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-   -   Walmart critics launch ad campaign (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/showthread.php?t=1089)

Mousey Girl 04-20-2005 03:02 PM

I, maybe, shop at Walmart 1-2 times a year. They carry certain things that Target does not. When I do go all I will get is the 3-4 items I needed and then I leave. They are planning 3 Super Walmarts here. The grocery stores are really opposing them, along with the labor unions. I can say, with confidence, that I will not be setting foot in any of them. There is really no need for them, we already have 3 Walmarts in town.

innerSpaceman 04-20-2005 03:50 PM

I have never in my life set foot in a Walmart, and I intend to keep it that way.

That's pretty easy for me to do, since I've never so much as seen one ... and there isn't one within 30 square miles of me.

Kevy Baby 04-20-2005 04:44 PM

Quote:

CHICAGO (Reuters) - An organization opposed to Wal-Mart Stores Inc. took out a full-page newspaper advertisement on Wednesday that accuses the world's biggest retailer of costing U.S. taxpayers some $1.6 billion a year.
I would love to see their rationalization on this one. While I by not means support Wal Mart, claims like this do an injustice to the fight. If they are using the government aid issue, they base their assumption that every single Wal Mart employee IS on government assistance and it is solely Wal Mart's fault.

If it were up to me, we would never shop at Wal Mart. Unfortunately, GusGus keeps going there depite my repeated requests that she not. *sigh* Maybe I need to step up my campaign with her...

BarTopDancer 04-20-2005 04:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevy Baby
If it were up to me, we would never shop at Wal Mart. Unfortunately, GusGus keeps going there depite my repeated requests that she not. *sigh* Maybe I need to step up my campaign with her...

Or maybe you should move across the street from a Target... :evil: :p

MickeyD 04-20-2005 05:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevy Baby
I would love to see their rationalization on this one. While I by not means support Wal Mart, claims like this do an injustice to the fight. If they are using the government aid issue, they base their assumption that every single Wal Mart employee IS on government assistance and it is solely Wal Mart's fault.

According to http://www.responsibleshopper.org:
Quote:

In May, 2004, Good Jobs First showed that Wal-Mart has received more than $1 billion in economic development subsidies from states for its stores. The subsidies have come as many states are forced by White House tax cuts and reductions in federal grants to make tough budget decisions. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities shows states are cutting subsidies for publicly funded health insurance, child care, federal employment, both higher and lower education, and programs aimed at public safety and people with disabilities. Taxpayer dollars continue to subsidize Wal-Mart, who took in more than $200 billion in revenue and netted nearly $9 billion in profits last year, while paying worker near-poverty wages, and violating environmental regulations Source: The Progress Report, May 28, 2004
I have no idea...but this could be what they are referring to.

Prudence 04-20-2005 06:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevy Baby
I would love to see their rationalization on this one. While I by not means support Wal Mart, claims like this do an injustice to the fight. If they are using the government aid issue, they base their assumption that every single Wal Mart employee IS on government assistance and it is solely Wal Mart's fault.

We had a minor kerfluffle up here with WalMart. The argument was that WalMart restricted the number of employees eligible for benefits by mostly hiring part time employees. (And not because no one wanted to work full time.) This allowed WalMart to offer its customers lower prices than competitors, who provide benefits to a larger percentage of their employees. The hidden costs come from taxpayers, who support the state's Basic Health insurance program (not to mention Medicaid) for people who don't have employer-provided health insurance and can't afford private coverage.

€uroMeinke 04-20-2005 06:11 PM

A Coworker once tried to take me to a Walmart. Fortunately, she has a a peculiar fear of zombies and the greeter that day was particularly zombie like - a few choice borrowed lines from Night of the Living Dead and we blew out of that parking lot.

I have yet to set foot in one.

Baileykat 04-20-2005 08:10 PM

When I lived in Texas...Walmart was just where you shopped! We lived in a small town...and the Walmart we had was great! Clean, always organized...unless you went at 2am...then the stockers were rampant! Walmart was usually the first place I went for everything...grocery staples, laundry stuff, bath stuff, diapers when the kids were little...everything except produce and meat. Where I lived, you just couldn't beat their prices! Period!

BUT BUT BUT....now here in Tucson...the Walmarts SUCKETH BIGTIME!!! Arghh!

Crowded, dirty, crabbyass people checking you out....the last time I went I had quite a few coupons...the clerk SIGHED LOUDLY when she saw them....the proceeded to go back thru my bags to actually verify that I had bought everything I had a coupon for! So that did it for me!

Target is my choice now!

Name 04-20-2005 08:18 PM

Back in the old days of Wally World, back when they were working hard to sell "Made in the USA" stuff, they were all clean, well organized, good places.(that was about 12 years ago) It seems to me that corporate greed has gotten the best of the company and has lowered their standards massively. Now they are on my list as the next low standard alternative to Big Lots! I refuse to shop at either. Actually, I think I would shop at Big Lots! before I stepped foot into another Wal-Mart.

wendybeth 04-21-2005 10:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Prudence
You know how sometimes you walk into a place and suddenly, for no concrete reason you can point to, feel without a doubt that this is Not A Good Place and We Need To Leave Right Now?

That was me, at the Renton WalMart. Haven't been in one since.

I read this, and thought of Steven King-lol.

I agree that Wal Mart is icky, evil and all that, but if we are going to go after employers for such a thing then we'd best start going after the Feds, because most enlisted soldier's families qualify for public assistance.


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