James Roscoe wrote:Come on Robin! I know you are itching to reply to this thread. Flame on!
It's tempting, really tempting.
Really, though, Thomas has expressed much of what I would have said, and Ray J. also covered some ground that's parallel with mine, although I don't really think it's a "class" thing so much as maybe a "urban" vs "suburban" thing, which is more a social than economic division.
In general, I don't think that the rise of the powerful, virtually untrammeled corporation since 1980, with its skewed emphasis on the stockholder and the quarterly balance sheet, is good for communities, the nation or the world, and if it's "free market," it's not the kind of free market that I grew up with and learned to admire. Its goals and its priorities are distorted beyond recognition.
Because of its international growth and the reality that its size allows it to direct the market, Walmart stands as the poster child for all this, and that's why it generates such a visceral response in so many people.
I'm also down on them for their virulent anti-unionism in the workplace, but they don't really stand alone there. I have the same problem with Whole Foods.