Dear Sir,
I wish to express my strong dissatisfaction with your practice of recording and tracking my purchases.  
I realize that, according to you, this is done in order to more  effectively manage your inventory and to create custom savings  opportunities for your customers, but let's be truthful with each other,  shall we?  You monitor these purchases so you can determine what I like  and then cease to provide it.
Time after time, always shortly after I discover a product and make  it a part of my regular diet, you remove it from your shelves.  It  doesn't matter how long the product was carried by your chain prior to  that, once I become a regular consumer, it's gone.
I could understand this if I were purchasing odd items.  If, for  example, I were searching for fresh Dalmatian puppy hearts that had been  marinated in the blood of young virgin Russian women, I would  understand.  But I'm not searching for such items at your location.   That's what gourmet grocery stores are for.  I'm just looking for cereal  and potato chips and the like. 
I've heard all of the arguments before.  You claim that monitoring  the purchases of your clients allows you to give them a variety of  goods.  Personally, I don't consider "variety" to mean "six brands of  oreos whose only distinguishing characteristic is differently colored  cream filling".  You claim that you are able to tailor make coupons  specifically geared towards me.  If so, I wonder what I bought that led  you to the conclusion that I was a likely purchaser of depilatory  creams.
You argue that your customers appreciate your practice.  In my  experience, people often say they enjoy something even when they don't  mean it.  Every woman I know tells me they enjoy massages, but as soon as I  put my hands up inside the fronts of their shirts, they get all  belligerent, so clearly, people seldom mean what they say.
The only conclusion, therefore, is that you have a personal vendetta  against me, just like my Nintendo Wii and the folks who conspired to  label my jeans so that it appears I wear a 38, when I clearly am much  more svelte.  
I wish I knew what I had done to offend you.  I shopped faithfully  at your store, even during strikes by your cashiers and baggers.  I  ignored your price gouging.  At let's not forget the night you had your  unfortunate "accident" with that drunken "working girl".  I'm not saying  I regret helping you dispose of her remains.  I'm just saying that I  really would enjoy having that freezer space back.
The point is, I thought we were friends.  I thought we understood each other.  I thought you had my back.  Clearly, I was wrong.
I've done all I can for you.  I hate to say it, but I think our  relationship has soured beyond repair, much like the milk you sold me  last week.  It didn't have to end this way.  All you had to do was say  those simple little words you knew I wanted, needed to hear:  "The Sunrise cereal is  in aisle four."  But you couldn't even do that.
Have a nice life.
 
Good stuff.
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