<<I would never say that. But you seem to have missed the point of the comparison. After Hurricane Katrina, Wal-Mart responded quickly with trucks of supplies. FEMA responded quickly by trying to keep the trucks out, and proceeded to make a horrible situation worse. So while you're trying to demonize Wal-Mart, from where I sit, Wal-Mart is not, generally, the bad guy, and is, generally, more effective at actually helping people.>>
Yeah, and Mafia dons give away turkeys at Christmas and Thanksgiving. Here's a concept I think you'd enjoy learning about: public relations. Sending a few truckloads of supplies is a cheap and easy stunt that provides short term relief that in all probability was superfluous. FEMA's responsibilities were infinitely bigger.
<<Okay, let's put it this way: Could be that pissing off customers by raising prices which would negatively effect the bottom line . . . >>
Exactly. Now you're starting to understand why they will try a lot of alternatives before actually passing on the costs of unionization to their customers. Including sharing a little bit more of their corporate revenue and retained earnings.
<< . . . explains in part Wal-Mart's resistance to unions.>>
(sigh . . . ) Once again, the bottom line is all that is needed to explain ANY employer's resistance to unions. It's really pretty basic.
<<Hence the [i.e. because their customer loyalty is based on low prices] resistance to unions. Am I the only one here thinking this is really not that hard to understand?>>
You seem to be the only one with a problem understanding that (1) maximizing profit and senior executive compensation is the primary reason behind Wal-Mart's or any business' opposition to unions and (2) there are many ways the cost of unionization could be absorbed, starting with senior executive compensation and perks and the profit margin, therefore (3) the costs of unionization need not impact directly on the Wal-Mart customer unless the greedy bastard owners insist on keeping their fists firmly clenched over an unfair share of the company profits.
<<So, your hypothesis is that they'll piss off everyone with whom they do business to keep prices low. I'm not an economist, but I have to say, your solution seems, well, not realistic.>>
You don't need to be an economist, just a businessman, or failing that, just someone with average to above-average skills in recognizing how the real world works, to realize that everything is negotiable, including rents, including the cost of supplies, including interest, including even local (municipal) taxes and the availability of tax breaks.
Most business people do not get "pissed off" if someone with whom they have had a long and profitable relationship with them comes to them and says, "Look, I have a problem. This fucking union is costing me $X per day and we can't keep on doing business the same old way. How about some tax relief? How about 10% rent reductions for the next six months?" What if anything do you really think is non-negotiable? People in business have to be flexible. Nobody likes being stuck with an empty building, a decamped tax-paying business, etc. Very few people doing business with Wal-Mart can afford to get pissed off at them, especially if Wal-Mart's demands are reasonable and understandable. Please refer to various academic studies of the Goose and the Golden Eggs.
<<I am kinda curious though if you really think Alderman Emma Mitts, you know, in the show the African-American woman working for the government who responded to what she saw in her community by asking Wal-Mart to step in and replace an abandoned factory with a Wal-Mart, is an asshole. >>
Not at all. I respected her. She had a short-term plan to realize immediate community benefits and she acted on it promptly and effectively.
<<Do you really think her goal was to enrich Wal-Mart and help it exploit the people in her community? >>
See my answer to your last question.
<<On the other hand, Alderman Joe Moore, seems clear to me from his comments in the episode, wanted to keep Wal-Mart jobs out of Chicago, he wanted to keep business and the creation of jobs away because he believed it would be bad for his community.>>
Moore may have been shafted by the producers of the video. There may have been parts of his case that were just left out by design. This is always the problem when you rely on agitprop for your understanding of a situation. However, it's possible too that Moore was a man without a plan and without an alternative vision. Merely opposing Wal-Mart does not automatically confer wisdom, sagacity or even common sense on anyone.
Since this is agitprop, you should consider the idea, actually pretty basic, that the propagandists chose their examples very, very carefully. Joe Moore may not have been the most intelligent and articulate Wal-Mart opponent to have interviewed. The actual location of that particular store may not have been the worst place in America to put a Wal-Mart into. All Wal-Marts are not equally bad for all communities. It might even be that for this community, for this location, for these people, Wal-Mart was a positive development. That does not change the overall position on Wal-Mart generally. For the location in question, Wal-Mart's battle was already won. That location and that battle could have been cherry-picked for various factors - - mainly to set an example, the conclusions of which could be transported into other Wal-Mart battles, the ones that are still on-going. Those are the battles that Wal-Mart needs to win, those are the battles this fascist agitprop shit was really made for. So that in those battles, the arguments of the "Potemkin Village" Wal-Mart can be unthinkingly applied: Wal-Mart good, opponents ass-holes, Wal-Mart good, opponents ass-holes.
<<Yet, oddly, they never mentioned class, and spent a good portion of the episode with a young woman who was clearly not one of the upper class rich, and who benefited from and was even glad to work at Wal-Mart. So, by pointing out that someone not rich benefited from the presence of a Wal-Mart in her community, defending her interests, attacking the interests of the folks who hate Wal-Mart, Penn & Teller were engaging in class warfare? >>
Uh, Prince, the "benefit" (wage slavery) was conferred upon a member of the working class. Get over it. This is how wage-slavery usually works. When capitalists open a new enterprise and offer low-paying McJobs to the desperate and destitute local population, the would-be wage slaves lining up in droves for the few low-paying jobs available do not usually bear illustrious family names like DuPont, Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, Bouvier, Mellon and Astor. They are, like this single mother of colour, members of the underclass. Surprised? Well, you shouldn't be. That's just how it works. The DuPont family has actually contributed none of its members to the work-force on the Wal-Mart floor.
<<More like, you seemed to start with the fascism bit . . . >>
And how else would one describe fascst agitprop?
<< . . . and then pulled out of the air this class warfare claim >>
Imagine - - the owners of the company are union-busters, but class warfare has nothing to do with it. They are altruistically crusading for low prices for the common man and woman.
<<and "Hitlerian in its ridicule" stuff. >>
Yeah, guess you got me there. I should have just called it "Hitlerian" without giving any reason why I thought it was Hitlerian.
<<Or in other words, you went from point A (fascism) to point B (fascism). Circular. >>
Maybe I can help you here. Go to the blackboard and grab some chalk. Write a big letter "A" on one side of the board and a "B" on the other. Join them as directly as possible, i.e. go from point A to point B. You have a straight line. Not a circle. Remedial geometry 101. Hope that helped. You're welcome.
<<And oddly enough, it results in more money in the pockets of the people who work the jobs created and who save money there. Class warfare by benefiting the lower "classes". >>
I think we already discussed this so-called incongruity between the concept of the class war and the "benefits" reaped by the wage-slaves. Yes, it's class war, and yes it does, through the miracle of economic exploitation, grudgingly put a few cents into the pockets of the exploited workers who take the "job" out of economic desperation. The class war aspect is not that these poor exploited souls get paid a few bucks but that the wages they deserve are being held back by a greedy and overnourished parasitic class of owners and senior executives growing fat off the labour of their wage slaves.
<<And oddly enough, it results in more money in the pockets of the people . . . who save money there.>>
Who are probably also being grossly overcharged on what they buy, the difference going straight into the mouths of the parasitic owners and merchants who run the shop. And their ad agencies. But that too is class warfare, since the savings in the pockets of the customers, probably on the whole more affluent than the store workers, comes straight out of what the store workers oughtta be earning. They get the dregs while the bosses and even the customers are skimming off them.
<<But I have to say, I was not aware promoting one's interests was warfare.>>
Class warfare is the sum total of thousands of skirmishes like this one between Wal-Mart and its employees and adversaries. The Penn and Teller video isn't the whole war, obviously.
<<Anyway, that you're reacting to the videos doesn't lessen the fact that you're also clearly trying to stir-up emotional dislike of the episode and Wal-Mart.>>
Nice try but the fact remains, I'm reacting to the video, the video isn't reacting to me. It was made with intent and purpose, both within the context of the class war.