Big deal! Amazon bought Whole Foods.
Grocery stores are going to go the way
of buggy whips and harnesses and strip malls.
Does anyone remember Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward catalogs? Staying at home to do the shopping instead of going to the store is something that Sears and Monkey Wards knew all about long before Walmart started selling almost everything online.
One could buy houses from Sears.
The internet is faster than the postal service: that is all.
Amazon has more money than either Sears or God, so if it is possible to buy groceries online, Amazon will find a way to do it.
Shopping from home isn't new: substituting electronics for postage stamps is new.
Maybe Amazon's model, which will develop as time goes on, will not really work well, but that electronics will supplant postage stamps and the Wells Fargo wagon is certain.
The sooner we recognize that we are in the midst of an electronic revolution, the sooner we can begin to rethink almost everything, and stop lamenting that the industrial era is petering out.
[My other blog is at: www.TucsonOldTimers.blogspot.com }
Grocery stores are going to go the way
of buggy whips and harnesses and strip malls.
Does anyone remember Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward catalogs? Staying at home to do the shopping instead of going to the store is something that Sears and Monkey Wards knew all about long before Walmart started selling almost everything online.
One could buy houses from Sears.
The internet is faster than the postal service: that is all.
Amazon has more money than either Sears or God, so if it is possible to buy groceries online, Amazon will find a way to do it.
Shopping from home isn't new: substituting electronics for postage stamps is new.
Maybe Amazon's model, which will develop as time goes on, will not really work well, but that electronics will supplant postage stamps and the Wells Fargo wagon is certain.
The sooner we recognize that we are in the midst of an electronic revolution, the sooner we can begin to rethink almost everything, and stop lamenting that the industrial era is petering out.
[My other blog is at: www.TucsonOldTimers.blogspot.com }
Is this a critique of the movement to "shop local"?
ReplyDeleteNo. It is a suggestion that electrons are loose in the world.
Delete