And I'm dying to know, who are the weirdos who get the urge to buy things like that right now? who are those weirdos?
I'm kinda thinking there are no people who feel the urge to buy Christmas things in the peak of summer. It's all just marketing and placement isn't it? shame on Costco
Before this was a thing in stores, elderly family members would buy things on sale so year for holiday and other special occasion gifts, because resources were limited. And there's nothing wrong with being wise, even if one has sufficient resources. There's a difference between that and stinginess/greed, and the line is thin and can easily become blurred. If I have what I need and operate from, hmm a lack mindset (”I lack personal operable transportation, poor me!), it is easy to fall into stinginess. When I operate from abundance mindset (”Good neighbors/friends/family go a bit out of their way, to make sure I can get to appointments and do other necessary errands! I'm so fortunate!" And compensate with gas money, chores, small but meaningful gifts if the others are declined or money is tighter), I can be wise and keep in my lane because the lines are seen more clearly.
Honestly it was before a month ago, probably 6-8 weeks ago I saw the first Halloween stuff there. Then it'll all be completely gone by the end of September and they'll spend the entire month of October celebrating Christmas
That's not why Costco is doing it though. The crowd they're catering to buys things in advance of when they need it, rather than just-in-time, and usually well before the actual seasons for thing.
Well... maybe. My response was mostly tongue-in-cheek... it wouldn't surprise me a bit if Costco was just selling Christmas kitsch in July with no other considerations.
Last year, about this time or even earlier, a supermarket in a major city here suddenly had a wealth of Chrismas products (mostly sweets) on offer. Of course, people wondered, and it turned out that the supermarket chain had been shooting pictures for their Christmas campaign near that location, and instead of throwing the stuff away, they simply sold them off.