Panic buying: Give culprits a criminal record, then name and shame them

From: David Loxley, Hartoft, Pickering.
There continue to be long queues outside supermarkets.There continue to be long queues outside supermarkets.
There continue to be long queues outside supermarkets.
Read More
Panic buying: Spare a thought for supermarket staff like my son – Jayne Dowle

PERHAPS it is now time for our Government to stamp very hard on those who are buying up all they can to strip the shops of food and essential items.

I have tried to find a suitable word to describe such selfish humans and it seems that the English language does not have any such word.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad
What more can be done to alleviate panic buying in supermarkets?What more can be done to alleviate panic buying in supermarkets?
What more can be done to alleviate panic buying in supermarkets?

If it does, it can only be one which publishers are reluctant to print.

Any such person, on summary conviction, must face a minimum fine of £1,000 plus court and prosecution costs; a subscription to charitable 
help services commensurate with the magnitude of their 
sin and confiscation of their hoard for distribution to the needy.

Anyone found to be black-marketeering to be given a non-negotiable prison sentence, say a minimum of five years.

This would not stop the activity but it might slow it down, and, if the perpetrators are publicly identified, they might feel a little contrition for they are not deserving of pity.

From: Peter Wood, Scaftworth Close, Doncaster.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

I KNOW there is a global crisis but was it so bad that retail establishments such as the Wetherspoons pub chain, and others no doubt, could refuse payment in cash and only accept payment by card?

Banknotes may be able to transmit the virus and I can understand that staff would rather not handle them but there is a serious principle involved here. Older people often prefer cash to ‘plastic’ – some may not even possess a payment card.

The Sovereign’s head appears on banknotes and coins for a reason – it signifies that they are legal tender and must be accepted as payment for goods or services. I’ve not noticed the Queen’s head featuring on any of my payment cards!

From: Malcolm Toft, Windsor Avenue, Silsden.

SURELY it is more dangerous to visit a supermarket than a pub during the present health emergency, in my immediate vicinity at least?

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The aisles are crowded in my local German-owned store. Where all these extra shoppers are arriving from is a mystery.

From: Jarvis Browning, Fadmoor, York.

WHERE is all the surplus food that would have gone to hotels, pubs and restaurants? Why 
is there a shortage on our shelves?