I guess I'm baffled, because in all the countries I been in, I have never seen any pharmacy style store that would also sell alcohol and tobacco. However, thus is in a country that considers it appropriate to sell guns the same way, so why should I be surprised?
correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't that what an earlier poster said Walmart does? Also didn't qudraginta also say much the same thing ?
Until it becomes illegal to sell water and pretend it is medicine, I don't see that changing.
I can't believe no one has yet mentioned the biggest advantage of this: it will keep you from ever again having 30-60 seconds of your life wasted by the idiot in line in front of you who is utterly incapable of communicating to the cashier which kind of cigarettes they want. I'm generally a Walgreens fan, but that alone is enough for me to make CVS my default pharmacy. And there might just be enough cranky, impatient SOBs like me out there to make up that 1.6% lost revenue.
Now if only a chain of convenience stores would stop selling lottery tickets...
You'll end up with one or more diseases even if you don't smoke and never did.And, if you put them in your mouth, you can end up with a disease.
Does this happen to you a lot?
You'll end up with one or more diseases even if you don't smoke and never did.
Does this happen to you a lot?
Most of the smokers I've known are pretty much settled on a particular brand by the time they have been smoking very long. The ones that aren't tend to be underage and are probably going to be buying their smokes in a quicky mart instead of a drugstore, if only because the quicky marts usually aren't going to be as finicky about IDs.
As someone who worked in a convenience store for three years.... yes it does. Somewhere between 10%-15% of the cigarette customers would waffle about what they want. The biggest chuck of customers have a very specific preference they will not deviate from, but with the sheer volume of customers those one in ten can be pretty annoying.
So, what exactly does a convenience store sell? are they always big chain places, or small family own businesses? it sounds as if you have a lot of big stores selling many things, so what happens to those small family businesses, or do they really not exist as such? What about in small towns?
As someone who worked in a convenience store for three years.... yes it does. Somewhere between 10%-15% of the cigarette customers would waffle about what they want. The biggest chuck of customers have a very specific preference they will not deviate from, but with the sheer volume of customers those one in ten can be pretty annoying.
"Convenience store" is a catch-all category. As Modified said, they are relatively small stores, typically attached to a gas station. In big cities, they may be open longer hours than bigger stores, even 24 hours. Prices tend to be higher and selection lower, but if you need something right now, or you happen to think of it while paying for gas or beer, it's right there. They often serve small neighborhoods within walking and biking distance; may be part of a mini-mall and kids often congregate around them.So, what exactly does a convenience store sell? are they always big chain places, or small family own businesses? it sounds as if you have a lot of big stores selling many things, so what happens to those small family businesses, or do they really not exist as such? What about in small towns?
True but smoking (on average) shortens lives
I can't believe no one has yet mentioned the biggest advantage of this: it will keep you from ever again having 30-60 seconds of your life wasted by the idiot in line in front of you who is utterly incapable of communicating to the cashier which kind of cigarettes they want. I'm generally a Walgreens fan, but that alone is enough for me to make CVS my default pharmacy. And there might just be enough cranky, impatient SOBs like me out there to make up that 1.6% lost revenue.