• Lime Buzz@beehaw.org
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    1 month ago

    And this is why commercial social media and the overarching idea that violence is a good way to solve most problems are both bad ideas.

    It says something that folks reach for that instead of learning how to be calm about such things and tend to be supported for such behaviour instead of told it’s not a good idea, even worse that they never take such things down once posted, often.

    All part of the patriarchal, oversharing that the internet loves.

    “Be happy, be horny, be bursting with rage, we’ve got a million different ways to engage”. -Bo Burnham

    • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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      1 month ago

      Maybe, but sounds like he was just having fun with it. I don’t think anyone should be a billionaire, but they’re just people.

    • dutchkimble@lemy.lol
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      1 month ago

      Yeah, at first it read like he was waiting outside to jump him. Then it sounded like he showed up to the fight at a time and place. Turns out it was only place and for internet points.

  • Damage@feddit.it
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    1 month ago

    Xavier Niel caught wind of the insult and decided to visit said Lidl—an Aldi-like discount supermarket

    Wtf is this disrespect, Kotaku?

          • thingsiplay@beehaw.org
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            1 month ago

            I know of brothers creating Aldi North and Aldi South, at least here in Germany (Aldi Nord and Aldi Süd). I wasn’t aware of the history of Lidl being a direct competitor to Aldi. Just looked up on Wikipedia for quick reference.

          • barsoap@lemm.ee
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            1 month ago

            Nope. Aldi was created by brothers who, after pioneering the discounter model and being quite successful with their stores, broke apart their empire over a disagreement – which was whether selling cigarettes was a good idea, in particular whether the theft rate would be too high. Completely fucking un-dramatic (very much in contrast to Puma/Adidas which is a feud that’s still going on), they always cooperated a lot in procurement etc, and definitely don’t compete with each other: The world is split into Aldi North and Aldi South, referring to their territories in Germany. The only other country where both are present is in the US because Aldi North bought Trader Joes, ages ago, it’s the only country where they’re technically competing but not really because they’re serving quite different market segments. Aldi South (under the Aldi brand) has been in the US for ages too, btw, but mostly kept a low profile. They both like to grow organically, no flashy fancy billion buck investments. In Aldi North stores at least in Germany Trader Joe’s is the store brand for nuts, dried fruits etc.

            The two Albrechts got into the business because their father, a learned baker, got ill with baker’s asthma and turned to bread trading instead, they expanded the product range of the business, after the war focussed heavily on high throughput on low margins and opened more locations, then introduced the supermarket model in Germany. Even in Germany it took some people quite a while that their quality was never shabby, on the contrary, but combine their low prices with the back then right-out warehouse atmosphere and you definitely didn’t see rich people there.

            Lidl is wholly separate and not founded by brothers. It technically predates Aldi and also the brother’s expansion before the split and rebrand (they were known as Albrecht Discount before), it was a small fruit trader which then got bought by Joseph Schwarz, then turned into a larger but still regional fruit trader. Lidl stores as we know them only go back to the 1970s when Dieter, son of Joseph, was already at the helm.

            Lidl is much more common outside of Germany than inside, though, long story short establishing yourself as a hard discounter in a market where Aldi is already present is hard. They did make Aldi turn away from the warehouse aesthetic, though, yes you can have nice signage and lighting and stiff be efficient.