Big Box Stores and Jobs

Things that don't fit anywhere else...

Postby halfdome, Danny » Wed Dec 13, 2006 9:31 pm

Some say our purchases of Chinese goods fuel the expanding Chinese war machine. :thinking: Danny
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Postby Arne » Wed Dec 13, 2006 10:48 pm

And some of our gas money supports the terrorists that want to kill us.
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Postby lanego » Thu Dec 14, 2006 12:49 am

john wrote:Not long ago we in the US used child labor, so did the rest of the world for a thousands of years....on farms. We also used children in factories in this country. I am glad we do not do so now, but it is our wealth as a nation that allows us the choice not to work our children. And I am sure in time as China's wealth grows they will choose as we have.

China and many other nations do not have the wealth to make that choice and I for one will not deny them the choice of working in a factory over starvation. China has a problem with too many people migrating to the cities in search of a better life in, I agree, a horrible factory. This is their individual choice and as such their labor can not be defined as slavery. To do so would lessen the grave reality of what slavery is. I applaud choice in China. It is a move in the right direction

I understand it is easy to export our values to another nation while living in comparative luxury, but I refuse to hold their choices against them when my values are simply unafordable for them.

Also I never said loosing a job was painless and alway lands one in a better place than before. On average, though, we do land in a better place after the pain of looseing a job. As I said before if this wasn't the case our unemployment rate would be much higher. We are a fortunate country to have such a flexable economy that we can loose a job in one area of the economy and simply move to a growing area of the economy. Many countries in Europe don't have this flexability and people have to go without a job. Thus their higher european unenployment rates.




1) What used to happen does not validate it happening now. We used to draw and quarter political dissidents in the Western world; we don't support it as valid for any government to use now.
Plus, you just contradicted yourself about the Chinese having choice.
2) Children in farm families are NOT comparable to factory children who are often tied to the machinery behind barred doors in firetraps, and beaten when they become too exhausted to work. These are the very conditions that led to The American Humane Society spearheading efforts to outlaw child labor in this country. And no study has ever proved that child slavery was necessary to economic development. Quite the opposite, such a fragile workforce, with undeveloped physiques and intellects, underfed and worked to exhaustion is an economic drain. Consider the costs of replacement training, guards, detention equipment to name a few.
3) The United Nations, of which developing economies are in the majority, denounces child slave labor. We are not importing luxury economy values to other nations; morality and compassion actually exist in the "Third World".
4) On average, displaced American workers are forced to take lower paying, more menial jobs when their old positions are out sourced. And using the unemplyment rate as proof of the opposite is comparing apples and oranges. Having any job does not equate to being better off than at a previous job. Eventually, some find equable employment, after losing retirement, savings and homes.

Finally, we are not ever going to have no imports from other nations; trade makes for healthy economies in many ways. However, to simply support by our purchases the rampant relocating of our industrial base to other shores for the gross enrichment of the already grossly rich and sell out our nation and our children, and as Ira pointed out, cancel our ability to kick ass when we need to, is selfish, foolish and suicidal. Now, you can go ahead and buy all the stuff from China while saying your vote or voice or buying power can't change a thing, but history refutes you. Every great change and leap forward came from the joining of many voices in dissent - our very nation grew from the dissent of the masses. Those practices in China just belabored will only change when the voice of the masses demands justice too loudly to be ignored. So, bullsh*t! We buy that cheap stuff because we are spoiled and selfish and greedy. We want all the things we see the rich and famous have; instead of insisting they curb their bloated appetites, we try to suck up just as much, believing we are entitled more than any other people in history or any place else in the world. Well suck it up now, cause God won't always be on our side. At least be honest about your greed, there is no justifying it with "once upon a time, we did those terrible things so its okay to live off their pain now." - You personally never suffered their pain, if you did you'd be screaming for justice like a banshee.
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Postby Miriam C. » Thu Dec 14, 2006 1:33 am

In my life time.
Ben Franklin--replaced by Woolworth
Woolworth--replaced by Venture
Venture--replaced by K-mart and Target
K-mart ---Walmart---Target---Sams Club- Cosco

Made in Japan,Tiawan, Korea, Mexico,China, ...
Each in it's own way have prospered by traveling thier version of the American dream. Each has it's corrupt politicians and coorporate owners. Each has, after it reaped the rewards of American dollars spent on cheap goods, whinned about the American exploitation of it's workers.

How is boycotting the country's largest employer going to help anyone? That won't change low wages. It won't change benifits, all it will do is move Target up on the list of big company's. There will always be a number 1.

Buy the best you can afford and if you research the store ownership, and agenda, you might just go to Wally World anyway. It's all about greed.
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Postby lanego » Thu Dec 14, 2006 2:08 am

Yes, it will change wages and benefits; refer to the available history of boycotts. If WalMart loses market share, it has been historically documented that the replacement of a market leader will avoid the mistakes that led to the fall of their rival. True that it may take more than one boycott to get the point across, but it does get through to decision makers when it affects profits. And while greed plays a large role in our world, it's not ALL about greed. That over-simplifies the human condition.
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Postby Ira » Thu Dec 14, 2006 6:23 am

This is getting INTERESTING!

And Miriam just HAD to mention Woolworth's, didn't she?

Sigh--I miss that store. I can almost right now smell the grilled cheese upon entering the store.

And the dead goldfish.
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Postby Miriam C. » Thu Dec 14, 2006 3:14 pm

:lol: Grilled Cheese Ira?

Ok I'm easy. Lets boycott every store that doesn't pay a living wage and hire a majority of full time workers. Oh yeah and provide medical benifits.
Why discriminate against an American owned company. Lets boycott Target too.

I'ts going to be a long, hungry, cold winter. Yeah---ya gotta boycott the stores that sell gas too.

I never simplify the human condition. This isn't about human condition it is about pure greed and total selfishness on the part of mega-rich people and the complete distruction of the American dream by those greedy people. Just look at the salary reports of your major stock brokers. :roll:

I love grilled cheese.
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Postby Ira » Thu Dec 14, 2006 3:34 pm

Miriam, I don't know about your Woolworth experiences…whether you grew up with them in your area…but they all had a lunch counter with stools.

And their most popular item was grilled cheese.

DAMN could they make a great grilled cheese sandwich!

If you do a search for Woolworth, grilled, cheese, you'll find a lot of old farts like me who also miss them.
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Postby Joseph » Thu Dec 14, 2006 3:40 pm

Ira wrote:If you do a search for Woolworth, grilled, cheese, you'll find a lot of old farts like me who also miss them.

When I was in college I'd go there on Friday night. AYCE fried clams & fries for - well, I don't remember the price, but if I could afford it, it was CHEAP!

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Postby SkipperSue » Thu Dec 14, 2006 3:41 pm

Their chocolate malt milkshakes were great too!
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Postby Ken J » Thu Dec 14, 2006 3:45 pm

I've been a lurker here - but this stuff tends to make my hair curl - it is absloutely correct that a large part of the reason we are in this fix is because we are greedy. We demand cheap toys, we demand cheap fuel etc etc - yet we cry when companies figure out how to get us the cheap stuff - as in Made in China. This also extends to our labor market - we want alls kinds of insurance, pensions, increase in minimum wage - we want our cake and eat it to.

And.....we are not even talking about the worlds natural resourses that are being wasted on the arm loads of junk that get carred out of Wal Mart every day (to end up in land fills six months later).

I heard a statistic the other day that 1/2 of the USA population shops at Walmart every week - that is incredible!! (I am not one of them)

So for me, I'm willing to pay more for stuff, would love to see gas remain at about $3/gal - if not, I hate to see what this earth looks like in 500 years - its really a shame

Ok - I'll go back to lurking now :)
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Postby Joseph » Thu Dec 14, 2006 3:45 pm

SkipperSue wrote:Their chocolate malt milkshakes were great too!

For those I went to the Doggie Diner. Now all gone but Zippy remembers...

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Postby Miriam C. » Thu Dec 14, 2006 5:40 pm

:lol: What I remember most of Woolworths is the smell. Grilled cheese, candy and cheap perfume. Glorious smells. I was a child.

I wasn't refering to the greed of average folks. If you can afford to pay bonuses in the hundreds of millions to a few people, you can afford to provide a living wage without raising prices. No reason we can't all live decent lives.
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Postby mwatters » Thu Dec 14, 2006 6:11 pm

Wow this topic moves fast! :o

Random thoughts (largely to distract me from grading finals...):

Big does not equal bad (doesn't have to anyway).

Costco is wonderful! We've shopped there for about 15 years. Thank God they came out here to the flatlands of Indiana after we moved too. It's the only place we can get decent cheese (Tillamook - sorry Wisconson) and steamer clams!

We dumped WalMart for our shopping almost completely a couple of years ago. Been burned too many times on clothes that ripped after 1 wearing, electronics that collapsed almost immediately etc etc. A turd, no matter how well polished and priced - is still a turd.

Where else but WalMart? Well... KMart carries pretty much all the same stuff. Target has everything but the guns.

China still despirately needs the middlemen. At the very least they need them to act as their apparently ONLY line of defense in terms of quality control. If they get THAT act together - then maybe. Till then - a greater and more visable presence in the marketplace will only build them a reputation for building junk. Course that's where Japan was at one time too. Doesn't mean China will follow the same curve though.

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Postby SkipperSue » Thu Dec 14, 2006 6:37 pm

I search the web everyday for weird and obscure photos. This one fits this kind of Wal-Mart thread. :R

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