ronnie_suburban wrote:Out of sheer curiosity, I just asked the 6 people in my company lunchroom to give me a quick thumbs up or thumbs down on Walmart. 3 said they don't shop there. 2 said they do shop there. 1 was indifferent and doesn't shop there mainly because Target is closer to her house. So, hardly a consensus either way but so much for the 'holier than thou' bullshit.
Maybe we're paying those 3 people who don't shop there too much.
=R=
JasonM wrote:I''m sorry I don't have twice the income required t to survive and pay my bills. I can't always afford to pay twice as much to "support the local guy."
How much do the baggers at TJs make?? I be some of them live off food stamps too. I applied for food stamps once, but was denied because I made too much money off of unemoloyment while I was out of work in bad health and could not even pay my mortgage. I used to shop at my local grocery but it sucked.
I'm sorry, but I'm not too f-ing pretentious to shop at Walmart.........
spinynorman99 wrote:JasonM wrote:I''m sorry I don't have twice the income required t to survive and pay my bills. I can't always afford to pay twice as much to "support the local guy."
How much do the baggers at TJs make?? I be some of them live off food stamps too. I applied for food stamps once, but was denied because I made too much money off of unemoloyment while I was out of work in bad health and could not even pay my mortgage. I used to shop at my local grocery but it sucked.
I'm sorry, but I'm not too f-ing pretentious to shop at Walmart.........
Tjs
http://www.glassdoor.com/Hourly-Pay/Tra ... -E5631.htm
It has nothing to do with pretentiousness. It's a company that reaps billions off the sweat of underpAid employees. It has preDatory business practices and has earned a lot of the bad will it has with a segment of the population.
JasonM wrote:I''m sorry I don't have twice the income required t to survive and pay my bills. I can't always afford to pay twice as much to "support the local guy."
How much do the baggers at TJs make?? I be some of them live off food stamps too. I applied for food stamps once, but was denied because I made too much money off of unemoloyment while I was out of work in bad health and could not even pay my mortgage. I used to shop at my local grocery but it sucked.
I'm sorry, but I'm not too f-ing pretentious to shop at Walmart.........
JasonM wrote:spinynorman99 wrote:JasonM wrote:I''m sorry I don't have twice the income required t to survive and pay my bills. I can't always afford to pay twice as much to "support the local guy."
How much do the baggers at TJs make?? I be some of them live off food stamps too. I applied for food stamps once, but was denied because I made too much money off of unemoloyment while I was out of work in bad health and could not even pay my mortgage. I used to shop at my local grocery but it sucked.
I'm sorry, but I'm not too f-ing pretentious to shop at Walmart.........
Tjs
http://www.glassdoor.com/Hourly-Pay/Tra ... -E5631.htm
It has nothing to do with pretentiousness. It's a company that reaps billions off the sweat of underpAid employees. It has preDatory business practices and has earned a lot of the bad will it has with a segment of the population.
At least TJs starts above the minimum wage. Wal-Mart is at the minimum wage, and as Chris Rock says, "when someone's paying you minimum wage they're saying I'd pay you less but the law won't let me."
looks like TJs employees are underpaid too.....
I make $40+ per hour and it's still difficult to make ends meet sometimes
Walmart employs single moms everywhere, or wouild you rather they work in strip clubs?
JasonM wrote:
Walmart employs single moms everywhere, or wouild you rather they work in strip clubs?
Blown Z wrote:I thought I'd share my RO score despite some of the anti Walmart sentiment here
seebee wrote:JasonM wrote:
Walmart employs single moms everywhere, or wouild you rather they work in strip clubs?
This really needs to be a banner quote on some site.
The GP wrote:Blown Z wrote:I thought I'd share my RO score despite some of the anti Walmart sentiment here
Blown Z-
I love how the Royal Oak bags complement the baskets underneath.
NFriday wrote:I do belong to Sams Club though, but only because it is less than two miles away from me, and I have an associate membership, and so it only costs me $10 a year. I would belong to Costco instead, but the closest Costco is 6 miles away, and I would have to pay $50 for a membership every year.
spinynorman99 wrote:JasonM wrote:
I''m sorry I don't have twice the income required t to survive and pay my bills. I can't always afford to pay twice as much to "support the local guy."
How much do the baggers at TJs make?? I be some of them live off food stamps too. I applied for food stamps once, but was denied because I made too much money off of unemoloyment while I was out of work in bad health and could not even pay my mortgage. I used to shop at my local grocery but it sucked.
I'm sorry, but I'm not too f-ing pretentious to shop at Walmart.........
Tjs
http://www.glassdoor.com/Hourly-Pay/Tra ... -E5631.htm
It has nothing to do with pretentiousness. It's a company that reaps billions off the sweat of underpAid employees. It has preDatory business practices and has earned a lot of the bad will it has with a segment of the population.
Ronnie_Suburban wrote:I (and others here) are hardly the only ones who think that Walmart is horrible. The City of Chicago has fought their entry here vigorously for years. Northbrook just fought them off as well.
Octarine wrote:Not even propane?!? That's crazy.
Vitesse98 wrote:For what it's worth, Costco has a sterling reputation as an employer. I don't shop at those 5-pounds-of-Craisins places, but if I did, I would shop at Costco.
Intrigued that Walmart is embracing organic. That's a pretty big deal, given where Walmart goes many must follow. Iirc, when Walmart shifted its focus from incandescent bulbs to CFLs, it single handedly pushed national trends in that direction.
Vitesse98 wrote:Intrigued that Walmart is embracing organic.
At the risk of sounding more equivocal than any self-respecting blogger is expected to sound, I’m going to turn my attention from the benefits of Wal-Mart’s decision to enter the organic food market to its costs. You’ll have to decide for yourself whether the advantage of making organic food accessible to more Americans is outweighed by the damage Wal-Mart may do to the practice and meaning of organic food production. The trade-offs are considerable.
apopquizkid wrote:Octarine wrote:Not even propane?!? That's crazy.
No, they get pretty crabby about that. They'll be first against the wall when the BBQ revolution comes.
ekreider wrote:Menards ad has the 8.8 lb. Royal Oak lump charcoal for a sale price of $4.99 through April 27 and a mail-in rebate of $2.00 merchandise credit per bag with a limit of four bags per household.
sundevilpeg wrote:And yet Target mystically gets a free pass and a hearty handshake from everyone! Astounding. They are the Minnesota version of Walmart, and I say this as a former corporate employee. [url=http://www.glassdoor.com/Salaries/target-salary-SRCH_KE0,6.htm]They don't look particularly impressive, in terms of average salary - in fact, right on par with WalMart...
Blown Z wrote::roll:
riddlemay wrote:Blown Z wrote::roll:
I guess it's a matter of opinion how far off-topic we are. The original post (from you) is about a reason to go to Walmart, to which others provided reasons not to go to Walmart, to which others replied concerning how valid or not those reasons are when seen in the light of Walmart's competition. Seems to me we're pretty much sticking to the topic--unless the only thing that qualifies as on-topic is the price of charcoal.