For several days, I’d been suffering from a mild cold, so I was using NyQuil to sleep at night instead of staying awake coughing. I realized one night that I was out of NyQuil, so I made a quick trip to the Target near my house to get some.
When I handed the 12-ounce bottle of NyQuil (a generic version, actually) to the clerk, she scanned it and asked for my driver’s license. I asked her why. She said it was required by law. I told her it’s not required by law, since it’s not a controlled substance and the law doesn’t require identification or recording of purchases in Alabama. She looked at me as though I was questioning a basic law of nature. She couldn’t understand why I would object to having my personal information stored in a database in exchange for handing her cash for cold medicine.
I left without the NyQuil. I told the clerk that I’d buy it someplace else that doesn’t invade my privacy. I walked out feeling angry at Target. And then I drove to Walmart and bought twice as much of the medicine without any ID of any kind.
Why does Target want to record my information when Walmart doesn’t?

FRIDAY FUNNIES
If you need vacation from spouse, maybe you married wrong person
NOTEBOOK: If results confuse Paul’s aides, how competent are they?
Art, culture are keys to winning the future for freedom of choice
Dad who made space for daughter reminds me little moments matter
Check out my re-runs if you’d like, because I’m on vacation for a bit
Heinlein: It’s not just ‘bad luck’ when creative minority is hated
What if emotional baggage we carry isn’t really our core issue?