Archive for December, 2005

Wal-Mart - Destroyer of Community

Since I’m getting comments about Wal-Mart posted to other topics, I feel pressed to actually create a post about Wal-Mart. Note the provocative title of this post. :)

Back in November I went to the Mount Vernon, Iowa showing of the anti-Wal-Mart movie .

The High Cost of Low Prices

Wal-Mart: The Movie

Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price - such a cool title.

The movie was shown thanks to the efforts of local Mount Vernon resident John Feeney, PhD, who is organizing an effort called The Small Town Project. The Project is attempting to raise the consciousness of local residents to inevitable population and demographic changes that threaten the pleasant small-town lifestyles in mid-Western towns such as Mount Vernon and Lisbon, IA. The movie was crowded, and a great success in terms of attracting lots of viewers.

The movie has a lot of work and research behind it in terms of presenting facts. But many of the facts presented could have used a little context. For example, when the claim that the combined area of concrete of Wal-mart’s parking lots is the area of a small state (Connecticut, was it?), it would have been helpful to have something to compare this against. For all I know, half of the country is paved in concrete at this point. The same for many of the statistics presented - no context. Numbers and information were presented in primarily a shock-presentation format, making it obvious the way that the film makers want you to feel upon seeing the information.

I agree with the general point that Wal-Mart and other big box stores arrive in an area as part of urban-sprawl, that they are both products of and promoters of globalization, and that they thrive on American consumerism.

All of which I do my best to avoid. As such, I don’t really want box stores near me - yes, Not In My Backyard. Though, it certainly is convenient to drive 20 minutes down the road and go to a box store. But who really wants one of those big, nasty, crowded stores in their neighborhood? Not me.

And In the Times

From “New World Economy - the age of high-wage jobs is over - and Wal-Mart isn’t to blame” by Matt Bai, in The New York Times Magazine, issue December 18, 2005 has leftist words that speak much better than can I:

“While G.M. rusts away like some relic from the last century, Wal-Mart beckons us toward our shrink-wrapped and discounted future. Wal-Mart’s founding family is said to be wealthier than Bill Gates and Warrent Buffet combined, and yet more than half of the company’s employees don’t receive health care, and its enduring quest to bring us lower prices drives down wages everywhere. Here we have the model for globalization as Republicans envision it - a world in which rugged entrepreneurialism is overly romanticized and the unskilled expendable, and where shareholder profits are the only measure of success.”

The article cites that Wal-Mart is the largest employer in the United States with 1.6 million employees as of 2004. (Fortune magazine April 18, 2005)

Mentioned in the Times article was a report by Jason Furman (available as pdf) that states:

There is little dispute that Wal-Mart’s price reductions have benefited the 120 million American workers employed outside of the retail sector. Plausible estimates of the magnitude of the savings from Wal-Mart are enormous – a total of $263 billion in 2004, or $2,329 per household. Even if you grant that Wal-Mart hurts workers in the retail sector – and the evidence for this is far from clear – the magnitude of any potential harm is small in comparison. One study, for example, found that the “Wal-Mart effect” lowered retail wages by $4.7 billion in 2000.

According to Furman’s report, Wal-Mart relies on governmental programs to provide health care and other resources to its under-paid employees so that it does not have to pay such costs, while ironically Wal-Mart and the Walton family have worked politically against such government entitlement programs.

So while fiscal conservatives like John Stossel feel compelled to present and defend the right of Wal-Mart to ‘create wealth’ via the simplistic arguments of basic capitalism such as explaining why the poor work at Wal-Mart:

“None of them was drafted. None of them was forced to work at Wal-Mart,” said Brink Lindsey, a senior scholar at the Cato Institute. “That means that if they’re working there, presumably, that was the best job they could get.”

and

That’s a myth. Businesses create wealth.

Take the simplest example. I buy a quart of milk. I hand the storekeeper money; she gives me the milk. We both benefit, because she wanted the money more than the milk, and I wanted the milk more than the money. This is why often both of us say “thank you.” Because it’s voluntary, business is win/win. A transaction won’t happen unless both parties benefit. Each party ends up better off than he was before. And when you have millions of successful transactions, you end up very well off — like the owners of Wal-Mart.

Politics In Song and Verse

If you would like to hear the leftist side of the issue in song, David Rovics recently recorded and posted an mp3 entitled ‘Wal-Mart’.

What the People Say

If you are interested in what public opinion has to say on the topic, you can take a look at some National Survey Results on Attitudes on Wal-Mart by The Pew Research Center. One finding:

Overall, 69% of those familiar with Wal-Mart have a favorable opinion of the company. Still, 31% have an unfavorable view, which is a considerably higher negative rating than is accorded to many other major corporations.

In 2003, NPR did a series of stories on Wal-Mart., including a segment on how a small-town’s downtown area has learned to survive in the wake of the arrival of a Wal-Mart. Hear the audio clip Main Street USA, Surviving the Wal-Mart Challenge on the NPR page.

A complex issue with lots of passions on both sides, I’m sure.
(This post is a work in progress….)

 

of Human Slaughter

unauthorized blog coming out of Darfur region in Sudan
http://sleeplessinsudan.blogspot.com/

Aid worker, female, 31, extremely single. Would tell you more about myself, but don’t really want the Sudanese government to kick me out of the country for this… sleeplessinsudan@yahoo.com

Over the last two years, the conflict in Darfur, has caused over 180,000 deaths related to fights between militias, rebels, and government forces. About two million people have left their homes because of the conflict.

 

Firefox Faster - HowTo

firefox 1.5

Get Firefox Now

The about:config trick:

After you get past the Beginner’s Guide stage with Firefox, this “power-user” trick will make Firefox download pages faster by allowing multiple connections so it can download more than one file at a time. (Broadband users only!)

1.Type “about:config” into the address bar and hit return. Scroll down and look for the following entries: network.http.pipelining network.http.proxy.pipelining network.http.pipelining.maxrequests Normally the browser will make one request to a web page at a time. When you enable pipelining it will make several at once, which really speeds up page loading.

2. Alter the entries as follows: Set “network.http.pipelining” to “true” Set “network.http.proxy.pipelining” to “true” Set “network.http.pipelining.maxrequests” to some number like 30. This means it will make 30 requests at once.

3. Lastly right-click anywhere and select New-> Integer. Name it “nglayout.initialpaint.delay” and set its value to “0″. This value is the amount of time the browser waits before it acts on information it receives.