HOME
ARCHIVE
SEARCH
DV NEWS SERVICE
LETTERS
ABOUT DV
CONTACT
SUBMISSIONS
Tear Down That Wal-Mart
|
||
All right...so I didn't just make that scenario up. It actually happened to Patricia VanLester at an Orange City, Florida Wal-Mart SuperCenter on November 28, 2003. "She got pushed down, and they walked over her like a herd of elephants," said VanLester's sister, Linda Ellzey. "I told them, `Stop stepping on my sister! She's on the ground!' All they cared about was a stupid DVD player." Apparently, VanLester and her sister also cared enough about those stupid DVD players to be on line at 6:00 am to buy one. Wal-Mart is America's largest employer. General Motors used to be America's largest employer but GM is too busy being Mexico's largest employer now, so it's up Wal-Mart to keep consumerism alive and trampling. Wal-Mart was founded by the late Sam Walton. Forget John-boy, these are the real Waltons and their story is a far more accurate illustration of the real American Dream. The Bentonville, Arkansas-based behemoth claims that more than 93 million Americans shop in at least one of its over 4,400 discount stores in the US. Those tens of millions have helped make Wal-Mart the single largest seller of pop music in America but you won’t find anyone trampled during a sale of rap music with "explicit" lyrics because Wal-Mart doesn't sell those kind of CDs. Rifles, knives, handcuffs, or handgun ammunition? No problem. With roughly half of their employees-I mean, "associates"-eligible for food stamps, the Waltons remain steadfastly anti-union. As an internal Wal-Mart document explained: "Wal-Mart is opposed to the unionization of its associates. Any suggestion that the company is neutral on the subject or that it encourages associates to join labor organizations is not true." To drive this policy home, Wal-Mart has become the world's largest importer of Chinese-made products and, the subsequent sweatshop-level prices have been know to cause a stampede or two. "We are very disappointed this happened," Wal-Mart spokeswoman Karen Burk said after the VanLester incident. "We want her to come back as a shopper." Ms. Burk needn't worry. As Louis Uchitelle explains in The New York Times ("Why Americans Must Keep Spending," December 1, 2003), despite a tough economy, "Consumers will keep spending anyway, going deeper into debt to do so if they must. They have too many needs, some that were luxuries only yesterday." Doing his part to promote holiday shopping (and predatory capitalism), Uchitelle says, "Consumers in America spend because they feel they must spend." * Related Article: Unions Are the Answer to Supermarkets Woes by Standard Schaefer Mickey Z. is the author of The Murdering of My Years: Artists and Activists Making Ends Meet (www.murderingofmyyears.com) and an editor at Wide Angle (www.wideangleny.com). He can be reached at: mzx2@earthlink.net.
Other
Recent Articles by Mickey Z.
*
Anarchy and the FBI * Sports Fans of the World Unite! * Stepping on a Flea (Sound familiar?)
*
Epicurean Evolution: A New Theory of (un)Natural
Selection
*
Not All Italians Love Columbus
*
In Our Own Image: Teaching Iraq How to Deal
with Protest
*
"The Truth Has to be Repeated"
*
A Ceremonial Journey: Bush's Progress
*
History Forgave Churchill, Why Not Blair and
Bush?
*
Incomprehensible Reluctance? AIDS Dissent and
Africa
|