Ah yes, Walmart the friend of the working class. Buy cheap 3d world crap to cause the Americans' factories to shutter, then happily take the working man's welfare bennies in payment for said cheap crapola. Win-win!
Buying cheap 3d world crap benefits the workers in those 3d world countries, who need it a lot more than laid off American workers.
I unashamedly believe that workers in Vietnam are just as important as workers in the US.
Agree. There is a reason why the Fortune Global 500 is (1) Dominated by mass market retailers and oil companies; and (2) The WTO takes a hands-off approach to global labor and environmental laws.
Let's also remember that Wal-Mart keeps prices low by keeping wages low, then sending its workers out for food stamps, housing assistance and public health care. Something about an "Honest day's work should pay the bills?"
This is what ticks me off the most--the fact that I'm supposed to subsidize a global conglomerate's workers
because the owners/managers don't want to pay a true working wage.
And yes, I do know that I'd have to pay more for goods and services if Walmart didn't exist. But here's the thing: In an ideal world, the world that we should have inherited, workers' wages (including
our salaries) would have kept pace with productivity since the 1950s, so that the minimum wage would now be ~$25/hour and our ability to pay for those goods and services would be concomitantly healthy, leaving us in an even longer period of post-WWII prosperity than actually happened (in other words, a period of prosperity continuing into the present).
Instead, though, we voted for oligarchs (and people who sympathized with oligarchs) who were savvy enough to distract us with "religion"/"patriotism"--and, of course, good old racism and classism--so they could emplace and solidify policies and strategies to suppress wages and salaries for middle- and lower-class folks; as a result, we're now finding out what living in a Big Corporate -controlled economy bent on maintaining and even expanding income inequality (otherwise known, especially in the tropics, as a "banana republic") feels like.
:now considering how to select the optimal cardboard box in which to retire on a (future) beach in Orlando:
/snark off