, Cuba, etc. has them, even a few US cities have them

and they all have the same thing in common, mostly empty shelves & they're good at losing money. Government is good at taking normally profitable/stable businesses and turning them into money pits (as with most government run things, a good deal of the profit gets used up as "administration fees"). Government taxes you to stock groceries, takes what little profit it generates to pay themselves, then taxes you again when you actually buy the groceries

It's a win, win, win.... if you're the government...
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@wildbill83 most entitlements and freebies from the government are intended as a re-election tactic. Identify a special interest group, and tax everyone else to transfer money towards that special interest.