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Salvation Army Bells Deemed Offensive

Giant, a prominent Washington DC area supermarket chain, has curtailed the number of days that the Salvation Army will be permitted to solicit donations this season outside of the grocery retailer’s locations.

In a number of media reports, it was claimed that the bells were offensive and irritating to a number of shoppers.

So what about those food solicitation campaigns where the grocery chain doesn’t simply set out a receptacle for those wanting to contribute food items to charity but instead gets broadcast news outlets involved?

Spokesmen from both institutions not only smooch their own rearends in letting the public know just how progressive both the media outlet and food distribution corporations are in bringing awareness to the plight of the supposedly malnourished but also castigate the viewing consumer if they do not comply with the demand for a contribution.

Why isn’t this deemed offensive?

Or how about the recipients of such charity who are not really starving per say but rather simply not receiving the quality of food they think that they otherwise deserve but are unwilling to work for in order to acquire?

Isn’t it offensive to be lectured to by such types or rather their benefactors?

But perhaps the greatest outrage of all occurs when the price for food the average consumer is forced to pay is jacked up with the goods not being sold often simply being tossed into the dumpster.

by Frederick Meekins

 

COMMENTS

  • Scope

    Someone robbed a bell ringer in Charlottesville in front of Sam’s Club. The robber pushed the bell ringer into a brick wall, and then he fell on his back on a pipe. The store is very very busy, and the parking lot is packed. I wonder why no one “got involved.” If my husband was there he would have grabbed the robber, and held him until the police arrived.

  • chbroussard

    I can make a list a mile long of what’s going on in this country today that I consider offensive, but ringing a bell to solitcit donations for the needy is certainly not one of them.

    I worked for a company that had one of our top executives on the board of the local Salvation Army. We were able to see first hand the tremendous good that was done by this organization.

    So what is it with all these progressives who are supposedly so concerned about the less fortunate? I guess it’s just lip service. Typical.