While I'm as opposed to "subsidies" as anyone, it's absurd to classify a subsidy as "stealing". The act of taxation is the part that's "stealing".
Ah, yes, poor Walmart. They are the victims because they get taxed! Never mind the fact that Wal-Mart cost taxpayers roughly a billion in subsidies each year. And this doesn't even take into account things like, this week Wal-Mart
pleads guilty to dumping hazardous waste and will pay $81 million. But they're innocent, right?
Or the fact that because Wal-Mart pays their employees so little, the majority of them are forced to be on government assistance programs. Walmart is costing the taxpayers roughly
$2.6 billion a year when including programs like government housing and food stamps. Americans are so stupid they actually believe they are paying less for Walmart products when in reality the money they have to pay in taxes makes Walmart one of the more expensive places to shop. And it really sucks for those of us who do not shop there because our tax dollars are used to subsidize the company just the same. This is the real difference between Liberals and Conservatives. Conservatives like handouts for companies, because they think it is virtuous capitalism at work. But giving tax dollars to the poor and needy? That's Socialism! Just listen to how cinepro bends over backwards to make excuses for Walmart's business practices. FOX News does the same thing because Walmart gives them money. One pro-Walmart, anti-Union skit on FOX actually had an ad banner saying, "
This message brought to you by Walmart"! I mean you just can't make this stuff up.
Walmart also
systematically challenges property tax assessments to chip away at its property tax bills, costing local governments several million dollars a year in lost revenues and legal expenses.
Tell me cinepro, when exactly did you sell your soul to the Capitalism lie? I gave you a clear example of unambiguous, indefensible theft in Wal-Mart refusing to pay its workers their earnings. You completely dodged it.
Obviously, if a person or company cheats on their taxes (i.e. breaks the law), they are then technically "stealing" buy not paying what the law says they should. But you don't seem to be accusing Walmart of illegally cheating on their taxes.
I'm accusing them of manipulating the system in ways that makes theft legal. That you would refuse to see the evidence and continue to make excuses for them, all because technically it is "legal," misses the point that it is entirely unethical. The fact is they lie, they cheat and steal in every sense of the term, but because they are such a powerful company with the money to influence politicians, they typically get away with it.
And if you're so caught up in what's legal, then Walmart steals from workers and this is proved by the fact that they've been forced to settle in dozens of nationwide lawsuits in which they refused to pay overtime to those who worked it. You see, Walmart manipulates the system, the rules and the people involved, all for the purpose of maximizing profits. They cut every corner imaginable and the workers are the ones carrying the burdens, as they are expected to work more and more even when they are told no overtime will be paid. Ethics doesn't have a role in anything Walmart does. Even when they get caught, they continue to break the law because they know most of the time they will get away with it, and ultimately it is profitable to steal.
In 2007 Walmart
settled a major lawsuit:
The United States Labor Department announced yesterday that Wal-Mart Stores had agreed to pay $33.5 million in back wages plus interest to settle a federal lawsuit that accused the company of violating overtime laws involving 86,680 workers.
In 2009
Walmart lost another lawsuit:
Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, forced employees in Oregon to work unpaid overtime between 1994 and 1999, a federal jury found Thursday in the first of dozens of such lawsuits across the country to come to trial.
Walmart had to pay roughly $5 million in back wages just
last year:
"Thousands of employees will see money put back into their pockets that should have been there all along," said Nancy J. Leppink, deputy administrator of the Labor Department's wage and hour division, in a statement. Walmart is also being investigated by the Department of Justice and the U.S. Congress over allegations that it systematically bribed Mexican officials in order to obtain permits for new stores.
And last August more than 20,000 New York Walmart employees filed a class action lawsuit
complaining that:
Gamble claims that while she worked at Wal-Mart's store in Centereach, N.Y., she and other hourly workers were routinely locked in the store at night where they would have to restock merchandise and count out the cash registers, even though the workers had already gone off the clock. Gamble says the tasks often took two extra hours. "What I want from this lawsuit is simple, and it is fair. When people work, they should get paid," Gamble said in a statement.
Do you see a trend of illegal behavior, cinepro? Obviously Walmart has no intention of obeying the laws.
But hey, you and your wife have to go with your hearts. I'm sure they're in the "Right."
I mean, what would Jesus do, right? Just a few months ago Wal-Mart found out that one of its employees was eating out of a bag of already opened Oreos. This 63 year old lady said she did so because she wasn't making enough money working at Walmart to feed herself and her family. Wal-Mart decided that firing her wasn't the best thing to do. No, it decided that the best thing to do was to
make sure she serves six months in prison for felony theft. Over a few Oreo cookies! But hey, they also gave a few hundred million to Right Wing causes, er, I mean "charity", so I guess they have ethics after all.
Everyone that works and shops at Walmart is ugly, so they're lying if they have attractive people in their ads? And if you look at their ads on YouTube, there are many that have people that aren't conventionally "attractive".
Not that they're ugly, but that they're depressingly sad to look at. People you just know are scraping to get by in life. This complaint would be "weird" if it were any other corporate advertisement, but Walmart employees are particularly depressing to look at. Some of them look like they haven't showered in weeks.
As with any business, they obviously care a lot about making money, but they do give back to the local communities:
Are you really
this naïve? You read the company's carefully crafted talking point from their website but you don't get into the details as to what these donations actually are and how they benefited the "local communities" and not their shareholders.
The Wal-Mart Corporation often brags about the philanthropy efforts of its founding family, the Waltons, but the bulk of the money donated to education goes to efforts that support vouchers, charter schools, and tuition tax credits. According to USA Today, Wal-Mart donated more than $250 million to such causes in six years time.
In fact, the National Education Association (NEA) charges that the late John Walton provided tens of millions of dollars towards the anti-public education movement and sat on the boards of several major pro-voucher organizations.
Don't let Wal-Mart's advertising fool you. This company is stealing tax dollars from the public education system, and their 'donations' hurt more than they help.
You're caught up in this typical Right Wing tactic of using "charitable" contributions to exonerate someone from wrongdoing. Republicans tried this crap with Romney and now you're doing it with Walmart.
The great thing about capitalism is that one day, Walmart will be gone (or a shadow of what it is today). Just like Sears, Montgomery Ward, and countless other retailers, eventually something better will come along, and people will choose that better option and Walmart will shrink. It won't happen because of the government, or unions, or whiners. It will happen because an entrepreneur will have a better idea, and people will support it.
Then you obviously do not understand Capitalism very well. Capitalism unregulated results in monopolies, period. That's because after a market has progressed to a certain point, only a few can seriously compete, and what drives the success is ultimately the money on hand. Wal-Mart was never something "better" in the sense the Capitalism gurus like to talk about. For instance, they don't provide better services or better quality products. Not even close really. Lots of its products are made from worthless plastics, designed to break within a year so customers will need to buy another one. Wal-mart doesn't provide better service either. The reason they are successful is because they invested early in electronic scanning system which dramatically cut their labor costs. They also have the money to invest in overseas labor markets. But ultimately, they succeed because it is run by an immoral BOD who puts profit above everything else. This is why the company can invest in foreign labor, abusing workers because their third world governments allow it. The result is ridiculously cheap products for which they get to charge anywhere from 4 to 20 times as much at the register. Now if you think this is what our founding fathers had in mind with Capitalism, then you're seriously in need of a history lesson. This was precisely the kind of thing folks like Thomas Jefferson and John Adams despised. But their money has a loud voice, and it says their success is explained as nothing more than pure Capitalism, meaning pure "American." That's the deception you've fallen for. It is anti-American not use your power and influence to avoid paying workers a just compensation.
And the reason these Mom and Pop stores, who provide infinitely better service, cannot compete with Walmart, has everything to do with unfair competition; the antithesis of what Adam Smith proposed. For instance, why does Wal-Mart, which is already an established monster of a corporation raking in billions in profits every year, get subsidized by local governments while the entrepreneurs, these heroes of Capitalism, do not? Because Walmart has the wealth to negotiate with. It has the wealth to buy local politicians. It has the wealth to invest in large scale technological upgrades that reduce labor costs. It has enough wealth so that it can afford to charge customers at "below cost"certain products, for just to drive their local competitors out of business. It can take an infinite number of risks to corner a market, that no rising entrepreneur could.
A secret behind Wal-Mart’s rapid expansion in the United States has been its extensive use of public money. This includes more than $1.2 billion in tax breaks, free land, infrastructure assistance, low-cost financing and outright grants from state and local governments around the country. -
http://www.walmartsubsidywatch.org/index.html
And what do you call it when Walmart sends negotiators to local governments to convince them it is in their best interest to subsidize their new stores, by telling them they will ultimately profit from sales tax revenue, and then shortly after their building is constructed, Walmart decides to drop everything and move to a newer building just down the road? Small towns who buy into these scams end up sacrificing tax payer funds, and giving up things like public services, more school teachers, firemen, etc.
I've brought up this point before. There are two former Walmart buildings withing a five mile radius of my home. Walmart used they for a short period before packing up everything and moving down the road just across county lines. Apparently, this is
something they do all across the country, leaving local communities with large, abandoned facilities who are in no position to negotiate (since they're already paid for!) with the few companies who could possibly use them. In the case of the Walmart in Cathedral City, the company packed up and left just days before the local government was going to receive 100% of the sale tax, according to the deal they had made. Walmart instead opened up shop just two miles down the road on the other side of the property lines so Cathedral City would receive nothing. There are currently 30,000,000 square feet of empty Walmart stores. Enough to build 30,000 classrooms!