D.C. Progressive Examiner: Why I boycott Walmart

by lefty_liberated | December 8, 2008 at 05:30 pm
325 views | 9 Recommendations | 9 comments

November 28, 9:58 PM

by Jim L. Cunningham, D.C. Progressive Examiner

Ahhh, it’s that time of year again… the flavors of leftover turkey and gravy sandwiches… the smells of neighborhood fire places burning… the sounds of people screaming as they’re trampled at Walmart on Black Friday.

Every year, on or around this day, I do an internet news search to find out what loss-leader items are luring people to the awful, evil place known as Walmart. Today a Google News search on “Walmart” returned thousands of versions of the story about a man who was trampled to death at a Walmart store in Long Island. Someone always gets hurt at Walmart on Black Friday. It’s become a matter of routine. One wonders why Walmart continues such a barbaric event that has long-proven itself to be dangerous.

I know why.

Because Walmart is evil.

OK. OK. It’s more than a bit simplistic to call Walmart “evil”, but they do have a long history of bad business practices, censorship, and poor treatment of their employees, not to mention that they’re pioneers at union busting. I quit shopping there long before I was politically aware. In fact, making the decision not to shop at Walmart many years ago may have been the first political act of my young life – and certainly my first politically-aware decision as a consumer. Of course, back then I was merely upset that Walmart refused to carry some of the music I liked because they deemed the content to be offensive or inappropriate. I felt that was my decision to make – not theirs - and that if the retailer insisted on deciding for me what I should be listening to, than I wasn’t going to shop there any longer.

That lasted for years. And then one day after I graduated college, when I was just scraping by, a SUPER Walmart was built in the little town I had recently moved into. I had been trying to survive on that little piece just-out-of-college salary and now there was a giant bright shiny new Walmart in the neighborhood that sold groceries in addition to everything else. I weakened and, for a brief time, enjoyed low prices on the things I needed, and even, Walmart end caps being what they are, the things I didn’t.

I was just starting to enjoy my newly-found savings (and I suppose cobble-together some sort of justification in my head to remove my guilt) when I learned the story about the T-shirt that Walmart found so offensive, they had it stripped from store shelves. What did that shirt say? It was Margaret from the Dennis the Menace cartoons. The shirt depicted her standing, hands on hips, with a speech bubble over her head that read, "SOMEDAY, A WOMAN WILL BE PRESIDENT!" apparently some people complained about the shirt and it was pulled from shelves. I was horrified.

After that, I stopped shopping at Walmart for good. I’m not alone. Many Progressives refuse to shop there. But I’ve always kept an eye on them [explicit language in link] and continued to hold a grudge. I pay attention whenever I hear something new about them. Heck, I pay attention even when it’s old news just rehashed in some different town or context. Sometimes Walmart makes the news, but it’s pretty rare. There are organizations like Walmart Watch who try to keep their atrocities in public view. But the worst stories are often personal.

I have a close friend who worked at Walmart. She used to tell me stories about how her managers would force her to clock out and return to work. There was nothing her or her coworkers could do. If they complained they would be fired and replaced with people who would put up with the treatment. She said her supervisors were ruthless people ever-willing to take advantage of employees in imaginative new ways. My friend, the kind soul that she is, always suspected her supervisors were simply responding to pressures from above.

I used to work for a packaging company. One of our customers would tell us stories about how agreeing to have his product sold through Walmart was like making a deal with the devil. They mandated how he would make his product, how it would be packaged, what colors to use on the package – you name it, they dictated it. But the worst part came when they told him they would no longer sell his product, unless he sold it to them cheaper - much cheaper. And when he couldn’t provide the quantities they wanted when they wanted for the price they wanted and still pay his employees a fair wage and continue to stay in business, Walmart offered to buy him out. It was for less money than he would have liked and he would lose the business he loved and the product he invented, but he had no choice.

And so Walmart uses its power to hurt American values, American workers, American business and the American economy. (Even consumers themselves if they’re not careful.)

I waited until after Black Friday to tell this story because I can’t, in good conscience, ask other people not to shop at Walmart. Not in this economy.

The way things are, you don’t have a choice. It’s not your fault the economy is in the tank. You should be able to get nice things for yourself and your family when things are bad.

But later, when things are better, maybe then you’ll change your mind and join me in spending our money in places other than Walmart.

 

Source: http://www.examiner.com/x-1470-DC-Progressive-Examiner~y2008m11d28-Why-I-boycott-Walmart

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lefty_liberated

I'm trying to use the highlight feature without much luck. 

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Rachel Nixon

Hi - do drop me a message if the problem continues and let me know what browser you're using. In the meantime, there's also a manual way of having the quote display as a Highlight.

I've been trying to explain how it works by pasting the code but it just replicates the way the Highlight looks, so will do it in two comments.

First: 

At the relevant place in your article, paste the following code and fill in the relevant areas:

[q url="paste web address of article here"]

Then paste the relevant portion of the original article.




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Rachel Nixon

Having pasted the relevant portion of the article, paste this last piece of code at the end. [/q]

That's it! Hope this helps.

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lefty_liberated

Thank you Rachel. I just couldn't get it to do it for some reason. I'd try to copy past the second [/q] and it would just ignore the changes. Will try to do it from the get go with the next story. Thanks very much for the pointers. 

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Rachel Nixon

No worries - let me know how you get on.

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Loopholezz

Amazing writing. Seriously, we must annihilate BIG CORPORATIONS within America if we truly wish to see changes in the rights of employees, consumers, affiliates, and all humanity that is somehow intertwined with such businesses.  We must come to understand that their power is established in our accepted reduction of our personal autonomy. As long as people continue putting up with these conditions there will continue to be conflicts.  Boycotting the corporation because your personal desire is to see the re-establishment of values, personal autonomy, equal and 'fair' treatment in the workplace, and the destruction of exploitation of our civilization is commendable and noteworthy. Thank you for that

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lefty_liberated

Well said. 

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Simon D

" I weakened and, for a brief time, enjoyed low prices on the things I needed,"


Yeah, but a lot of people fail to consider the hidden prices when they're assessing the price of products at Walmart: the lost jobs to outsourcing. The tax on our government because of healthcare costs. The list goes on and on. <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-asqVZGQLAM&eurl=http://fred2blue.wordpress.com/2008/12/09/from-china-with-love/&feature=player_embedded">This Anti-Walmart ad</a> is pretty eye opening in explaining why their claim for "low prices" isn't exactly true.

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lefty_liberated

Thank you for the link. 

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