Pistol ammo is usually under half-price there and they always have my favourite fishing spoons - the really small Dick Nites and 000 size Needlefish:

Big trout like tiny flashy things.

I buy cheap Chinese stuff...sometimes have no choice. You know the internet...I'd have to see the video in Walmart to believe it. I'm in Walmart maybe 4-5 times a year...about all I can stand.davidlucasbarnes wrote:shame on you takza! for all your anti-establishment talk, i can't believe you even set foot in wal-mart. you've seen the video online and surely know the negative impacts wal-mart has worldwide so why wait to see the video in the store before you boycott them?
that was exactly my point.Petros wrote:If you do not like it, shop somewhere else.
Not if it's the only employer left in an area. The impact of Wal-Mart is far more reaching than it just closing local business. It funnels cash out of its location, returning about 15C on the dollar back into the local economy. A locally owned and operated business puts about 80C on the dollar back into the local economy, keeping the localised velocity of money high and creating more jobs and, more importantly, more opportunity for independent Americans.Petros wrote: If the employees do not like it they are free to quit
People have no choice. I will buy an American-made product over a product from anywhere else. Sometimes something I need cannot be bought in the US. The things America doesn't make anymore 46,000 factories closed under Bush, a direct result of Clinton's NAFTA, Bush making it easier to both outsource jobs to the third-world (and withdraw funds from American businesses with his tax-breaks for the wealthy) and Reagan's destruction of America's sensible import tariff structure.Petros wrote:if people did not buy the cheap china made stuff they would not exist.
No they don't, they want jobs and American-made products. These basic things have been stripped by presidents making terrible economic blunders.Petros wrote:So it is not Wal-mart's fault that people like buying cheap china made junk, they are just doing what their customer want.
See above. There's nowhere locally I can buy many of the lures I fish with because Wal-Mart destroyed most of the local independent tackle shops. Wal-Mart also aggressively stockpiled ammo, meaning that a box of 40S&W costs about $10 there, $25 everywhere else.Petros wrote:If you do not like it, shop somewhere else.
That's such a broken argument on so many levels.ohcanada_00 wrote:Is the paradox of choice at all entering this argument? I choose to buy the best products or the most inexpensive products or a product from a brand I like/trust/support. Companies like Wal-Mart have the statistics of that choice nailed down to a science and then exploit the numbers to thier advantage in either purchasing, marketing or other areas. I like to buy local as often as possible, more because of the lessened impact on shipping the same bunch of collard greens I could buy from the Puyallup valley versus from Argentina. That doesnt mean though that I as a consumer am willing simply because its locally produced or locally available to pay more or purchase an inferior product. The finest watches are not made in California, they are made in Switzerland. The finest diamonds dont come from Arkansas, they come from Canada. The most premium cameras are Japanese! We cant as a society keep going around saying that Chinese/Asian/third world goods are crappy just because they come from those places then turn around and demand the finest things from the rest of the world. The ultimate sports cars come from Europe so why are they thought of as exclusive and the pinnicle when on the other hand some of the best clothing is made in China and its 'not as good'. Is it because China isnt yet producing our luxury goods so the mundane every day items like undershirts, socks and toys dont rate as highly on the thought process? What if Ferraris were made in China and sold at Wal-Mart in the same limited number, fashion? Would you turn your nose up at a Ferrari because it was made in China? Because it was sold at WalMart?
I can't believe you can actually say that and not be joking. Yes, jobs are required by Wal-Mart in order for it to operate. However, study after study has proven that those jobs come at the expense off better paying and generally better jobs inside the same community. You simply cannot argue that it's not better for a town to keep most of its money circulating in its own businesses than it is to have nearly all of it taken out of local circulation. It's basic economics.ohcanada_00 wrote:Some of the communities yes. No argument. The vast number of other communities though are saved by WalMart on average 200-400 jobs are created with a new WalMart. More jobs are created or extended or saved in the planning, contruction and maintenence of a WalMart property. Can they do better? sure. Can they treat worker better? sure. but are they the monster everyone makes them out to be? I dont think so.
I don't believe it's a qualitative issue as much as it is a socioeconomic issue.ohcanada_00 wrote:Another argument in the broader range of this topic is that of the perceived quality of American made goods. In some cases, i think its justified but look around and tell me the last time you bought a camera and felt guilty it wasnt made in America. I've had things made in America that were ultra high quality but I've also got my famous Chinesse torque wrench from Harbor Freight that looks like it has been to war several times over and back and still is only 4% off and works like a charm. On the flip side, I had a pair of pants made in the USA that I loved and fell apart after about 3 months, and had a Sony laptop utterly melt down after 4 months of extremely light use due to a production flaw.
Another broken argument. If the end result of those freight jobs is selling products from which the profits go offshore, basic economics (sorry to be repetitive) suggests that eventually our money will run out and there will be nobody buying and shipping things. You can't export freight service. And when your tangible exports are massively outweighed by your imports, your entire economy is a ticking time-bomb and can only be destined to fail.ohcanada_00 wrote:I think we as Americans (and Canadians) (and those of us that are dual citizens) need to stop using the argument of inferior quality and loss of jobs and realize that as the world changes, its not going to stop for us/U.S. (<---- ha! clever pun) Yes, manufacturing jobs were lost but how many logistics and shipping and transportation jobs have been created? I used to be in the logistics industry and never once did anyone feel like we had enough people to do the job. We were always hiring! Perhaps some companies no longer make TV's in America because the quality was inferior or the market just didnt want what they had to offer? Maybe we can look even closer and ask if the pervailing attitude of certain Detriot based businesses was more widespread than we thought? The thought of 'people will buy whatever we make just because its made in America' doesnt fly any more. Ask Ford, GM or Chrysler how that worked out for them. I dont think Wal-Mart is the monster, nor the Wal-Mart consumer. They are simply a comapny who found a niche, filled the niche and then from within has continued to expand and fill the niche over and over and over again.