Originally posted by: Modelworks
Originally posted by: Amused
So what? The success of Walmart obviously means they are selling what a large enough percentage of people want, at prices they want.
Why is it bad to sell cheaper lawn mowers at $99? Why is it bad to sell cheaper goods that the lower classes can afford? Should they be forced to do without because elitists don't like that walmart sells cheaper goods? Should they be forced to buy used equipment? Or is it just that you don't believe the poor should cut their lawns at all?
The most elitist part of the hate walmart bandwaggon is displayed right in this very thread: Walmart sucks because it's filled with redecks and minorities.
Wow... a store that becomes successful by offering better selection, prices and a higher quality of life than ever before to the poorest among us is bad because those poorest among us go there.
hmmmm....
It isn't that Walmart is selling what people want. It is that they are selling what people have access to. Consider this:
A city with several shops selling quality merchandise.
Walmart comes in selling lower quality, at low prices, even buying out the makers of the quality merchandise telling them, sell at our price or go out of business.
Once the competition is gone, walmart charges whatever it wants. You can no longer buy quality because those manufacturers now no longer exist. It isn't competition or low prices at this point, it is a monopoly.
You say people in this thread hate walmart because it is filled with rednecks and minorities when you yourself imply that only low class people shop at walmart.
Personally I shop at walmart only when absolutely necessary. China has enough of our money without me helping both a mega corporation and them. Instead I live in a small town where there are the shops that a walmart store would have closed. They have tried several times to interest the town in coming here. No thanks, we like our town the way it is.
And guess what ? We have many many poor people here and there are no complaints. I rather walk in a grocery store where the manager says Hi, and the cashiers talk to you , the pharmacist know you by name and when I go to a specialty store, the person there really cares about what I want to buy. It isn't some teenager who could care less.