In the world of retail modernization, this story is number one with a bullet. Is there anything more 20th-century American than vending machines? They revolutionized life in the 1900s. By 1890, New York City had placed automated chewing gum dispensers on its railway platforms; soft drinks were delivered by mechanical means in 1937; and back in the social Stone Age, Americans used machines to secure their cigarettes. In the U.S., all the following have been procured courtesy of mechanized merchants:
Person-free peddling appliances have also gotten political. In California, machines have meted out marijuana; in heavily Democratic Connecticut, they've dealt abortion drugs. But red states have their own ways of revolutionizing life for the masses. And in the southeast, the self-service industry has gotten a 2nd-Amendment-themed update. From Al.com Wednesday:
The boxy, high-tech bullet brokers -- constructed by a company called American Rounds -- use facial recognition to confirm each buyer's identification. Once a photo ID is received, a 360-degree scan is performed. Such news calls to a defining difference between regions of the country. For years, Californians have had to undergo background checks to acquire ammo. The political machine there seems stacked against those who relish the right to bear arms. Meanwhile, AL is the opposite of LA. RELATED: Alabama Passes Law Protecting Gun Owners From De Facto Private Sector Firearm Registry And where might firearm owners in the Yellowhammer State acquire their vended cartridges? The grocery store, of course. More from Al.com:
Sometimes you just need some milk, eggs, and 9mm 115-grain jacketed hollow points. In a promotional video, Fresh Value COO Terry Stanley claimed a win with store patrons:
Innovation in the realm of munitions sales makes sense; thanks in part to 2020's riots, the gun market hasn't exactly waned: Trigger Warning: To the Horror of the Mainstream Media, Soaring U.S. Gun Sales Break Another Record Hot as a Six-Shooter: Gun Sales Continue to Soar as Dems Find Their Strange Place in the Chaos American Chaos Triggers Impossible Demand as Smith & Wesson Reloads Number 1 With a Bullet: Americans Keep Their Gun Grab Going, but Some Companies Are Shooting Blanks Another Fiery Year: Survey Reveals More Than 3 Million First-Time Gun Buyers as of Mid-2021 To be clear, Alabama isn't the first state to see a machine that bestows bullets. Eight years ago, Fort Worth's Shoot Smart chain introduced the first such convenience to be offered at a Texas shooting range: But Alabama appears a pioneer in adjoining guns and groceries. Not everyone fancying a Fresh Value favors the high-caliber kiosks. In July 4th on-air coverage by Birmingham's WVTM, one man disapproved:
And stop the presses -- there's been some very recent recoil. On Friday, WVTM competitor ABC 33/40 reported the Tuscaloosa machine is being benched:
Nope.
Per ABC, the manager of a different Fresh Value location claims Tuscaloosa's kiosk has suffered lackluster sales. Regardless, Oklahoma has followed Alabama with American Rounds installments in supermarkets. Is AI-vended ammo the way of the future? In red states, maybe. In woker regions, such installations would see grocery stores requiring trigger warnings. Whatever the fate of robotic bullet sales, surely we can all agree that the future looks stunningly strange. -ALEX |
Saturday, July 6, 2024
Freedom Feels Different in a Red State: Alabama Launches Ammo Vending Machines
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