Free Frappucchino
#1
Original Poster
Joined: Apr 2003
Posts: 19,419
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Free Frappucchino
No, it's not a troll post 
Here is the yahoo link:
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/040628/285951_1.html
It says Starbucks will be introducing new product tomorrow, June 30, in North America, and it will be free.

Here is the yahoo link:
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/040628/285951_1.html
It says Starbucks will be introducing new product tomorrow, June 30, in North America, and it will be free.
#3
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 34,738
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I rarely get very angry with strangers who are not bothering me. But today at Starbucks where the Yankee and I were getting our coffee ground, I watched a moron, excuse me, woman, dipping her straw into her mochajavawhatever and feeding it to a 6 month old baby.
Of course, the little guy loved it, sweet and flavorful and he was probably already high as a kite on caffeine.
I wish the people working behind the counter had said something to her
Faina, I looove Frappacinos, thanks!
They give the Yankee Brain Freeze
Of course, the little guy loved it, sweet and flavorful and he was probably already high as a kite on caffeine.
I wish the people working behind the counter had said something to her

Faina, I looove Frappacinos, thanks!
They give the Yankee Brain Freeze
#7
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 174
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Ah, your sweet story reminds me of the day at the Seattle Space Needle (see travel related!) when I learned my baby (almost 1 year old) knew how to use a straw. She'd grabbed my iced latte cup and began sucking the straw. She managed to actually drink some and liked it! I was just so excited she knew how to use the straw it never occurred to me to care she'd just had (gasp!) caffeine.
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#8
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 34,738
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LOL, How did lawyers find their way into Fodors?
I will repeat what I wrote..
I WISH the people behind the counter had said something to her..
I wish they, who sold her the drink, could have said, maybe something about the amount of sugar and caffeine in a mochachino and that it is more for adults than infants.
I wish that I could have said something, like, do you realize how bad that is for a 5-6 month old baby?
But I , like the counter people, watched, shook our heads and felt helpless and sorry for the baby.
It is not anyones "job description" to tell someone that they are doing something harmful to a child, I think it is more like "compassionate" or still having a heart to want to protect children.
I will repeat what I wrote..
I WISH the people behind the counter had said something to her..
I wish they, who sold her the drink, could have said, maybe something about the amount of sugar and caffeine in a mochachino and that it is more for adults than infants.
I wish that I could have said something, like, do you realize how bad that is for a 5-6 month old baby?
But I , like the counter people, watched, shook our heads and felt helpless and sorry for the baby.
It is not anyones "job description" to tell someone that they are doing something harmful to a child, I think it is more like "compassionate" or still having a heart to want to protect children.
#10
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,637
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It is not anyones "job description" to tell someone that they are doing something harmful to a child, I think it is more like "compassionate" or still having a heart to want to protect children.
Then I have to wonder why you didn't tell her?
Then I have to wonder why you didn't tell her?
#11
Guest
Posts: n/a
I can't speak for Scarlett but I know I've been in uncomfortable situations and not said or done anything.
Afterwards I replay it over and over again with what I should have said or what I should have done.
The regret of having done nothing at the time just makes me want to kick my own back end.
Afterwards I replay it over and over again with what I should have said or what I should have done.
The regret of having done nothing at the time just makes me want to kick my own back end.
#13
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 3,107
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I think most employers would tell counter-clerks who dispensed unsolicated child-rearing tips to customers where the door is.
It's the clerks jobs to sell product to customers, not to be ticking off customers. I have to agree with Grasshopper on saying anything that NEEDS to be said to the parent.
I don't think a few "dribbles" from a straw is gonna hurt the baby anymore than a lot of other junk people feed kids -- she wasn't injecting mouthfuls of the drink, was she?
But then what does all of this have to do with TRAVEL? (other than the OP, but even then, I wouldn't go out of my way on vacation for a free drink; but thanks for the tip anyway, Faina)
It's the clerks jobs to sell product to customers, not to be ticking off customers. I have to agree with Grasshopper on saying anything that NEEDS to be said to the parent.
I don't think a few "dribbles" from a straw is gonna hurt the baby anymore than a lot of other junk people feed kids -- she wasn't injecting mouthfuls of the drink, was she?
But then what does all of this have to do with TRAVEL? (other than the OP, but even then, I wouldn't go out of my way on vacation for a free drink; but thanks for the tip anyway, Faina)
#15
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 1,131
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This whole thread is non-travel related, but I think it demonstrates what a recent poster said about the attitudes of some veteran posters here that turn off newbies.
It is not up to any of us, nor certainly any of the Starbucks employees who are paid $5.15 an hour to sling capuccinos, to advise people how to feed their children. When my now grown children were young, I also gave them some treats that were probably not the best for them. No one ever hung me out to dry for it, and I would not presume to do it to anyone else. As parents and people, we are hardly perfect.
Just my opinion.
It is not up to any of us, nor certainly any of the Starbucks employees who are paid $5.15 an hour to sling capuccinos, to advise people how to feed their children. When my now grown children were young, I also gave them some treats that were probably not the best for them. No one ever hung me out to dry for it, and I would not presume to do it to anyone else. As parents and people, we are hardly perfect.
Just my opinion.
#18
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 34,738
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One last word on this, and Thanks to FainaAgain for the link!
"I wish that I could have said something, like, do you realize how bad that is for a 5-6 month old baby?
Well, "Grasshopper" , ( who I am sure would step right up and say something, wouldn't you?)
I, like most people,( as Austin and GoTravel so nicely put it), knew it was not my business to say anything to her, as it was not the responsibility of the clerk at the counter either. That is why I WISHED I could have said something.
I don't know what newbies etc has to do with this, but Leona was right, few of us have many rights, when it comes to being the observer of child neglect, however benign some of us consider it.
Yes, rb, she was pouring the stuff down the little tikes throat..filling the straw then pouring it into his little open bird mouth..(can you picture it
she might have been a grandmother or baby-sitter, whatever, it was an observation, not meant to start a debate.
"I wish that I could have said something, like, do you realize how bad that is for a 5-6 month old baby?
Well, "Grasshopper" , ( who I am sure would step right up and say something, wouldn't you?)
I, like most people,( as Austin and GoTravel so nicely put it), knew it was not my business to say anything to her, as it was not the responsibility of the clerk at the counter either. That is why I WISHED I could have said something.
I don't know what newbies etc has to do with this, but Leona was right, few of us have many rights, when it comes to being the observer of child neglect, however benign some of us consider it.
Yes, rb, she was pouring the stuff down the little tikes throat..filling the straw then pouring it into his little open bird mouth..(can you picture it

she might have been a grandmother or baby-sitter, whatever, it was an observation, not meant to start a debate.
#19
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,637
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No Scarlett, I wouldn't have said a word. Because frankly, I don't think it would have been any of my business. If she'd been wacking the kid, or left them locked in a hot car it would have been a different matter. But really, I think a little frappacino is blowing things out of perspective.
To each his own.
To each his own.
#20
Joined: Jul 2003
Posts: 1,466
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There was an article in the 6/29/04 Boston Globe about how many calories those Frappaccino and other "chinos" really have -- Starbuck Grande Caramel Frappaccino 430 calories, 10 grams saturated fat. McDonald's double cheeseburger 490 calories, 12 grams saturated fat.

