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Larry Greenly
Resident Chile Head
7033
Sun Mar 26, 2006 11:37 am
Albuquerque, NM
Larry Greenly wrote: Someday we'll all grocery shop at WalMart. We won't have any other choice.
I'll grow my own damn food before I'll darken the doors of a Walmart or Sam's Club ...
James Roscoe
Chat Prince
11034
Wed Mar 22, 2006 6:43 pm
D.C. Metro Area - Maryland
A.B. Drury wrote:I'm going to stir this pot a little; what is everyone's disdain with Wal-Mart? I'm not particularly fond, myself, but I'm curious why people prefer not to shop there.
A.B. Drury wrote:I'm going to stir this pot a little; what is everyone's disdain with Wal-Mart? I'm not particularly fond, myself, but I'm curious why people prefer not to shop there.
Jo Ann Henderson
Mealtime Maven
3990
Fri Feb 16, 2007 9:34 am
Seattle, WA USA
I'm with you, A.B. I don't get it. Okay, so the small guy can't compete. The small guy just needs to figure out how to specialize. Then the small guy becomes the big guy -- like Whole Foods. Go Figure!A.B. Drury wrote:I'm going to stir this pot a little; what is everyone's disdain with Wal-Mart? I'm not particularly fond, myself, but I'm curious why people prefer not to shop there.
Larry Greenly
Resident Chile Head
7033
Sun Mar 26, 2006 11:37 am
Albuquerque, NM
Stuart Yaniger wrote:A.B. Drury wrote:I'm going to stir this pot a little; what is everyone's disdain with Wal-Mart? I'm not particularly fond, myself, but I'm curious why people prefer not to shop there.
It's a class issue, at the root of things, and a general dislike of successful and powerful capitalist enterprises.
Jo Ann Henderson
Mealtime Maven
3990
Fri Feb 16, 2007 9:34 am
Seattle, WA USA
The little guy needs to find a niche market and stick to it, then they won't be in a position to be squeezed by Wal-Mart, who specializes in nothing but volume (thereby lower prices). Success breeds success = metestisizing. The reason the traffic flow is screwed up is because 80% of the population is trying to get into the parking lot. Wal-Mart is not doing it by themselves! Consumers are as much the culprit!Larry Greenly wrote:Oh, puhleeze. A class issue. I'm a capitalist, too.
Other than squeezing the little guys, metastisizing to every corner and screwing up traffic flow in residential neighborhoods, screwing their employees on time and benefits, selling the labors of sweat shops, and parking nightmares, there's nothing wrong with Wal-Mart.
Just a few weeks ago, Wal-Mart was trying to place a superstore in Albuquerque's main landing field for our balloon fiesta--the largest in the world. Luckily, they lost. No one in Albuquerque is more than a few minutes from a Wal-Mart. How many do they need?
A.B. Drury wrote:All good input. While I'm not naive enough to believe that Wal-Mart has not been involved in shady business practices, I still have no hard information that I could lean on when making my principles against patronizing Wal-Mart.
I think it is very "trendy," for lack of a better word, and "accepted/encouraged" in certain circles to dismiss Wal-Mart. All-in-all, it really doesn't matter what oters think, I'm just curious.
Me? I don't like the crowds; collisions in aisles, questionable people, and the general notion that a lot of people LOVE Wal-Mart and actually make a "deal" out of going there--that perplexes me to no end. . . . Quality of goods is likely sub-par, and noticeable--caution has to be taken when browsing certain products. One-stop shopping for toothpaste, bread, batteries, a magazine, and a package of athletic socks can't get any better/affordable than W-M. The food, for the most part, is as decent as you'll find at any other run-of-the-mill grocery store, AND at better prices. No, it's not "Wild Oats" or "Whole Foods" with health nut-haven and "stick it to te Big Man" mentality, but I'm not working for the little man--I'm working for ME Besides, it seems Whole Foods may be getting a little big for its own good, anyways. What's next?
And, Jo Ann, you asked about Wal-Mart's own brand--they have a store brand called "Great Value," FYI Sometimes it's a good deal, otherwise you're REALLY getting what you pay for!
Larry Greenly
Resident Chile Head
7033
Sun Mar 26, 2006 11:37 am
Albuquerque, NM
Stuart Yaniger wrote:It's not how many "they need," it's how many consumers want. No-one shops there at the point of a gun.
Larry Greenly
Resident Chile Head
7033
Sun Mar 26, 2006 11:37 am
Albuquerque, NM
Jo Ann Henderson
Mealtime Maven
3990
Fri Feb 16, 2007 9:34 am
Seattle, WA USA
Being from NY, I assume you've shopped at Macy's!Thomas wrote:Almost sums up why I don't shop there. I also don't shop at Lowes, Home Decrepit, or just about any other chain like them.
My distaste for these places is neither political nor knee-jerk, as Stuart implies.
In general, I find these large chain stores one more step on the downward ladder of civilization.
I grew up in a major city, if NY is still a major city. I loved shopping where I knew the people, could talk while shopping, could even share something of life with them, could certainly trust their advice as well as their products. When I opened my wine retail shop in Manhattan, small, comfortable, and trustworthy was the modus operandi. I don't get that feeling in large chains. Here''s what I get from them.
I find the general product quality lacking, often not worth the cheaper price. I wonder where they would be without injection molding???
I find the customer service ok--sometimes--but it would be even better if the person taking care of me had more knowledge than I about the product or the process for which the product is used; or at least be able to form a coherent sentence.
I find the size and confusion in such places a waste of my valuable time.
I find that their buying habits geared mainly toward price means that they may not get back in the store the same product that I came to love--if I could ever come to love any of the cheap stuff they usually offer.
I find the general atmosphere of these places dehumanizing, the lighting epilepsy-inducing, and the flooring almost intended to keep me from standing still.
Did I mention that their cheap products prove the old saying, you get what you pay for? I hadn't? Well, I ought to have.
Jo Ann Henderson wrote:Being from NY, I assume you've shopped at Macy's!Thomas wrote:Almost sums up why I don't shop there. I also don't shop at Lowes, Home Decrepit, or just about any other chain like them.
My distaste for these places is neither political nor knee-jerk, as Stuart implies.
In general, I find these large chain stores one more step on the downward ladder of civilization.
I grew up in a major city, if NY is still a major city. I loved shopping where I knew the people, could talk while shopping, could even share something of life with them, could certainly trust their advice as well as their products. When I opened my wine retail shop in Manhattan, small, comfortable, and trustworthy was the modus operandi. I don't get that feeling in large chains. Here''s what I get from them.
I find the general product quality lacking, often not worth the cheaper price. I wonder where they would be without injection molding???
I find the customer service ok--sometimes--but it would be even better if the person taking care of me had more knowledge than I about the product or the process for which the product is used; or at least be able to form a coherent sentence.
I find the size and confusion in such places a waste of my valuable time.
I find that their buying habits geared mainly toward price means that they may not get back in the store the same product that I came to love--if I could ever come to love any of the cheap stuff they usually offer.
I find the general atmosphere of these places dehumanizing, the lighting epilepsy-inducing, and the flooring almost intended to keep me from standing still.
Did I mention that their cheap products prove the old saying, you get what you pay for? I hadn't? Well, I ought to have.
Stuart Yaniger wrote:There's an interesting thing here- Thomas complains that the employees are not very competent and Larry complains that they're underpaid and exploited. So we should pay top-dollar and bennies to dummies and incomps? Or just pay more for better people and let the dummies starve?
James Roscoe
Chat Prince
11034
Wed Mar 22, 2006 6:43 pm
D.C. Metro Area - Maryland
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