Walmart Rations Rice
Following Costco's lead, Walmart announced it is now rationing rice. Shoppers at Sam's Club discount wholesale clubs will be limited to four bags of rice per customer. Wal-Mart "working with our suppliers to address this matter to ensure we are in stock, and we are asking for our members' cooperation and patience." It's not as bad as it sounds, the bags are still 500 lbs each.
Wal-Mart Rations Rice, Warns of "Supply and Demand" Concerns [Fox Business News]
PREVIOUSLY: Costco: One Bag Of Rice Per Customer, Please
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Comments:
@unklegwar: What is the fascination? Nothing really. Just that rice has sustained millions of people throughout the history of civilization. Also, "Rice is a staple for a large part of the world's human population, especially in East, South and Southeast Asia, making it the second-most consumed cereal grain. Rice provides more than one fifth of the calories consumed worldwide by humans." Yeah, rice, whatever.
@timmus: Do you eat bread products? Rice pretty much replaces all bread products in our household. We can't go through a loaf of bread before it gets moldy.
Wait, yesterday all the blowhards were slamming Costco and championing Wal-Mart for being paragons of Free Market (cough) for not having limits.
Or adopt sensible policies to prevent a minority of customers from inconveniencing the majority of them. But hey, potato, potahto.
So all you guys are going to admit you were wrong, right?
...Yeah, I didn't think so either.
Hello? 500lbs is just a starting point. It's number that we can all currently tolerate. Next year it could be 250, then 125, and so on....It's just like all of the cameras - if they all popped up instantly people would freak, but if they add 1 or 2 here and then a few at a time they just become a part of our lives. Same thing with gas - nobody's doing much more than whining now, but if prices doubled in a month, there might be a full fledged revolt.
It forms the basis of some cultures' diets. And with the US being a melting pot or whatever they're calling it now (I prefer to think of it as a "mixed salad"), I'm sure this will affect at least a few people.
And I speak from experience, since as a Puerto Rican I go through my fair share of rice and beans. And rice and chicken. And rice and sausage. And rice and pigeon peas. You get the idea.
@unklegwar: Also, fortunately, Walmart is *not* rationing its supply of "Narrow World View" at this time, that time-tested product that prevents people from seeing that other people live their lives in many different, varied ways.
"We are limiting the sale of Jasmine, Basmati and Long Grain White Rices to four bags per member visit," the company said in a statement. "This is effective immediately in all of our U.S. clubs, where quantity restrictions are allowed by law."
Sounds like a great time to visit your local Indian and Asian markets.
@lightaugust: I agree that our president isn't doing much to actually help people. I don't think there's as much rationing going on as this article suggests though.
However, now that I think about it, I tried to buy gochujang from our local Asian market yesterday and they said their supplier was out so they couldn't get it with this month's supplies... maybe all Asian food will be rationed!
@Greasy Thumb Guzik: Yeah, there's nothing like saying "don't panic" to cause a panic.
Actually this reminds me of the Baked Bean wars back in the UK a few years back.
This sounds bizarre! A food shortage of rice? WTF?????????
Is the world coming to an end???
btw..... The only rice I eat is basically the equivilant of rice crispies cereal. IF that is indeed actually rice? I havnt had actual rice since I was a kid.
Now if they start rationing wheat products.... i am going to REALLY be pissed/worried.
We started eating more brown rice to get away from bread & pasta. That and it is cheap and won't go bad.
We bought 50# bags of flour when they said it was going to go up. Now you can't even get the good stuff at Sams and stores are rationing.
I can store a years worth of rice in our pantry and probably will.
Sams also changed suppliers or quit carrying a bunch of things in the last month. This might just be the tip of things. That worries me.
@lightaugust:
This has more to do with asian exports being reduced, a poor harvest, and crops that are being diverted for biofuel usage more than Dubya.
Laugh all you want but this is the tip of the iceburg people.
As China & India raise their standard of living more grains are going towards meat production.
Addtionally, corn based products are going up too because we are diverting food crops toward plant based fuels.
We as a country have become fat, dumb & happy ... is anyone's standard of living higher than it was last year ?
All it takes is a trip to the grocery store to see that food costs are rising significantly.
@AMetamorphosis: Yes, as a matter of fact, my standard of living has gone up. Thanks for playing the overgeneralization game.
Actually, a significant portion of the 'panic buying' in the US currently, at least with rice, is getting shipped out to people's families in the Phillippines and other nations in the SE asia area. Other than Thailand, they are mostly fairly dependent on imports to keep their market stocked, and those imports have dried up significantly this year. Just think what it's costing for all those Americans to SHIP 50-200 pounds of rice to the Phillippines, after buying it here. Let's just say it ain't cheap.
@PlanetExpressdelivery: I know that's technically correct, but the head in the sand approach by Dubya, and damn near everyone else, is killing us. Metamorphosis is correct about the tip of the iceberg, and if we don't see food rationing as a major harbinger of trouble, I'm not sure what's going to set it off.
@Kavatar: Our local Asian market sells 20 lb bags for $16.99, which I bought last night at Winco for about $8. It's enough of a price difference, to keep me at Winco. Also, Winco isn't quite the huge that Costco and Wal-Mart are. So, local Asian market isn't always the answer, although I do go there for a few other things and I try to pay in cash so that they don't have to pay the credit card fees.
Human civilization is destoying itself. The rate at which we speed toward extinction is increasing.
An excellent article IMHO: The Biofuels Scam, Food Shortages and the Coming Collapse of the Human Population [www.naturalnews.com]
@sixninezero: I've actually started researching it. I actually think some of us should decrease our demand of rice and get it to developing nations who need it more. In Haiti, the cost of a small container of rice has DOUBLED. When you make $2/day and your rice now costs over $1 and barely feeds your family, it gets hard to eat. And that's why we're starting to see food riots.
While there's not going to be many in the US or Europe who starve due to a rice shortage, our costs are going to continue to rise and people in developing nations will start to become malnourished and we're going to start seeing more people dying of starvation if this continues.
Whose bright idea was it to use a food source for fuel anyhow?
In all seriousness, I'm very happy that your standard of living has risen. Unfortunately, I find this is not the case for a large majority of people I interact with.
Even if your standard of living has risen, unless you make a substantial amount more than you did last year, a higher percentage of your take home pay is going for heat, gas & food.
I know mine is :-(
I still have rice from last year. I don't eat a whole lot of it. But this is still somewhat scary, because of the economic impact will be. If they are starting to say how much rice a person can get even if it is 500lbs. What is to stop them from saying how much meat you can buy a week.. and hello "Food Ration Cards" from a time gone by.
























500 lbs??? each, so I can only buy 1 ton of rice per visit....seems fair to me.