Originally posted by: rjain
Originally posted by: Bowfinger
Originally posted by: rjain
You know what's amazing? The fact that so many people claim to support the American Dream but hate its results.
Sorry, Wal-Mart is not an example of the American Dream. It is a perversion of the American Dream.
For the sake of a simple example, let's assume the American Dream is to become a millionaire.
It's not. It's to be given the opportunity to work hard and be rewarded more if you work harder than others. Maybe you should learn where Walmart came from (and, for that matter, Home Depot). Both those companies are the embodiment of the American Dream.
How presumptuous of you to declare that
your American dream is
the American dream. But even if we adopt your one true definition, Wal-Mart hurts it more than it helps. There are untold thousands of factory workers and small business owners who wanted to work harder and be rewarded more. Now, thanks to Wal-Mart, they're either unemployed or they're working harder and being rewarded
less in some mediocre service sector job, maybe working at Wal-Mart.
According to Forbes, in 2002 the five heirs to the Walton fortune were worth $103 Billion. Let that sink in for a moment . . . that's 103 thousand million dollars. That is a tenth of a trillion dollars. That is up to 102,995 Americans who were denied the American Dream because Wal-Mart took it from them.
Oh, they "took" someone else's money? Too bad the other person
freely chose to give Walmart that money because Walmart was giving them the best value. There aren't any "do-overs" in real life.
Why don't you read it again, champ. I didn't say Wal-Mart took their
money, I said it took their American Dream. And no, they didn't "freely choose" to sacrifice their dream to Wal-Mart.
Yes, this is a gross oversimplification, but the principle holds. Wal-Mart's incomprehensible profits didn't just materialize out of thin air. One way or another, it came out of the pockets of Americans.
Americans who
freely chose to give that money to Walmart.
Your point? First, your statement isn't wholly true -- many people lack practical alternatives to Wal-Mart because it's driven competing businesses out of the area and/or reduced some people's earnings to the point where Wal-Mart is all they can afford. Catch-22.
More to the point, do you claim drug dealers are good for America since some Americans "freely choose" to give money to them? Didn't think so. Your claim fails for the same reason. The fact that Wal-Mart's customers are so selfish or ignorant that they make short-sighted purchasing decisions doesn't change the fact that Wal-Mart is bad for America.
It came from tens of thousands of potential business owners who could not compete with Wal-Mart.
Because they couldn't provide what the customers wanted. Do you really support keeping a business around even though it's not competitive with the other options? Are you really against the best option being available to the consumer? Are you going to require that all toys must cost more than $5 because of this, just like we have minimum wages? Are you going to require that all computers cost more than $1000? Is that really good for America?
Yes.
Oh, you probably need an explanation, too. I expect to provide a fair and reasonable level playing field where a monster business cannot drive smaller companies out of business simply due to its size. Others here have documented the many ways Wal-Mart competes unfairly, putting honest local businesses at a fatal disadvantage. If that ultimately means people have to pay a few percent extra on their purchases, that's a reasonable trade-off for preserving American jobs and the American standard of living.
That Wal-Mart low price is bogus anyway. We all pay for the "great savings" through higher taxes and welfare costs. Again, that 103,000 million dollars in the Waltons' pockets didn't come out of thin air. One way or another, every dollar of it came out of our pockets -- willingly or not.
It came from countless factory workers who became unemployed because Wal-Mart forced their former employers to move their factories overseas.
How did Walmart force them to do that? Did they hold a gun to the head of the company's owners and tell them to move the factory overseas?
Yes, in a business sense. Wal-Mart tells its suppliers "you will sell to us at this price or we will buy elsewhere". Given Wal-Mart's market share, this translates to "play our game or your business is dead." Since these companies can't meet Wal-Mart's demands with American labor, they are forced to move overseas to survive.
Why? Because Wal-Mart wanted to lower the retail price of its goods, but it was NOT willing to make less money.
No really, it's their blood, sweat, and tears.
No, it isn't. It's the blood, sweat, and tears of Sam Walton, not his leeching children. (Note that Sam also had the moral fiber and the business sense to recognize the high value of Made in America. The leeches don't.) It's the blood, sweat, and tears of their suppliers and their former, now-unemployed employees. Other businesses have to choose between higher profits or lower prices. Wal-Mart has the market domination to demand both.
That $5 you saved on those cheap shoes didn't come out of the 103,000 million dollars in the Waltons' pockets. It came out of the pocket of a former factory worker or factory owner.
So what? He didn't work his ass off enough to make the shoes cheaper, so why should I work my ass off more to pay him extra? Are you saying that I should be FORCED to buy the MORE EXPENSIVE pair of shoes?
As before, your statement is both false and missing the point. He did "work his ass off", he just isn't able to feed his family on a dollar an hour. And yes, I am saying as an allegedly patriotic American, you should be willing to pay an extra $5 for a pair of shoes because it is good for America. It helps keep the American economy healthy. It helps keep people like you employed so you aren't mooching off the shrinking base of taxpayers.
When you shop at Wal-Mart, you're helping put Americans out of work. Sure, a fraction of those unemployed will get "lucky" and get crappy jobs at Wal-Mart. That's only a drop in the bucket compared to the total jobs lost.
You claim that jobs were lost, but there's no proof that jobs were actually lost because of Walmart.
Right. Whatever helps you sleep at night.
It's clear, however, that you are vigorously opposed to freedom of choice on the part of the producer, consumer, and retailer. If they want to spend their money where it gets them the best value, why should we forbid them?
It's clear, however, that you don't care about anyone but yourself. It's that kind of screw-everyone-else, me-me-me greed that is killing this country. The only difference between you and the sleaze bags in Enron's executive suite is the $3,000 suits (which they didn't buy at Wal-Mart).