First of all, Dyna, your application of the word "yuppie" as a pejorative to everyone 
who shops at a local co-op not only crosses the line to inflammatory rhetoric, in my 
view, but is also quite false.  It's still eminently possible to buy cheap food at 
North Country - buy your food in bulk.  There are plenty of people of quite limited 
means who go the co-op route.  They have certain commitments/convictions you seem not 
to have - which is fine, don't get me wrong.  It's not fine for you to call them names 
for following their beliefs.

Now, I've read all of Mark's posts, and I really didn't hear him saying "no big boxes, 
ever."  I don't want to put words in his mouth, but here are the messages I took from 
his posts:

a) Big boxes are not the panacea you seem to believe them to be.  

I agree with this position.  Big boxes may or may not detract from their surrounding 
communities, depending on the community in question, but we should not have absolute 
faith in their ability to "save" a neighborhood.  Also, in my opinion, big boxes are a 
facet of an unsustainable growth / land use / energy use pattern that we will, at some 
point, be forced to revisit, much as we're having to revisit and at least partially 
undo our 50-year experiment with road-only infrastructure.  The less wholly 
Minneapolis embraces the big box, in my opinion, the more flexible we are, the more 
easily we may resist major problems if the big box trend is reversed.

For instance, what might happen if the third-world economies producing many of our 
retail goods are allowed to develop to the point where they refuse to work for peanuts 
- either due to the gradual increase in living standard promised by free-marketeers or 
by a local revolt against the export economy?  If Walmart cannot push its prices down 
by pushing its suppliers' prices down because said suppliers' bottom line rises due to 
fair pricing for labor, can Walmart still function?  Will the current retail system 
hold up to such a challenge?

b) Given that avenues of local, small business are a major factor in the success 
stories of the most successful areas in the Twin Cities (and many other cities), we 
should do our best to even the playing field between local small business and 
multinational corporations.  This means, at very least, not giving the latter 
taxpayer-funded incentives to locate in our communities.  If Targets and Rainbows are 
truly more efficient, better businesses, let them take care of themselves.  If Jerry's 
turns around a few years from now and demands a handout to stay, we must allow the 
"free" market to rule.

This all leads me to the most fundamental doubt I have about your - and other big box 
boosters' - view of economics: that size is always better.  There are benefits to 
bigness, no doubt.  But I'm not convinced that these benefits have as much to do with 
"efficiency" as they do with economic power.  Walmart has the power to force its 
suppliers to lower their prices by threatening to cut them out.  Walmart has the power 
to squelch competition by losing money at a given store at a rate it can absorb, due 
to its size.  Neither of these are examples of an "efficient" use of resources; they 
are examples of the bullying of the weak by the powerful.

Major corporations have, historically, used their resources in quite inefficient ways. 
 Examples (Enron, Kmart, etc.) surely come to mind.  Think of the loop between the 
producer of a material good, the retailer, and the consumer (who, in classical 
capitalist thought, is her/himself a producer) as an electrical circuit.  Which system 
allows more "current" to escape, the one shifting voltage to a plug it will be 
siphoned off by power-guzzling appliances like CEO Salary and Advertising Budget, or 
the one with a small, steady rate of loss along the transmission line?  I'm not sure 
there's a "factual" answer to this question - especially if one reduces the loss in 
the latter system by shortening the transmission lines in question.

In short, modern centralized economic systems may have the appearance of efficiency 
while paradoxically being the most wasteful resource distribution scheme in history.

In response to some of your specific comments:

"Being that your cite [sic] is 13 years old that means we now have 4 million 
or so farm workers with said illness?"

The borders to this country - as I'm sure you know - are a little bit porous.  New 
sub-poverty migrant workers are available to replace those who die or leave the 
agriculture sector.  Your attempt at refutation here was pretty weak: no counter 
evidence, just a sarcastic tone.

"Most of the local co-ops are a perversion of the traditional co-op 
principles. They employee working class folks at service industry wages 
to serve upper class customers. BTW, I've had friends who work at the 
local food co-ops who can't even afford a car."

Again, little evidence contrary to Mark's point.  One anecdote, which I will 
counterbalance with one of my own: when I worked at a co-op, (Seward) I received 
health care.  My wages, while not stratospheric, were by far not the lowest I've had.  
I know folks in co-ops who make a very decent living - rivaling my current 28K.  
Perhaps not enough to raise a family of four, but how is that different from the 
situation at Cub?

"Some of us work nights."

Your basic approach to this debate has been to paint yourself as the prototypical 
Northsider.  Are you trying to claim no Northsiders would be interested in Friday 
night entertainment?

"Being neither an artist nor financially able to consume art I won't bother them."

Here's why I love art like "obey."  You get to "consume" art for FREE!  What a bargain!

"Bugger off."

Do you really want those of us who do not live on the Northside to eschew spending our 
money on the Northside?  To carefully keep out of your neighborhood?  How many of your 
Northside neighbors trying to improve your community take this stand towards other 
Minneapolitans?  My guess is not a majority.  In my opinion, it would be unfortunate 
if your view was shared.  As a Seward resident, I welcome the input, help, and retail 
dollars of residents every other neighborhood.  When outside of my neighborhood, I do 
my best to find cool local businesses to support (Joe's Market in Como comes to mind).

Really, though.  The concern you express most often on this list centers around crime. 
 Would you advocate a system under which the Northside funded its own cops, without 
help from other Minneapolis taxpayers?  Or are there limitations to how far we should 
"bugger off"?


Robin Garwood
Seward
TEMPORARY REMINDER:
1. Don't feed the troll! Ignore obvious flame-bait.
2. If you don't like what's being discussed here, don't complain - change the subject 
(Mpls-specific, of course.)

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