Posted on 05/19/2004 7:50:14 PM PDT by Ditter
"Oh well, maybe I'm just being paranoid! :-)"
No. Bookstores are designed that way by the companies. It reaks of elitism. That's the way they wanted it.
Good suggestion but I don't know any locally owned book stores . We go to Murder By The Book but they only sell murder mysteries. I'll have to research that in the Houston area.
Hahaha! Glad to know I'm not the only one who does that!
My advice is to go to Hastings or any other bookstore. Barnes & Nobles are the worst when it comes to elitism, liberal, anti-bush hatred.
The key point is that almost no one is buying this anti-Bush propaganda. Look at recent best sellers like Hannity's book and O'Reilly's. When the election is over, Barnes and Noble will have a lot of these trash Bush books sitting on discount tables or carried to waiting dumpsters.
The last time I went into a Border's I was amazed at the freak show that was working there. Grungy college students with body piercings etc.
Kind of reminded me of the days when I worked at Barnes and Noble's main store in NY. I never thought that crap would catch up to me 25 years later in the DC suburbs.
If there is a Hastings bookstore in Houston, I have never seen it. We do order from Amazon but sometimes its nice to browse.
Borders should pay me for all the book re-arranging I do.
I constantly take the Pro-Bush books and move them to more prominent locations...
I also take Soldier of Fortune out of the hunting section and move to Political Events - Current Affairs.
When I am really feeling nasty I hide Michael Moore books and anything to do with Hillary that is flattering.
Doing my part....
First heard about this during the last Presidential election, from Michael Medved.
Where do you live? I have had your experience many times in B & N-- unfortunately, I wasn't as assertive as you were.
I keep running into that. And this is a very small Texas town that went for Bush last time. And conservatives read more non-fiction than liberals do anyway. But when I went to look for THE THIRD TERRORIST by Jayna Davis, neither of our bookstores had it - they ordered it for me because they could have it there in a day or two, faster than Amazon.... but both bookstores had full shelves front and center of anti Bush books.
"If there is a Hastings bookstore in Houston, I have never seen it. We do order from Amazon but sometimes its nice to browse."
First. Move out of Houston. Second. Continue shopping online. That's all the browsing you need when confronting the belly of the liberal beast.
It's because you have spyware on your computer. Seriesly...
...and we can read....
Ping to the newly-created REPUBLICAN PARTY REPTILE Ping list, named after our spiritual founder, P.J. O'Rourke. What is the Republican Party Reptile? It is a creature of the eighties. Its neoconservatism with its pants down around its ankles, the Rehnquist Supreme Court on drugs, a disco Hobbes living without shame or federally mandated safety regulations. The Republican Party Reptile supports a strong defense policy, but sees no reason to conduct it while sober. The RPR believes in minimum government interference in private affairsunless the government brings over extra girls and some ice. In short, the RPR is the new label that our political spectrum has been crying out forthe conservative with a sense of humor and a healthy dose of depravity.
To be added or subtracted, just ask. :o)
GOOD FOR YOU!
I still turn lying history upside down wherever I find it in any store.
Were the censored political party Democrat in this scenario, the ACLU, NYTimes and CNN would be all over it, claiming first amendment abuse.
I don't know overstock.com's politics, but they have the best book prices around. I just bought Misunderestimated from Overstock.com for $16 and change, which is a few bucks less than Amazon, and I'd already sworn off of Amazon when they were hawking the French conspiracy book about 9/11.
Here in "blue country" the small bookstores are generally "mom and mom" operations if you get my drift and they NEVER carry anything conservative.
Very possible true. But you forget one little tool that the marketers use in the grocery stores that that affects product placement and just might also be applicable in book stores:
Slotting fees.
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