I dislike Wal-Mart for a lot of reasons. The is just cementing my conviction to not spend any of my money with them. In my opinion, the city leaders and the zoning board have really messed this one up and are also to blame.
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I'm not a fan of Walmart either and avoid going there if at all possible, but I fail to see the issue here. If the residents don't want Walmart to build there, then they either need to convince the landowner not to sell to Walmart or they need to buy the land themselves. Seems like a no-brainer to me.Frankie wrote:http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/educat ... 649676.php
I dislike Wal-Mart for a lot of reasons. The is just cementing my conviction to not spend any of my money with them. In my opinion, the city leaders and the zoning board have really messed this one up and are also to blame.
Since Walmart sells almost nothing made in the USA any more (Sam is turning over in his grave) I care less than nothing for Walmart.Frankie wrote:http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/educat ... 649676.php
I dislike Wal-Mart for a lot of reasons. The is just cementing my conviction to not spend any of my money with them. In my opinion, the city leaders and the zoning board have really messed this one up and are also to blame.
JALLEN wrote:I have never understood the vitriol against Walmart. It is quite irrational, frankly. The company would not be the world's largest retailer if it were not pleasing customers, lots of them, offering the goods and services they want to buy at attractive prices. Operating efficiently, competing, is a requirement for success in commerce, and nobody does that better than Walmart.
The only part of it I understand is the opposition of union members who can't stand to see non-union businesses, or governments, prosper. Not that I agree with it, but I understand their opposition. OTOH, nobody has ever seen Walmart employees marched in to work with guns at their heads. Customers either, for that matter!
Perhaps some don't like the customers, some of whom have attracted ridicule.
Attracting crime is a joke. It's not like they were turning it into Indian gaming or a race track or a brothel, for crying out loud.
That would require them to spend their own money to get what they want. It would require them to grow up instead of crying until the nanny state comforts them.RottenApple wrote: I'm not a fan of Walmart either and avoid going there if at all possible, but I fail to see the issue here. If the residents don't want Walmart to build there, then they either need to convince the landowner not to sell to Walmart or they need to buy the land themselves. Seems like a no-brainer to me.
paperchunker wrote:We shop at Walmart regularly. I get items for our home, clothes for my back, and food for the table at reasonable prices. And the show is really entertaining
That's interesting. Our local Walmart doesn't seem to do anything to catch shoplifters except turn the video over the the cops. The local police FB page regularly has video of people walking out the door with stuff. Not under their shirts either. Couple guys walked out with a trash can (also stolen) with $700 worth of shampoo in it. Another guy walked out with a big screen TV.texanjoker wrote: ...The only part about Walmart I never liked was having to work a patrol beat with a walmart. Their loss prevention is very active and deos a good job catching the shoplifters which was a pain. They would regularly call with a shoplifter in custody that kicked their behinds making it a robbery..all over a $5 tshirt.
RottenApple wrote: .... If the residents don't want Walmart to build there, then they either need to convince the landowner not to sell to Walmart or they need to buy the land themselves. Seems like a no-brainer to me...
I'll bet they like that! Here in my city the cops are there are the time. An APD officer was shot and killed last year over a shop lifter at a walmart.ELB wrote:That's interesting. Our local Walmart doesn't seem to do anything to catch shoplifters except turn the video over the the cops. The local police FB page regularly has video of people walking out the door with stuff. Not under their shirts either. Couple guys walked out with a trash can (also stolen) with $700 worth of shampoo in it. Another guy walked out with a big screen TV.texanjoker wrote: ...The only part about Walmart I never liked was having to work a patrol beat with a walmart. Their loss prevention is very active and deos a good job catching the shoplifters which was a pain. They would regularly call with a shoplifter in custody that kicked their behinds making it a robbery..all over a $5 tshirt.![]()
RottenApple wrote: .... If the residents don't want Walmart to build there, then they either need to convince the landowner not to sell to Walmart or they need to buy the land themselves. Seems like a no-brainer to me...