Really, you're not far from needing a baseball glove, at least not at the store we shopped in. It's like your food items offended them. They don't always bag for you in Ireland either, but it's less throwing and more gentle rolling or sliding. And at busy times, they had baggers bagging groceries to get people in and out faster. But they were encouraging bring-your-own-bags when I was there 7 years ago. A year later they put a tax on plastic bags so most stores won't even offer you one; it's like paper versus plastic here, only opposite. They give you paper first and only give you plastic if you ask for it. Apparently they got tired of plastic bags littering their touristy-green roadsides, trees and sheep pastures. And, from what I have heard, the tax has worked. Everyone switched over to paper or reusable plastic (very heavy plastic, like the ones you can buy here for cold stuff) or canvas bags and the total amount of litter has dropped. Now if they could just figure out paper crisp wrappers....
<<When I shop, I wanna get in and get out. If I have a bunch of stuff, I help bag while the checkout person scans, and load my bags into my cart. Because of the attitude, using the self-checkout is just easier and I'm faster than some of those cashiers anyhow... Shopping at Aldi and at Farmers Market, bringing your own is the norm.>>
My theory is that Wal-Mart's long term plan is to make such terrible cashiers (probably because they give them bad pay and bad health insurance) and to keep everyone on the floor from ever knowing where anything is--and that this will cause people to love to check themselves out and to use computerized locator maps to find stuff--to the point that Wal-Mart will eventually be able to get rid of almost all of its cashiers and all of its floor personnel. One cashier per 4 or 6 self-checkout registers and just the regular stocking crew at night. Think of the money you will save if you have almost no employees! Customers will do the work for themselves! Look at gas stations; customers now pump their own gas and clean their own windows and check their own fluids. They even pay for air they put in their tires themselves. Gas stations used to have to give people air for free and employ people to man those pumps. Wal-Mart would like to be as streamlined as gas stations one day.
But, you know what--getting gas is a hassle. I want to do it and get away as quickly as possible. I don't want to shop at the gas station. You make shopping a hassle and people will only shop for what's really necessary and nothing more. They will end up shooting themselves in the foot.