people who dont respect the people that make them who they are dont get respect from me
11/15/2005 8:40:54 PM
considering that walmart doesn't hire full time, how the fuck are they supposed to get benefits?besides, it's cheaper for them to get the gov't to pay for healthcare, what motivation do they have to support their own goddamned workers/customers?[Edited on November 15, 2005 at 8:44 PM. Reason : df]
11/15/2005 8:43:33 PM
DONT YOU GET IT?IF YOU WORK FOR WAL-MART, YOU DONT DESERVE SHIT AND WE CAN FIRE YOU ANY TIME WE WANT FOR NO REASON AND YOULL LIKE IT GODDAM IT B/C THE SAVINGS ROCK! this thread reeks of "everything i learn in life i learn in econ 205 and nowhere else".V sure hope youre paying full tuition, and by full tuition, i mean the out-of-state, unsubsidized kind. "no, i dont want your socialist handouts! its wrong! you lose!"I MEAN, THE STOCKMARKET IS RIGHT THERE, WHY CANT EVERYONE JUST PLAY IT LIKE ME???[Edited on November 15, 2005 at 8:48 PM. Reason : North Carolina.]
11/15/2005 8:45:51 PM
11/15/2005 8:45:59 PM
11/15/2005 8:48:16 PM
ha!
11/15/2005 8:50:18 PM
someone's gotta get fucked, it should be the people at the bottom who should have lived a life like me like i said, hope you never had to rely on any SOCIALIST gov. money for anything.
11/15/2005 9:02:54 PM
11/15/2005 9:09:18 PM
11/15/2005 9:19:55 PM
^Well, I hate to bring "the real world" into this picture, but ... I must.When you enter the world of business, you may take time to look around and learn that not all businesses operate on the sole virtue of dollars and cents. Many businesses, by contrast, operate on the virtue of providing value to their customers, and therefore recieving dollars and cents.The business world has canonized this idea by giving it the label "corporate culture."One may argue that workers at the low-end are not disposable, but rather that Wal-Mart has a corporate culture of treating them as such. These are very different concepts.Whether a worker is disposable or not should, in any reasonable business, depend upon the worker himself. It makes no sense to me that all workers in a Wal-Mart are the very same and should be treated the same; but rather, the ones who work the hardest and who are the best should be paid more and should be incentivized to stay.In that scenario, the corporate culture may be said to be "excellence" rather than "cheapness."If Wal-Mart wants to drive down rates in the labor market, then so be it -- but they should not unilaterally impose a corporate culture of "cheapness" rather than "excellence" on consumers. THAT is manifestly inefficient; for a great worker is rarely, in any field, interchangeable for a poor one.
11/16/2005 12:15:06 AM
11/16/2005 12:35:50 AM
Luigi, you should get out of school sometime and actually start a business. You obviously have no idea how difficult it is to manage trade-offs in the real-world.What you fail to notice are the goals of the people involved. If you check the statistics, Wal-Mart like most low-wage employers has a very high rate of turn-over. This is because Wal-Mart jobs are unskilled and low salaried, no one wants to work there unless they are in management. Many workers treat Wal-Mart as a form of unemployment insurance. When they get laid off and the government provided insurance runs out they go work at Wal-Mart just to make ends meet until they can find a real job. This is why Wal-Mart can get away with such horriffic benefits, the employees don't plan on working there long enough to need them.Secondly, the argument that Wal-Mart is driving up medicare costs is utterly rediculous. The workers in question are uneducated and unskilled, sometimes even barely employable. As such, whether they worked at WalMart or Food Lion, they would be on the government dole one way or another. It wasn't Wal-Mart that put them there but a government agency that decried they would be eligible. As such, short of Wal-Mart forcing them to buy into a health plan, the workers are going to opt for the free government coverage. [Edited on November 16, 2005 at 12:56 AM. Reason : g cov]
11/16/2005 12:50:16 AM
11/16/2005 12:58:24 AM
youre right, i havent studied this in depth, its not my area. it just makes sense to me that they could take a little money away from the overpaid ceos and disperse it to the workers/consumers, which theyd probably put back into their company anyway. i guess im missing something. most top management is ridiculously overpaid, i do know that much. do they make enough to warrant their job and responsibility? yes. do they make an excessively large amt more than they should practically make? ok, wal-mart wants to raise wages? awesome, ill find out if that happened from my friends that actually work there. some article from some random site doesnt prove that.this isnt the only reason given as to why their practices are harmful. but economics is the end all be all for you two, so i guess all the other stuff they do to communities doesnt matter. those are pretty damn important, too.im trying to write a final thesis and i keep getting dragged back into this... [Edited on November 16, 2005 at 1:08 AM. Reason : .]
11/16/2005 1:02:44 AM
11/16/2005 1:19:11 AM
God, this thread is getting annoyingWILL YOU LIBBIES PLEASE LISTEN TO THE LESSON YOURE BEING TAUGHT HERE? STOP EMBARASSING YOURSELVES. WHY DO THEY CLOSE BECAUSE OF UNIONS? B/C UNIONS RUIN BUSINESSESS, OF COURSE THEY WILLWHY ARE THEY PAID SO LITTLE? B/C THESE ARE THE LOWEST RUNG WORKERS OUT THERE! they can better themselves if they wanted to!Thank god we dont instate the socialism you fools want.
11/16/2005 1:19:20 AM
Luigi, Wal-Mart could afford to pay its CEO less, there are mechanism built in to do that. My point was that raising the minimum wage would not bring us much closer to utopia, it might even move us further away, depending on how you rate "need." For example, if Wal-Mart started paying $9 an hour out of the goodness of its heart, even if it didn't reduce employment (Wal-Mart can afford to pay higher wages, firms that cannot would not, obviously), it might shift employment. For example, middle-class high-school students that previously were on the fence about getting a job, it may not be worth missing out on parent-funded teen-years for $7 an hour, but it most surely is for $9 an hour. As such, unskilled workers with a family to feed, but cannot speak english, would be crowded out by decidedly unneedy highschoollers, which happen to be fluent. This wouldn't matter as long as sufficient $7 an hour jobs were previously unfilled elsewhere to swallow up the newly freed (desperate) labor, but would it not have been better for society to allow the desperate workers to under-bid secondary-earners such as children, spouses, and pensioners?[Edited on November 16, 2005 at 1:25 AM. Reason : .,.]
11/16/2005 1:24:53 AM
one dollar more for the pissed off kid at the register instead of another thousand for the CEO, thats all i was talking about.and noones bothered to argue any of the other points anyone made[Edited on November 16, 2005 at 1:27 AM. Reason : .]
11/16/2005 1:26:50 AM
UGH, stupid SOCIALISTSjust GET OUT OF THIS COUNTRY THEN[Edited on November 16, 2005 at 1:30 AM. Reason : .]
11/16/2005 1:30:42 AM
i love wally world
11/16/2005 4:38:06 AM
11/16/2005 7:35:20 AM
it's evil because i can't go in there without finding something i need/want and have to get right away...and because of the 5.50 dvd bin, that's just a drain on my bank account...that's why it's evil (well, that and the cultish nature of it's store management, but i don't really care about that, just cheap dvds)
11/16/2005 8:21:07 AM
^Must be a Steven Seagal fan.
11/16/2005 9:06:46 AM
One complaint that I have with Wal-Mart is that they do not effectively enforce their own human rights standards through their vendors, which makes it hard for those of us who want to "play by the rules" to compete.I work for what would be considered a small company, we do around 32 million a year, and 50% of that is with Wal-Mart. I contract and manage 12-15 factories in China at a given time. Wal-Mart conducts audits of each factory to ensure that each factory maintains certain human rights and working condition standards. The problem is that generally all of these auditors are on the "take." Many factories simply pay off the auditors to get a pass rating. This problem is everywhere, so I can't just move to another factory.I routinely see workers breathing in dangerous fumes and chemicals. Also, I'm surprised I haven't been there when someone gets a finger chopped off around the heavy machinery with the common safety standards I've seen.[Edited on November 16, 2005 at 9:40 AM. Reason : blah]
11/16/2005 9:37:27 AM
11/16/2005 9:43:45 AM
11/16/2005 9:45:24 AM
11/16/2005 9:48:23 AM
11/16/2005 9:55:44 AM
11/16/2005 10:27:46 AM
It's ironic how Walmart used to be all about American made, then proceeded to force all of its suppliers out of the US.
11/16/2005 10:32:33 AM
^Sam Walton was a good guy in my opinion, in most respects, he constantly walked the floors and interacted with the average worker. I think he identified with them the most out of anyone in the company.Okay I found some funny/sad quotes form the inspection report:
11/16/2005 10:37:11 AM
I think a lot of Walmart's bad behaviour has developped as a result of it's huge success. The success they've had has given them an unfair advantage in the marketplace: virtually bottomless pocketbooks and the ability to force just about any company it does business with to do whatever it wants. The competitive thing to do would be to split Walmart up so it has to compete against itself.It is certainly true that a lot of good has come from Walmart. But it's hard to argue that more good wouldn't come from making Walmart have to compete with Walmart.
11/16/2005 10:39:51 AM
From The Independenthttp://indyweek.com/durham/2005-11-09/cover6.html
11/16/2005 10:45:14 AM
In America we vote with our dollar...When we vote for walmart what do you expect.
11/16/2005 11:11:03 AM
^^ Then what is everyone complaining about? If Costco is able to reduce costs by paying more then it will have lower prices and be victorious in the marketplace, problem solved! Wal-Mart will either adapt (do the same) or conceid to costco.
11/16/2005 1:09:12 PM
they arent really the same type of store though am i right? isnt costco competing more with sams? i mean i dont need 50 paper towel rolls.
11/16/2005 1:14:41 PM
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/walmart/
11/16/2005 1:28:06 PM
11/16/2005 1:38:02 PM
11/16/2005 1:57:29 PM
^^ It was that simple for wal-mart.
11/16/2005 2:40:18 PM
So we should ignore all of the problems for 20 years while someone else catches up?
11/16/2005 4:04:37 PM
while 25cent paper towel rolls is a great deal, eventually storage becomes an issue (or for some products, shelf life). perhaps i had a bad example. i might buy toilet paper, paper towels, detergent, etc there but i cant imagine buying half the stuff i get at walmart there.
11/16/2005 4:29:00 PM
^^ Do not sacrifice the principles of private property and self determination unless we have no choice. And if waiting 20 years is a possible solution, I think we should all take it.
11/16/2005 7:18:34 PM
that's absurd.
11/16/2005 7:21:07 PM
They had this shit on the Simpsons tonight.
11/16/2005 7:37:40 PM
Wages and benefits arent just costs or fees for service, they can be investments as well. Even at the low level jobs, an experienced worker will tend to be more productive than an inexperienced one. A worker who likes his job will be more productive than one who hates it. A company that recognizes this and does invest in their workers by paying them better and providing more benefits can reap productivity gains from their investment and be more profitable in the long term.Edit: It can also help goodwill, having a good public image can help you be more profitable as well. This is why Value Based Management is winning out in the market place.[Edited on November 16, 2005 at 8:38 PM. Reason : ]
11/16/2005 8:32:14 PM
Just ask any Best Buy employee. Part of NET is memorizing the evils of Walmart.
11/16/2005 10:11:35 PM
Because BB is so much better
11/16/2005 10:25:29 PM
11/16/2005 10:39:20 PM
11/16/2005 10:44:40 PM