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Walmart Taking Away Insurance For 30,000 Workers and blaming rising
costs rather than their ever increasing greed requirements. Walmart can pay living wages, Walmart can provide benefits to its employees. It chooses not to because it bumps their bottom line profits to foist those expenses on to the economies of the localities they infect with their Big Box Hellholes. Make no mistake about it, when you shop at Walmart, you are removing money from your local economy permanently. Part of it goes into the Walton coffers and the other part goes into China. Buying goods at Walmart harms America. Shopping at Walmart is un-American. Patriots vote every day of their lives with their wallets and the choices where they spend their money makes. -- Barbara J Llorente, 71 Cerritos Ave San Francisco, CA 94127. |
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On Saturday, October 24, 2015 at 1:27:29 AM UTC-4, sf wrote:
Idiot. The real sf wouldn't have misspelled "their" as "there" in the subject line. Cindy Hamilton |
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![]() "Cindy Hamilton" > wrote in message ... > On Saturday, October 24, 2015 at 1:27:29 AM UTC-4, sf wrote: > > Idiot. The real sf wouldn't have misspelled "their" as "there" > in the subject line. > > Cindy Hamilton The *pretender/pretenders* are obviously illiterate as well as laughable. Cheri |
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On Fri, 23 Oct 2015 19:27:05 -1000, sf > wrote:
>Walmart Taking Away Insurance For 30,000 Workers and blaming rising >costs rather than their ever increasing greed requirements. > >Walmart can pay living wages, Walmart can provide benefits to its >employees. It chooses not to because it bumps their bottom line profits >to foist those expenses on to the economies of the localities they >infect with their Big Box Hellholes. > >Make no mistake about it, when you shop at Walmart, you are removing >money from your local economy permanently. Part of it goes into the >Walton coffers and the other part goes into China. > >Buying goods at Walmart harms America. Shopping at Walmart is >un-American. Patriots vote every day of their lives with their wallets >and the choices where they spend their money makes. MalWart, and it's "their", not "there"! John Kuthe... |
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On Sat, 24 Oct 2015 04:44:27 -0700 (PDT), Cindy Hamilton
> wrote: >On Saturday, October 24, 2015 at 1:27:29 AM UTC-4, sf wrote: > >Idiot. The real sf wouldn't have misspelled "their" as "there" >in the subject line. > >Cindy Hamilton I know YOU don't care, Cindy, as long as you get your's! :-( Complete egocentricity is an UGLY thing. John Kuthe... |
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![]() "John Kuthe" > wrote in message ... > Complete egocentricity is an UGLY thing. > > John Kuthe... You would be the expert on that. Cheri |
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John Kuthe wrote:
> MalWart, and it's "their", STFU you lunatic! https://www.minneapolisfed.org/publi...al-communities The Wal-Mart effect: Poison or antidote for local communities? Wal-Mart even scares businesses that aren't direct competitors, at least not yet. Banks, for instance, lobbied Congress hard to keep Wal-Mart from becoming an industrial loan corporation, which, in effect, would have allowed it to offer banking services. But some argue that the company can be, and often is, a force for good. Wal-Mart's low prices are hard to dispute, and the biggest benefactors are low-income shoppers. Wal-Mart has been widely lauded for its $4 pharmacy program, which has rippled through drug and pharmacy industries to the delight of consumer advocates. The company has received considerable attention for various environmental initiatives. It has widely replaced store lighting with energy-saving bulbs and given the bulbs prominent space on store shelves. The company announced in November that it has increased the energy efficiency of its buildings and truck fleets by 15 percent since 2005, and has committed to using solar energy at 22 sites. It also promised to cut solid waste from its U.S. stores by 25 percent by next October. Earlier in the year, the company announced a pilot program with a small number of suppliers (among its 60,000 worldwide) who will start measuring, and hopefully reducing, their carbon footprint. So the fedgazette decided to take a closer look at the matter, attempting to answer a seemingly straightforward question: What economic effect does Wal-Mart have on local communities in the Ninth District? Conventional wisdom suggests that Wal-Mart's economic influence is significant and obvious. If that's indeed the case, then we should see palpable change in measures commonly used as proxies for community health—things like jobs, firms, income, population and poverty. So the fedgazette looked at 40 small counties in the district that saw Wal-Mart come to town between 1986 and 2003 and compared them with 49 similarly sized non-Wal-Mart counties in the district (see methodology). The fedgazette then looked at these familiar benchmarks—jobs, firms, population, income and poverty—from 1985 to 2005 to see if Wal-Mart counties performed differently than non-Wal-Mart counties. Readers should understand that all results come with a host of caveats (again, see methodology for examples). The point of this research is not to offer the last word on whether Wal-Mart is helpful or harmful—it is clearly both, though which it is depends on the circumstances. In fact, in this matter Wal-Mart is no different from any new business—large or small—coming to town and competing with incumbent businesses for finite spending in a community. Wal-Mart just competes for a larger share of it, and within a bigger geographic area. As a result, the hope of this research is to better frame the friend-or-foe debate over Wal-Mart. Given the terror that Wal-Mart is purported to inflict on communities, the fedgazette's findings of the firm's economic influence are almost mundane. Despite its kill-them-all reputation, Wal-Mart is not the threat that many fear, at least in terms of economic benchmarks commonly associated with healthy, growing communities. For example, Wal-Mart is widely believed to destroy local firms and jobs and to have a dampening effect on wages. But fedgazette findings suggest the opposite: Firm growth, employment and total earnings were somewhat stronger in Wal-Mart counties and, in some cases, even in the retail sector. The research does suggest that retail earnings per job fell in virtually all counties studied. But they actually fell by less in Wal-Mart counties. |
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John Kuthe wrote:
> Complete egocentricity is an UGLY thing. > > John Kuthe... You're example #1! |
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Cheri wrote:
> > "John Kuthe" > wrote in message > ... > >> Complete egocentricity is an UGLY thing. >> >> John Kuthe... > > You would be the expert on that. > > Cheri Ding! |
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Cindy Hamilton wrote:
>sf wrote: > >Idiot. The real sf wouldn't have misspelled "their" as "there" >in the subject line. 'Zactly... that's gotta be one of our UNeducated UNemployable resident trolls. I shop at Walmart and Amazon as much as I can... I LOVE those stores. About the only time I don't get packages from on line stores delivered is on Sundays and legal holidays when the carriers are off, I already got two deliveries today, a big package of bungee cords for lashing down the 10' X 12' heavy duty cathouse tarp that was delivered yesterday, with a pair of cool weather cycling gloves, and 120 pounds of cat litter. |
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Brooklyn1 wrote:
> Cindy Hamilton wrote: >> sf wrote: >> >> Idiot. The real sf wouldn't have misspelled "their" as "there" >> in the subject line. > > 'Zactly... that's gotta be one of our UNeducated UNemployable resident > trolls. https://groups.google.com/forum/#!search/the$20agononizingly$20slow$20group$20killers |
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On Sat, 24 Oct 2015 09:32:42 -0500, John Kuthe >
wrote: > On Fri, 23 Oct 2015 19:27:05 -1000, sf > wrote: > > >Walmart Taking Away Insurance For 30,000 Workers and blaming rising > >costs rather than their ever increasing greed requirements. > > > >Walmart can pay living wages, Walmart can provide benefits to its > >employees. It chooses not to because it bumps their bottom line profits > >to foist those expenses on to the economies of the localities they > >infect with their Big Box Hellholes. > > > >Make no mistake about it, when you shop at Walmart, you are removing > >money from your local economy permanently. Part of it goes into the > >Walton coffers and the other part goes into China. > > > >Buying goods at Walmart harms America. Shopping at Walmart is > >un-American. Patriots vote every day of their lives with their wallets > >and the choices where they spend their money makes. > > MalWart, and it's "their", not "there"! > > John Kuthe... Send your complaints here X-Complaints-To: -- sf |
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On Sat, 24 Oct 2015 13:55:17 -0400, Brooklyn1
> wrote: >Cindy Hamilton wrote: >>sf wrote: >> >>Idiot. The real sf wouldn't have misspelled "their" as "there" >>in the subject line. > >'Zactly... that's gotta be one of our UNeducated UNemployable resident >trolls. I shop at Walmart and Amazon as much as I can... I LOVE those >stores. About the only time I don't get packages from on line stores >delivered is on Sundays and legal holidays when the carriers are off, >I already got two deliveries today, a big package of bungee cords for >lashing down the 10' X 12' heavy duty cathouse tarp that was delivered >yesterday, with a pair of cool weather cycling gloves, and 120 pounds >of cat litter. You sir, are part of the disease!! Frontline expose: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontl.../walmart/view/ Music: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qw64hRgLBqM Lyrics: http://www.lyricsvip.com/The-Reveren...re-Lyrics.html Results: Data from http://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/balance/c5700.html U.S. Trade Imbalance with China (millions of dollars, to China) Year Amount 1985 6 1986 1664 1987 2796 1988 3489 1989 6234 1990 10431 1991 12591 1992 18309 1993 22777 1994 29505 1995 33789 1996 39520 1997 47695 1998 56927 1999 68677 2000 83833 2001 83096 2002 103064 2003 124068 2004 161938 2005 201544 2006 232548 2007 258506 2008 268040 2009 208688 2010 273063 2011 295422 2012 315053 2013 318417 2014 342632 John Kuthe... |
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John Kuthe wrote:
> You sir, are part of the disease!! > > Frontline expose: **** off you obsessive freakwit! https://www.minneapolisfed.org/publi...al-communities The Wal-Mart effect: Poison or antidote for local communities? Wal-Mart even scares businesses that aren't direct competitors, at least not yet. Banks, for instance, lobbied Congress hard to keep Wal-Mart from becoming an industrial loan corporation, which, in effect, would have allowed it to offer banking services. But some argue that the company can be, and often is, a force for good. Wal-Mart's low prices are hard to dispute, and the biggest benefactors are low-income shoppers. Wal-Mart has been widely lauded for its $4 pharmacy program, which has rippled through drug and pharmacy industries to the delight of consumer advocates. The company has received considerable attention for various environmental initiatives. It has widely replaced store lighting with energy-saving bulbs and given the bulbs prominent space on store shelves. The company announced in November that it has increased the energy efficiency of its buildings and truck fleets by 15 percent since 2005, and has committed to using solar energy at 22 sites. It also promised to cut solid waste from its U.S. stores by 25 percent by next October. Earlier in the year, the company announced a pilot program with a small number of suppliers (among its 60,000 worldwide) who will start measuring, and hopefully reducing, their carbon footprint. So the fedgazette decided to take a closer look at the matter, attempting to answer a seemingly straightforward question: What economic effect does Wal-Mart have on local communities in the Ninth District? Conventional wisdom suggests that Wal-Mart's economic influence is significant and obvious. If that's indeed the case, then we should see palpable change in measures commonly used as proxies for community health—things like jobs, firms, income, population and poverty. So the fedgazette looked at 40 small counties in the district that saw Wal-Mart come to town between 1986 and 2003 and compared them with 49 similarly sized non-Wal-Mart counties in the district (see methodology). The fedgazette then looked at these familiar benchmarks—jobs, firms, population, income and poverty—from 1985 to 2005 to see if Wal-Mart counties performed differently than non-Wal-Mart counties. Readers should understand that all results come with a host of caveats (again, see methodology for examples). The point of this research is not to offer the last word on whether Wal-Mart is helpful or harmful—it is clearly both, though which it is depends on the circumstances. In fact, in this matter Wal-Mart is no different from any new business—large or small—coming to town and competing with incumbent businesses for finite spending in a community. Wal-Mart just competes for a larger share of it, and within a bigger geographic area. As a result, the hope of this research is to better frame the friend-or-foe debate over Wal-Mart. Given the terror that Wal-Mart is purported to inflict on communities, the fedgazette's findings of the firm's economic influence are almost mundane. Despite its kill-them-all reputation, Wal-Mart is not the threat that many fear, at least in terms of economic benchmarks commonly associated with healthy, growing communities. For example, Wal-Mart is widely believed to destroy local firms and jobs and to have a dampening effect on wages. But fedgazette findings suggest the opposite: Firm growth, employment and total earnings were somewhat stronger in Wal-Mart counties and, in some cases, even in the retail sector. The research does suggest that retail earnings per job fell in virtually all counties studied. But they actually fell by less in Wal-Mart counties. |
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