• Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    47 minutes ago

    Try the German solution. To get a cart, you have to put a Euro into the cart to unchain it. When you return it, you chain it back on and get the Euro back.

    Works for many years now, and people have been conditioned to it, so they return even “hacked” carts (there are tools to unchain them without a coin).

  • Renorc@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Because they are dicks? Is there any reasonable justification for not returning your cart? Claiming to be creating jobs is just BS. Either you strive to be a productive part of society or you only look out for yourself. The shopping cart indicator is a decent tool for separating these two types of people.

  • BlueLineBae@midwest.social
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    2 hours ago

    I always return my cart rain or shine no matter how far away the return is. But there was one time I didn’t when I moved to a new neighborhood and went to the local grocer for the first time. This particular store shared a parking lot with a hardware store. I parked in a spot I thought was on the grocery store side of the lot, but I guess not? I bring my cart out and I’m almost to my car when suddenly the wheels lock up and I can’t move the cart anymore. turns out they have a system in their carts to prevent people from stealing them. But I guess the zone for that is up to interpretation because I really feel like I was parked on the grocery side of the lot even if off to the side a bit. I ended up leaving the cart and just walked my groceries to my car. I blame the store for not properly marking the zone or improperly setting it in the first place. Not much I could do about it otherwise.

  • kurikai@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    People will leave their trollies anywhere but in car parks. Bicycle rqcks? Fair game. Foot paths? Yeah sure. Car parks? Nah that would inconvenience people.

    • RedSnt 👓♂️🧩 🧠 🖥️@feddit.dk
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      1 hour ago

      I think you’re onto something. My gut tells me it related to car culture, but it could also be some specific cultural entitlement related to something as simple as “the customer is always right” and “have it your way” mentality.
      It’d be fun to figure out if this happens elsewhere in the world. I don’t think it happens much in Europe, but I only live in one of the countries, Denmark, and we all have to use a 10 or 20 krone coin (like 1½ dollars and 3 dollars) or a token that fits (often free from the store) to “rent” trolleys and I think that psychologically help give some temporary feeling of ownership of the cart making one more likely to return it.

      • xav@programming.dev
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        1 hour ago

        It’s not the coin. It’s the education. We European aren’t educated as selfish people.