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PhreeZone 15
With in 10 miles of my house I have 3 Walmarts, 2 of which are SuperWalmarts. I also have 2 Sam's clubs. I also happen to have 2 former Sams club buildings and a Walmart building that are sitting empty since no one can fill them. All big box chains are doing this. I have 4 Krogers stores in 5 miles, but only one of them is actually open. The others just sit there empty. 2 Best Buys with in 2.5 miles and only 1 is open. Same situation with ToyRUs and soon its looking like Circuit City is doing the same. Exit 110 is dead and exit 111 on the highway has a brand new shopping center
And tomorrow is a mystery
Parachutemanuals.com
To answer multiple posts:
Reverend Jim: You're right, maybe we could stand for a little "readjustment" in the cost of living area, maybe we're asking for too much as a working public. But also consider that Generation X is supposed to be the first generation that will not be as financially successful as their parents. This is the first time in the history of America that this has happened and it has people kinda rattled.
BlindBrick: great minds think alike! I'm an engineer by schooling but am taking an EMT course right now.
Phree: I have an empty former-Mart by my house and would love to turn it into something fun. Skate park comes to mind, but I'd really like to come up with something we could do that was skydiving related. I'm thinking about some sort of aircraft carrier catapault-like device that would accelerate you and your (deployed) canopy across the ground up to a good "swooping" speed, then cuts you loose so you could practice your swooping indoors and cheaper than riding the plane. Waddaya think?
Elvisio "PT Barnum ain't got nothin' on me" Rodriguez
jraf 0
Walmart lowers the quality of our life not only by taking manufacturing jobs away from the united states (low-cost-country sourcing directive actually makes their buyers seek everywhere but in the US), but also by selling inferior products for top dollar.
The products seem cheap, but Walmart makes a huge profit on them.
They underpay their staff, work them without moercy and are happy to buy products manufactured in Chinese concentration camps.
Soon all our Otters will be going to China, cause we will not be able to afford to jump thanks to all the savings Walmart has given us.
Me Jungleman! Me have large Babalui.
Muff #3275
but guess what, they expected me to work EVERY saturday, which is when I go to the dropzone. So today after trying to negotiate only working 2 sats a month, they told me I couldn't and so I quit!!!
I need jump money, but not if it means working at a place where I won't be able to jump...
so my job search continues...
Sarah
Mother to the cutest little thing in the world...
buckleme 0
Some say F@#k WalMart. I say...
F@#k in WalMart.
Wow. I need to sleep or get laid.
Mary B
Sandillas Rodriguez
Muff Brother #2959 TF #77
RevJim 0
QuoteSo maybe it is late and my mind is dirty but I though that this thread was going to start more like this.....
Some say F@#k WalMart. I say...
F@#k in WalMart.
Wow. I need to sleep or get laid.
Actually, it only took 9 posts to get that far.
Karma
RB#684 "Corcho", ASK#60, Muff#3520, NCB#398, NHDZ#4, C-33989, DG#1
buckleme 0
.
Mary B
Sandillas Rodriguez
Muff Brother #2959 TF #77
RevJim 0
QuoteAhh...I see that now....I was getting bored with the post by that point.....
.
'tis ok, I understand.
By the way, I vote for 'laid'.
Karma
RB#684 "Corcho", ASK#60, Muff#3520, NCB#398, NHDZ#4, C-33989, DG#1
WTF planet does this happen on? 30- 35$ per hour (60-70K /yr) for assembly line & janitorial work???QuoteNope. Joe Blow is quite content to make $30 an hour to turn 2 bolts every 30 minutes, while his cousin John Blow likes making $35 an hour to push a broom (it seems he got carpal tunnel from turning too many bolts per hour, resulting in a strike, a workload shift, a permanent production line slowdown, and a raise). Where else can you expect to get paid more for doing less?
right....
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PhreeZone 15
Ford is actually in a place where they need to lay off skilled labor but the union contract says they can't. Instead of having the guys all sitting around doing nothing they are having them sign in at the start of each day, see if there is work and if not they are cleared to go home for the day while drawing a reduced salery. Most of the guys I know from there are now running their own businesses at home and doing Ford as their side job
And tomorrow is a mystery
Parachutemanuals.com
QuoteOver 70% of all non food products sold by Walmart are made in China. It is true that things seem cheaper, but they are of much inferior quality.
Sometiems but not always. If you buy name brand stuff, the quality is no different than you'd get anywhere else.
Quote
Walmart lowers the quality of our life not only by taking manufacturing jobs away from the united states (low-cost-country sourcing directive actually makes their buyers seek everywhere but in the US)
Forgive me if you have, but try studying some university level business and economics. America is now a service rather than industrial society. Though it's a politcal favorite, so far losing industrial jobs has not been a bad thing. For every single industrial job the US loses, it gains more than one service job to replace it.
As for not buying in America. That's patently false. Wal-Mart buys from whoever is the cheapest for them. There are plenty of domestic companies that meet that criteria and therefore sell to Wal-Mart.
Quote
but also by selling inferior products for top dollar.
You say that like some thign wrong; however, accumulating wealth is the fundemental purpose of capitalism. If you think the price is unfair, don't buy. If enough people agree with you, the price drops. That's another fundemental truth of the capatilistic theory of supply and demand.
Quote
The products seem cheap, but Walmart makes a huge profit on them.
Umm no. If you operate on a discount pricing model you don't see "huge" profits. Wal-Mart reaps a large return on their investment by being incredibly aggressive in their efforts to control costs.
Quote
They underpay their staff, work them without moercy
Actually that's only thier hourly staff. Salaried employees are some among the most well compensated in their occupational field.
Relations with their hourly employees has always been Wal-Mart's weak point, no way to deny that. This is a problem that has periodically been excaberrated by a combination of mangaerial incentives and unscrupulous low level managers.
-Blind
jraf 0
The bulk of their employees are hourly.
What brand name stuff do they sell, if you please?
Accumulating wealth in China is perfect indeed, lets build the Chinese space program.
There is a low-cost-country directive at Walmart. They don't seek in the US too hard at all.
When it comes to profit - read their annual report
Last but not least - if you take some basic college business courses you will learn that economy is a game of balance. Balance manufacturing with service. Balance of payments. Trade balance.
We have exported our manufacturing to China, we are now exporting our service jobs to India, we are exporting our IT and Finance jobs in the same direction.
Our main export to China right now is scrap metal. We, a world superpower are exporting raw materials like some friggin central African country.
Try and buy an American made computer, TV set, DVD or any other high tech manufactured product.
In the name of short term gain we are loosing our competitive advantage...we are loosing the battle for the future.
Me Jungleman! Me have large Babalui.
Muff #3275
You overlooked the third and most important option. Train for a different job that's in demand. What we are experiencing is nothing more than the birthing pains as the US transitions from an industrial society to a service society. Not a whole lot of consolation for those that are too old to retrain, but that the way it works.
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