> From: Dan Minette <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> 
> From: "The Fool"

> 
> > Do you exclude food from your calculations? (Most food isn't grown
in
> > Red China)
> 
> No, I didn't realize that certain things "didn't count" as products
for
> you.  But, I'll be happy to look at non-food items as a catagory. 
The
> superpermarket sales (which clearly includes non-food items, but what
the
> heck) is about $50 billion.  That leaves almost 250 billion in
non-food
> sales.

Because most wal-marts don't have a supermarket section?

> 
> >Do you also exclude srevices wal-mart has like their automotive
service
> dept?
> 
> Are you seriously arguing that the $18.95 lube special is a
significant
> portion of the Wal-Mart income?  I'd guess that this would be balaced
out
> by the non-food items sold in the supermarket, but let me be very
very
> generous and assume that these sales amount to about $20
billion/year.
> That still leaves about $220 billion/year.  15 billion is about 7% of
that.
> Well under 10%.
> 
> Unless you can find a way to make about 90% of Wal-Mart's sales "not
count"
> for one reason or another, your statement is false.  I've been very
> generous in granting you the right to exclude things, and still end
up with
> less than 10% from China.

Are you seriously saying that walmart sells for $1.00 goods for every
$1.00 of goods they buy? I thought they made 3.x % profit after taking
out the percentage for average pay for workers (including--if
any--benifits) and sales taxes.

Then list for us how much in goods they get from other countries like
mexico, honduras, india, taiwan, japan, korea, etc.

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