Leave it to the liberal media to blame capitalism for the tragic
trampling death of a Long Island, N.Y. Wal-Mart employee in the
wee hours of Black Friday.

Instead of putting blame squarely on the senseless, rampaging shoppers,
Times economics reporter Peter Goodman outrageously suggests they
are merely victims of a retail marketing machine responsible for
selling capitalism at any cost.

http://www.mrcaction.org/r.asp?U=13890&RID=17339014

===============
**
*Reporter Blames U.S. Business for Wal-Mart Trampling, a "Shopping Guernica"
*

http://www.timeswatch.org/articles/2008/20081201122212.aspx

*The Times economics reporter on the trampling death at an early-morning
Wal-Mart sale: "It was a tragedy, yet it did not feel like an accident. All
those people were there, lined up in the cold and darkness, because of
sophisticated marketing forces that have produced this day now called Black
Friday."*

*Posted by: Clay Waters
12/1/2008 12:35:36 PM *

Times economics reporter Peter Goodman certainly can't be accused of dry
writing. Goodman constantly draws attention to his economics stories (often
well-positioned by editors) with sharp criticism of capitalism, and he
reached a new level of leftist abstraction in his Sunday Week in Review
piece on the early-morning shopping stampede at a Long Island Wal-Mart that
resulted in the trampling death of an employee, "A
<http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/30/weekinreview/30goodman.html?_r=>Shopping
Guernica Captures the
Moment<http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/30/weekinreview/30goodman.html?_r=>
."


>From the high-brow yet histrionic headline (here's some background
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Guernica>on the German bombing of
the Spanish city of Guernica) to the inflated prose, it's good, chewy bias
in Goodman's favored Marxist professor mode (as prominently displayed in his
December 2007 story headlined "The Free Market: A False Idol After
All?<http://www.timeswatch.org/articles/2008/20080102130433.aspx>
").



Goodman is eager to paint the Wal-Mart rampagers as some species of victim
-- if not of capitalism directly, then the marketing that is selling
capitalism to the people in this time of crisis.

*From **the Great Depression, we remember the bread lines. From the oil
shocks of the 1970s, we recall lines of cars snaking from gas stations. And
from our current moment, we may come to remember scenes like the one at a
Long Island **Wal-Mart in the dawn after **Thanksgiving, when 2,000 frantic
shoppers trampled to death an employee who stood between them and the
bargains within.*

*It was a tragedy, yet it did not feel like an accident. All those people
were there, lined up in the cold and darkness, because of sophisticated
marketing forces that have produced this day now called Black Friday. They
were engaging in early-morning shopping as contact sport. American business
has long excelled at creating a sense of shortage amid abundance, an anxiety
that one must act now or miss out. *

This year, that anxiety comes with special intensity for everyone involved
-- for shoppers, fully cognizant of the immense strains on the economy,
which has made bargains more crucial than ever; for the stores, now
grappling with what could be among the weakest holiday seasons on record;
and for policy makers around the planet, grappling with how to substitute
for the suddenly beleaguered American consumer, whose proclivities for new
gadgets and clothing has long been the engine of economic growth from
Guangzhou to Guatemala City.

*For decades, Americans have been effectively programmed to shop*. China,
Japan and other foreign powers have provided the wherewithal to purchase
their goods by buying staggering quantities of American debt. Financial
institutions have scattered credit card offers as if they were takeout menus
and turned our houses into A.T.M.'s. Hollywood and Madison Avenue have
excelled at persuading us that the holiday season is a time to spend
lavishly or risk being found insufficiently appreciative of our loved ones.

After some hyperbole about working hours "being slashed" and health benefits
being "downgraded or eliminated altogether," Goodman concluded:

In a sense, the American economy has become a kind of piƱata -- lots of
treats in there, but no guarantee that you will get any, making people prone
to frenzy and sending some home bruised.

It seemed fitting then, in a tragic way, that the holiday season began with
violence fueled by desperation; with a mob making a frantic reach for things
they wanted badly, knowing they might go home empty-handed.

Interestingly, Goodman's Times colleague, media columnist David Carr,
pointed the finger at the media in his Monday column, "Media and
<http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/01/business/media/01carr.html?sq=>Retailers
Both Built Black
Friday<http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/01/business/media/01carr.html?sq=>
."

This weekend, news reports were full of finger-wagging over the death by
trampling of a temporary worker, Jdimypai Damour, at a Wal-Mart store in
Long Island on Friday. His death, the coverage suggested, was a symbol of a
broken culture of consumerism in which people would do anything for a
bargain.

The willingness of people to walk over another human being to get at the
right price tag raises the question of how they got that way in the first
place. But in the search for the usual suspects and parceling of blame, the
news media should include themselves.

Just a few days ago, the same newspaper writers and television anchors who
are now wearily shaking their heads at the collective bankruptcy of our mass
consumer culture were cheering all of it on.

Carr cited a story from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that "advised
readers to leave the children at home, at least the ones not big enough to
carry the loot, because they will just slow you down."

Media and retail outfits are economic peas in a pod. Part of the reason that
the Thanksgiving newspaper and local morning television show are stuffed
with soft features about shopping frenzies is that they are stuffed in
return with ads from retailers. Yes, Black Friday is a big day for retailers
-- stores did as much as 13 percent of their holiday business this last
weekend -- but it is also a huge day for newspapers and television.

In partnership with retail advertising clients, the news media have worked
steadily and systematically to turn Black Friday into a broad cultural
event. A decade ago, it was barely in the top 10 shopping days of the year.
But once retailers hit on the formula of offering one or two very-low-priced
items as loss leaders, media groups began to cover the post-Thanksgiving
outing as a kind of consumer sporting event.

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