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sublimegamer
· 7 years ago
· FIRST
WOO! Now that's what I'm talking about.
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dontaskmeidontknow
· 7 years ago
The USA needs this.
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third
· 7 years ago
Not really. "Food" in the us isn't exactly edible.
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geluregis
· 7 years ago
Not as bad as Britain
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shiruzun
· 7 years ago
Idk about other stores, but Target donates discarded food to food shelves
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itsamemaria
· 7 years ago
In Publix (for those fortunate enough to have them) You have to sign up to receive the bread and cakes of the day so that you can donate it. I know because my brother does it for a church, I think you have to e an organizatin or church. Not sure
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Edited 7 years ago
sincere_milkshake
· 7 years ago
@geluregis what's wrong with the food in Britain?
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geluregis
· 7 years ago
Jellied eels
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sincere_milkshake
· 7 years ago
That's not a common delicacy though
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guest
· 7 years ago
This. This needs to happen everywhere
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syrupfish
· 7 years ago
They should also do something about unnecessary food packaging
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smitty
· 7 years ago
The problem with instituting this in the US is potential lawsuits. I have heard that there are loads of retailers that want to do this, but won't due people's litigious nature.
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geluregis
· 7 years ago
Only a mentally ill person would try to sue when they don't even have enough money to buy their own food.
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unicycle
· 7 years ago
The US actually has a law that protects food donors from lawsuits as long as the donations are made in reasonably good faith (called the Good Samaritan Act or something). Retailers like to use the possible threat of lawsuits as a cop-out for not donating food when the law is actually on their side.
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