
Inflation Exit Only
Corporate pricing rhetoric presents inflation relief as a public benefit while the actual gains are captured upstream by executives and shareholders. The joke is that the supermarket’s anti-theft design treats relief itself as something customers must be kept away from.
Inside a glossy supermarket aisle, a huge promotional wall screams “INFLATION RELIEF” in cheerful sale lettering. But the display is boxed in by sleek anti-theft exit gates and metal rails, turning the promised lower prices into a corral shoppers can only stare into, not reach. Ordinary customers press against the barriers with empty carts and strained faces, while on the far side an open executive-only lane leads out smoothly. Through it, smiling executives in suits stroll away carrying shopping baskets overflowing with tags labeled “RECORD PROFITS,” as if they’re the real discounted goods being distributed. The scene should read instantly as a store-engineered trap: relief is advertised to all, but structurally routed to the top.
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