Boy, a lot of pent-up complaining going on here. Someone needs to pour everyone a cold one and we can all chillax.
I want to go back to Sears for a moment. For someone of my age, born in the early 60's, when I became an adult in the 80's, Sears was already over. I went for tools and appliances and that was it. I never shopped there for anything else. They hit their high point in the early 70s. Craftsman, DieHard, Kenmore, Allstate, Sears Tower, and later Dean Witter, Coldwell Banker, Discover Card. If you go onto Wikipedia and read the summary of Sears, you see what an absolute incompetent series of business decisions were made, including a long series of acquisitions and divestitures and loading the company to the hilt with debt.
What amuses me sometimes is it just seems like things get re-swizzled in a slightly different way, but it's all been done before. Amazon is opening physical stores here and there (got one here in San Jose, never been) backed by their massive online business. That was Sears and Montgomery Ward years ago, a small local store backed by a massive catalog business selling everything from undies to kit homes. Who remembers catalog showrooms like BEST and Consumers Distributing where you saw merchandise displayed around the store or you looked through a catalog, then picked up a form and a golf pencil, entered info, turned it in and waited for your item to slide down the conveyor belt, and paid for it? Not too different from going to an Amazon store, seeing/touching an item, ordering it, and having it show up at your doorstep the next day.
I feel like we're not far from the end of physical shopping in stores. Things arrive at home quickly and easily, and returns are getting easier and cheaper. Why not order that pair of socks, you can always send back without too much expense or trouble. We'll end up plowing under all the malls and strip shopping centers and turning them into data centers and solar panels to run our online lives.