> From: Robert Seeberger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> From: "Dan Minette" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> 
> >
> > From: "Dave Land" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >
> >> On Dec 4, 2005, at 11:16 AM, Gary Nunn wrote:
> >>
> >> > Driving to work, at 5:00 am that morning was a REAL eye-opener. 
> >> > I was
> >> > astounded at the number of people at the Super Wal-Mart. I made 
> >> > the
> >> > mistake
> >> > of stopping there to pick up donuts on the way to work
> >>
> >> OK, I'm home sick from work today, and in my few minutes of
> >> consciousness, I really should be doing something productive, but
I
> >> have to chime in and say, "Gary, you're *CONTRIBUTING* to the 
> >> problem
> >> just by shopping at Wal-Mart!"
> >
> >> Wal-Mart is the corporate equivalent of those rude shoppers. It
> >> shoves ahead in line, it doesn't care whose toes it steps on to
get
> >> the best deal, it honks its horn and gives the finger to other
> >> businesses, and it treats its employees like crap.
> >
> > About a quarter of the increase in productivity in the United
States 
> > was
> > attributable to Wal-Mart.  Productivity gains are independent of
the 
> > pay or
> > benefits received by employees, so one cannot argue that's the 
> > source.
> >
> > Going to the local Wal-Mart, and going to the local mall, one can 
> > easily
> > see the difference in the average economic status of people who
shop 
> > at
> > each place.  Since my kids were looking at jobs at the mall, I can 
> > say that
> > the benefits and wages there were not better than Wal Mart.
> >
> > So, I'm not sure why Wal-Mart is singled out as evil.  Is there
some 
> > reason
> > that inefficiency is inherently moral?
> >
> 
> Wrong question Dan.
> Efficiency has nothing to do with peoples dislike of Wal-Mart.
> But I think a comparison of Wal-Mart and Microsoft with regard to 
> their business practices, why people dislike them, and why one and
not 
> the other has spent time in court over business practices would be 
> edifying. I assume there are more similarities than one might expect 
> at first glance.

Yes.  One of those companies is sued an average of 1700+ times a day
every day, and one isn't.

Ineffiencies *are* the economy.  Perfect efficiencies would lead to 0%
employment and complete economic collapse.

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