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by pbhjpbhj
3898 days ago
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Doesn't the fact you can get the attention at will disprove your hypothesis? It's the behaviour that gets the attention, otherwise you wouldn't be in control. If it weren't the behaviour then you'd get approached as often when you don't do as when you do. As I said before it could be that you get observed more because of your demographic, but if you can perform a behaviour that gets direct attention then it's not your race or other aspects of your appearance that's causing the staff action. Just stand where you are and start swearing loudly will work too, you'll get a member of staff, they'll say "can I help you" - it's the usual attempt in a commercial environment to be non-confrontational when really one means "you look suspicious, why are you here" - you then say "please ring this up for me". Chances are they see that will get you out of the store ASAP, which would be their intention during the approach. I work in a store, it's really obvious when people don't follow standard purchasing/enquiry patterns. |
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Not at all. What would be perceived as customer interest as a non-minority customer is perceived as suspicious as a minority customer.