Did you know you can do this in Italy?

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discount code "pasinis10 or pasini10"

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Same in Norway and most EU countries that I know of.

broder
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"You're just breaking it open.."

"But.. it's my stuff!?.."
Love it.

cheapshotninja
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I just love his confidence
Pulls it close "i take my stuff" 😂😂😂

ISpeakBrian
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"I take my stuff" with the most serious face you'd think he just committed a crime has me deeeead lmfao 😂

bookssxcoffee
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I think it’s the same anywhere in Europe. I thought it was like this all over the world.

flavius
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He's not wrong. As long as the unit or item has a bar code it can be sold that way.

chedderbug
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“In Italy you can broken and take your stuff” had me dying

jackbrown
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In Poland it is very common for bottles. It is tricker with other products like yogurt/homogenised cheese, you simply look for the "not meant to sell separately" or single scanning code if there isn't you are free to break multipackage and take as much as you want

SaltyCatling
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In Germany you can always just take one of a whole package. The prices for one bottle are always next to the product and by law it also must be mentioned next to the price for the whole package.

moin_games
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Im in Canada and you can do this here too. That’s just the shipping packaging. As long as there’s a barcode on each individual item…you can buy them individually.

BandlerChing
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The “not labeled for individual sale” is what prevents that in the states

afiblacksails
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Same in Brazil. If the product has its own label, you can buy ir individually (bulk is not mandatory).

Quetzasp
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In Brazil, you can also break and remove one, just like in Italy, AS LONG AS, when you remove it, they can still sell the rest separately and also all of them need to have the nutritional table and ingredients (required by the regulatory bodies). For example, if there is a packet of coca cola you can break the packet and buy it, on the other hand, if there is a packet of toilet paper you cannot open it and buy just one roll.

Asafe.
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It's not just Italian it's the rest of the world except for US 😂

ELFBDS
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You can do this in the UK too! Only exception is if they have "Sold as multipack, not for individual sale" written on it

catrinmelldansen
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As long as it has a bar code it works. If you separating it breaks the label (like with the coke bottles) you can’t break it because they share a bar code. But the big packs wrapped in plastic have one barcode for the whole pack and one for each individual bottle if you don’t want the whole pack.

ahleenah
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That's common for European discounters. Displaying everything in the packaging in which it shipped saves work and money.

Maxime_K-G
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Actually, in most countries there is a law on a public offer. it is similar in many countries and protects you in self-service markets, because without this law, your attempt to get hold of any item would be considered theft. Generally, under this law, you can buy anything as long as: a) the unit has a barcode to scan b) there is a price tag that shows the price per unit. The unit can be any, a store can sell cola by measuring the amount in bottles, or it can measure by volume, for example per liter/gallon, even by weight. It depends on the store. because the price tag for the product provides a public offer for purchase. Legally, the price tag in such a law is accepted as a public contract, in which it is indicated that the store is obliged to sell you the goods for the value and for the unit of measurement specified in the price tag. And so that the moment between the time you took the product in your hands and your actual payment at the cash register is not considered theft, the public offer provides conditional leasing on the territory of the market. Simply put, when you pick up a bottle of kohl, it's already yours, you can even drink them without paying yet. also, by taking the bottle in your hands, you are signing a contract, which indicates that you have now taken the bottle on credit, and will either give money for it, or return the same product that you took in the same condition. And this credit will be valid until you leave the territory and actually exit the offer. that is, you can go to the store, take and use anything, but after using it, you have already changed the condition of the product, so you will be obliged to pay for it before exiting the offer. Usually it looks like that, but of course, from the point of law, it can be written differently

thatStrangerGuy
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"I take my stuff!" I just love the way he said it!

alecgrandy
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As a European, I FULLY THOUGHT this was the policy everywhere... LOL

NotThatGTA