ACK...I hate the whole Wal-Mart bashing thing.
They are Capitalists, and that isn't such a bad thing.
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There'sthis small town in Oklahoma somewhere in the panhandle region. They have a decent local economy with the oil industry as their base. They have many small and medium chained businesses thriving in town. Walmartcomes in and sets up shop. Although prices arent exorbantly highat the otherbusinesses they are moreexpensive than walmart.People begin shopping at wal mart driving the other companies out of business. These people closethier doors to find work elsewhere. The town dgrinds almost to a standstill because the only place hiring is walmart.
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Why does the town grind to a halt?
Is it because they save $3 on an 8-pack of toilet paper?
Is it because they have to work at Wal-Mart's tire shop, instead of Ed's Tires?
Or is it because the oil market tanks?
Because someone decides that those folks in OK are putting their lives at risk?
So the oil company must invest $1.2 billion in upgrades to a plant that is barely breaking even, because a skunk was born with three eyes on the outskirts of the plant.
I don't believe that Wal-Mart is the end of the world.
I DO believe that it is just PART of the world...a world that is always changing.
I don't believe that people buying at Wal-Mart is a plot by the Chinese to overtake the world.
I believe they buy there because they have cheaper prices.
That isn't their fault, it is their ADVANTAGE.
The problem isn't Wal-Mart...it is us.
We can buy at Ed's Tire, or at Wal-Mart Tire.
We can buy toilet paper at 60 cents a roll at the corner market, or 40 cents at Wal-Mart.
They aren't forcing us to buy there.
We do it of our own free will.
Personally, I think the average American, me included, has become fat and happy.
I have a tenant who lost his job a few months ago.
Unemployment has run out, yet he passed on a job because it would only pay him $40/day.
So, I ask, which is more? $0 or $40?
Well, $0 is.
Because at $0, someone else picks up his expenses.
In this case, Catholic Charities.
I'm all for charity and aid, especially if it helps a kid.
But we've gone beyond charity and aid in this country.
We've developed dependancy on funds that should not exist.
We've raised our standard of living to the point of unaffordability.
When we can't afford it, we borrow to fund it.
When we can't borrow any more, we tell the government they owe it to us.
Public assistance is our drug of choice.
When my average non-working tenant has a fancier TV, computer, etc., than my average working tenant does, there is a problem.
When my average non-working tenant has a bigger family than my average working tenant does, there is a problem.
When my average non-working tenant is BIGGER than my avereage working tenant is, there is a problem.
Let's assume the government announced that there was no more money for any assistance (of any kind, including unemployment, social security, and medicaid/medicare). At the same time, they announced that all minimum wage laws were now abolished.
Would the auto workers be willing to work for less than $25 an hour? You bet.
Would my tenant take that $40/day job? You bet.
Would the average American decide it was better to work for food than it was to starve? You bet.
Would Wal-Mart consider buying wood blocks from a USA company, instead of China? You bet.
But that would be because the cost was reasonable. They were made from "trees" by a low-paid work force.
Right now, they can't afford them, because they are made by a "seasoned group of fine wood-crafter artisans with a combined experience of over a century", who need $40/hour in pay and benifits to keep up their lifestyle.
They can't afford it because the wood is "cut from only the finest hardwoods, from non-native-American lands, which are grown organicly, and replanted with non-genetic seedlings".
It makes us happy to know such things exist.
It makes us happy to buy them when we can afford them.
It makes us sad when we realize we can't afford them.
It makes us a little happier when Wal-Mart sells the Chinese knock-offs.
Which we can afford to buy, but are unwilling to make ourselves.
It isn't Wal-Mart's fault.
It is our own.