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Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
Ah, I see you have a grasp of how Canadian politics works. And you obviously also live in Western Canada. I'd guess either Alberta or BC.
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Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
AT did not use "most" incorrectly... he proabably should have put some parenthesis around "made in America," but that has nothing to do with most.
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Sanctions by the US on chinesse goods would be bad for world trade and could lead to bigger trade blocks - with world trade up this year well it would hurt global economic recovery.
In the SEIV id like to see exchange of resources on a treaty type basis ie i have suprlus of organics of 10K per turn you have 10K excess minerals lets swap for x amount of turns or only broken if the other party cant supply. This could be an alternative to trade. |
Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
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I wonder what the minimum portion of the manufacturing process has to happen in America in order for the seller to be allowed to put a "made in America" sticker on it? What if they produced the entire jacket in China, shipped it to America, and then they sewed the zipper on? Can they claim that it's made in America? |
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I've got a chick-friend like this. When she's not getting enough attention from her fellow she starts flirting with me, in fun. Like Western Canada we keep it strictly verbal and above-the-table. But apparently it works, and his jealousy gets her what she wants out of the situation. And despite his occasional threats on my life, we're pretty good friends. |
Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
As long as Western Canada doesn't ever shout out "Oh Washington" when she's maiking love to Ottowa. That would be really akward, and could have serious ramifications for our Free Trade agreement. Not to mention Ottowa might get a complex and have trouble keeping Newfoundland above the artic circle.
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Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
Keep in mind that increasing minimum wage always leads to some people losing their jobs and to inflation. It is a fine balancing act, not to be tread lightly.
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Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
[quote]Originally posted by gregebowman:
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I would imagine most U.S. citizens wouldn't work in the conditions that Chinese workers et. al. are forced to work in. Chinese companies are allowed to dumb raw toxic waste into their rivers and pollute their air - I would challenge anyone who claims there are too many regulations to go to Beijing and then claim they would want to live in that Toxic wasteland. I am not sure what you mean by "sky-high" union wages. But I do know that most equivalent non union workers get paid the $5.00/hour minimum wage with no health benefits. And those federal laws mentioned are being eroded or simply not enforced by the current administration. [ January 15, 2004, 20:18: Message edited by: rextorres ] |
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True or false: US industrial production is less than $140 billion. (US imports from China is about $140 billion). True or false: China has more than 375 Million slaves/prison workers (Chinas total workforce is 750 Millions) Numbers from the CIA factbook |
Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
If you think the place of manufacture is all you have to consider, think again!
Bill Moyers did a feature on Walmart on his PBS show "NOW with Bill Moyers" a few weeks ago. http://www.pbs.org/now/politics/walmart.html Wal-Mart Facts and Figures World's largest retailer, 2003: Wal-Mart United State's largest private employer, 2003: Wal-Mart Wal-Mart's worldwide workforce: 1.3 million Wal-Mart's most 2002 annual sales figures: $245 billion Gross Domestic Product of Switzerland, 2002: 231 billion Number of Wal-Mart stores worldwide: 4,300 Number of Wal-Mart stores opened on October 29, 2003: 39 Average hourly wage of Wal-Mart employee, 2001: $8.23 Average hourly wage of unionized supermarket workers: $10.35 Wal-Mart's price of Kellogg's Corn Flakes vs. competitors price: 56% I had heard they had some labor troubles and lawsuits, but the truth is beyond belief! It gives new meaning to terms like 'skinflint' and 'Scrooge'... Check this out: Their average employee working in the US makes $15,000 a year, $7.22 per hour! These employees gross under $11,000 a year. The company brags that 70% of their employees are full time, but fails to disclose that they count anyone working 28 hours a week or more as full time. There are no health care benefits unless you have worked for the company for two years. With a turnover rate averaging above 50% per year, only 38% of their 1.3 million employees have health care coverage. In California alone it's estimated that the taxpayers pay over $20 million annually to subsidize health care benefits for these employees who get none from this behemoth corporation. According to a report by PBS's "Now" with Bill Moyer, their managers are trained in what government social programs are available for these "employees" to take advantage of so that the company can pass on those costs to the government (meaning taxpayers). It allows them to not only keep their $7 BILLION in annual profits, but to do so by substituting benefits they refuse to provide with benefits paid for with taxpayer dollars. The National Labor Relations Board has issued over 40 formal complaints against the corporation in 25 different states in just the past five years. The NLRB's top lawyer believed that their labor violations, such as illegal spying on employees, fraudulent record keeping, falsifying time cards to avoid paying overtime, threats, illegal firings for union organizing etc., were so widespread that he was looking into filing a very rare national complaint against the company. (The company contributed $2,159,330.00 to GW Bush and the GOP in 2000 and 2002. The NLRB attorney was replaced when President Bush took office.). They force employees to work after ordering them to punch out. In Texas alone this practice of "wage theft" is estimated to have cost employees $30 million per year. Wage theft or "off-the-clock" lawsuits are pending in 25 states. In New Mexico they paid $400,000.00 in one suit and in Colorado they had to pay $50 MILLION to settle one class-action case brought against them. In Oregon a jury found them guilty of locking employees in the building and of forcing unpaid overtime. This company holds the record for the most suits filed against it by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. A lawyer from "Business Week" (not exactly the bastion for supporting Labor) said, "I have never seen this kind of blatant disregard for the law." They had to pay $750,000.00 in Arizona for blatant discrimination against the disabled! The judge was so incensed that he also ordered them to run commercials admitting their guilt. Nearly 1 MILLION women are involved in the largest class-action suit ever filed against a corporation. Although women make up over 65% of this corporations work force only 10% of them are managers. The women who have become store managers make $16,400 a year LESS then the men. The corporation took out nearly 350,000 life insurance policies on their employees. They did not tell the employees and named the corporation as the beneficiary. They are now being sued by numerous employees, and although the corporation has stopped this practice of purchasing what is known as "Dead Peasant Policies", a company spokesperson stated, "The company feels it acted properly and legally in doing this." They practice "predatory pricing": They come into a community and sell their goods at below cost until they drive local businesses under. Once they have captured the market the prices go up. Locally owned and operated businesses put virtually all of their money back into the community which helps keep the local economies vibrant. This corporation sucks the money out of the local community, decreases wages and benefits and ships the profits out of state. This company doesn't buy locally or bank locally. They replace three decent paying jobs in a community with two poorly paid "part-timers". In Kirksville, Missouri when this company came to town, four clothing stores, four grocery stores, a stationary store, a fabric store and a lawn-and-garden store all went under. Eleven businesses are now gone. (The above information can be found in "Thieves in High Places", James Hightower, The Penguin Group, New York, NY, 2003 p. 166 - 193.) In Contra Costa County, northeast of Oakland, the county board enacted a ban on so-called big box stores. Walmart responded with a phony voter registration drive meant to put a measure on the ballot to overturn the ban. For this they paid canvassers a higher wage than they pay their own employees. [ January 15, 2004, 23:45: Message edited by: Baron Munchausen ] |
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Well, I don't know how it works for you, but I'd have to admit that I started it. Few things are as entertaining and without risk as flirting with married (or otherwise firmly attached) women.
Not that I'm trying to derail the topic here or anything. I'm all for calling a spade a spade and Wal-Mart the devil. This is entertaining and without risk as well, though not quite so entertaining... |
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Well, no I didn't start it. Just turns out she liked me and I didn't even know it. Whenever she gets in a spat with her boyfriend, she comes to me. But I'm still in highschool, so maybe this has something to do with the weird dynamics that exist in every highschool that don't exist anywhere else.
(Edit: Sorry for getting the off topic topic farther off topic http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon10.gif ) [ January 16, 2004, 00:28: Message edited by: Renegade 13 ] |
Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
Wal-mart is a particularly bad and unpatriotic (for people who care about such things) company and I don't even step foot in one. They are driving down the wages of the average worker:
by forcing manufacturers to ship out jobs overseas so that their prices are low enough so that wal-mart will buy from them AND by causing competitors to lower prices and ultimately lower wages to compete with them. It's ironic (if I may use that word) that the people whose job they are costing are the very same they expect to come in and shop in their store. It's a downward spiral. |
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Baron Munch, that's very valuable information. and i'm now boycotting walmart.
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Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
I was already not shopping at Walmart just cause they have low-quality crap and are rather crowded (with ailses very narrow and such), dirty stores with products all mixed up and all over the place. And they really are not that cheaper than most places, with few exceptions.
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Dammit our store was clean. And while the 'Target brand' stuff like Utility and whatnot was a hell of a lot less durable than Levi's, it never felt as low-grade as what I could find at Wal-Mart. Though they do have good produce. |
Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
I hardly ever go to Wal-Mart because there isn't one near me. But the few times I've been to one, I thought the store was pretty good. I didn't know about this! http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/shock.gif
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Trying to disengage from one of those positions is one of the hardest things I know |
Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
doesn't sound risk-free.
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Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
You are all missing one other rather nasty side effect of Walmart's low prices for goods.
Sure they pay their staff peanuts. Sure they take the cheapest option at all times, but what do the cheap prices mean? It means they stiff their suppliers, and use their buying power to force down the prices the farmers and manufacturers can charge for their goods, reducing in turn their profit element, and reducing the amount of cash they have to support their businesses, and in turn pay their workers. My advice? go for quality, not cheapness of goods - a farmer near me was a major supplier to Tesco and Asda (owned by Walmart in the UK). HE got so fed up with being told what he would charge that he withdrew from his supply arrangements, and decided to open hs own shop and concentrate on low-volume high quality produce, all organic. Now? Sainsburys ARE BEGGING HIM to supply products, and he can take them to the neogitating table! bloody good effort for him |
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Trying to disengage from one of those positions is one of the hardest things I know </font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">I've only gotten in a situation that might have been close to this once. I leaned on an odd bit of reputation that I may not deserve (that I am a control freak and have compulsion to rationalize romantic situations) and worked into a joke that I would not have anything to do with an S.O. of a friend for four months after the breakup. In the joke I also pointed out that this pretty much takes care of the issue permanently, as no girl seeing a friend of mine is going to go without a man for four months. Really, it was all in fun, I think... |
Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
Is there such a thing as a large chain of department stores that doesn't use practices similar to those of Walmart?
I know there is a small local store in my town that is very particalar about where there clothes come from but I have a bit of a problem paying $180 for a shirt that I can get at a department store of abut $30. I'd really like to buy stuff from stores like this but the price difference is so extreme. |
Re: OT Do you care were the products you buy are made
Loser, know what you mean. I have unfortunately been in the situation where some ribald flirting with a couple of colleagues/secretaries, has led to the situation where they have developed a crush on me (god forbid, are they blind? do they have no taste?) and have decided that they want a red-hot extra-marital consignment of fresh English sausage - now that is a bloody hard situation to get out of if you dont want the girl to turn into a bunny boiler
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