WildCat
NWO Master Conspirator
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2003
- Messages
- 59,856
Then what are all the ash trays for?They're not smoking cigarettes...
Then what are all the ash trays for?They're not smoking cigarettes...
What ash trays?Then what are all the ash trays for?
He totallty ignores the fact that engineers, teachers, fire fighters, cops, and a whole ist of other highly-trained professionals are out of work because nobody is higher in those professions because slime like the Koch roaches and the Walton larvae need their tax breaks for CREATING JOBS in the minds of idiots like chinless Mitch and the orange skinned freak from Ohio.In the sense that searching for a job does not guarantee securing a job, that is true. But I think what Neally was trying to point out is that not searching for a job does, in fact, guarantee not securing a job.
The ones SC saw:What ash trays?
There weren't even cigarrette butts on the ground, there were tin cans all over the place for the butts.
You just dropped proof to the contrary in front of us in your video. There is at least one identifiably disabled person there who would need a hell of a lot of special accomodations in most jobs that pay a living wage.
My guess (but I'm not positive on this) is that there were and that they shopped there when they existed, but they went out of business after Walmart came around because even if his family patroned these other businesses, enough people switched over to Walmart to drive the others out of business.
I do know that there are quite a few products they just didn't have access to prior to Walmart, particularly in terms of entertainment, and products for children. The area they are from (I've been there) is just so sparsely populated that you could not get everything available at Walmart prior to its existence, I just don't see how there would be the market to support stores that are very specialized.
But his family still would prefer to not have Walmart as their only shopping outlet, even if it means they didn't have access to certain products due to lack of a Walmart.
I posted a link earlier to a site that sells only American-made clothing, shoes, etc. http://americanapparel.net/Clearly noone can come to these protests unless they are wearing clothes they fashioned themselves, and raised on food grown themselves. Clearly every single person there is there only for their own betterment, and not out of solidarity for others or others' situations.
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I posted a link earlier to a site that sells only America-made clothing, shoes, etc. http://americanapparel.net/
So American-made products are available, but I bet 98% of the protestors wear the foreign-made clothes because they're cheaper. Which makes them hypocrites.
Not that this is a thread about WalMart but I bet most of the poor people there are happy a Walmart is there.
What ash trays?
Sure they can, they just have to buy fewer t-shirts. Just like their grandparents did in the Golden Age when everything was made in the USA and people were happy with a 1000 sf house.Because people who are on a living wage can't spend $22 on a Tshirt, maybe?
I posted a link earlier to a site that sells only American-made clothing, shoes, etc. http://americanapparel.net/
So American-made products are available, but I bet 98% of the protestors wear the foreign-made clothes because they're cheaper. Which makes them hypocrites.
:While smoking cigarettes made by Big Tobacco, stocking the medical tent with products produced by Big Pharma, using Big Electronics products to post on Big Social Networking about how they're sticking it to The Corporate Man and aren't gonna take it any more.
And yet they can afford laptops and smartphones and the necessary subscription fees those products entail.Maybe they can't afford the higher priced because they're out of work....
the circle of:
Hey, I support limiting campaign donations to $10 per person/entity per year. Do the same for party donations. Such a law has no Constitutional issues.It's a large group of people, but my guess is that the majority aren't really anti-capitalism as many here keep suggesting. I'm sure there are probably some who protest capitalism in general, but I think the majority are protesting that the rich continue to benefit disproportionally from the poor and middle class.
One can wear Nike shoes, use cell phones, take aspirin, and even smoke cigarettes while protesting against companies shipping jobs overseas and sitting on profits without hiring, the rich lobbying against jobs bills intended to increase demand, the huge discrepancy in pay between the management of large companies and their workers, the growing amount of the country's wealth going to a smaller number of the richest people, the potential conflict of interest created by allowing corporations to anonymously donate unlimited amounts of money to organizations that endorse and support certain politicians, or lobbying against regulation that might prevent the bad behavior that put us into this mess.
-Bri
Hey, I support limiting campaign donations to $10 per person/entity per year. Do the same for party donations. Such a law has no Constitutional issues.
Now everyone's equal, no one has any undue influence. Sound good?
Or better yet: limit every party's campaign funds to a set, equal amount.
Hey, I support limiting campaign donations to $10 per person/entity per year. Do the same for party donations. Such a law has no Constitutional issues.
Now everyone's equal, no one has any undue influence. Sound good?
Nor do they get the subsidies and tax giveaways that the Walton larvae do.Mom & Pop couldn't match WalMart's prices or selection or convenience.
Hey, I support limiting campaign donations to $10 per person/entity per year. Do the same for party donations. Such a law has no Constitutional issues.
Now everyone's equal, no one has any undue influence. Sound good?