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"Lube up, lean into the fire, and laugh"

 
 
Reply Wed 18 Jun, 2003 09:26 am
If you have not read San Francisco Gate's Mark Morford's irreverent, witty and downright funny comments on current events, you have not had your laugh for the day. The funny on Wal-Mart is only one item in today's S.F. Gate.
-----BumbleBeeBoogie

"Lube up, lean into the fire, and laugh"
By Mark Morford: [email protected]
http://sfgate.com/columnists/morford/a/

== MARK'S NOTES & ERRATA ==
Where opinion meets benign syntax abuse

== In A Wal-Mart Kind Of Hell ==
Censored magazines, banned music and pseudo-Christian fun at America's scariest retailer
(By Mark Morford)
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2003/06/18/notes061803.DTL

Stop. You've found it. This is the place. Americana HQ. Patriotism in a giant tin bucket. This is where souls recoil, children wail, dreams die.

This is Wal-Mart. The glorious consumer mecca, the epic wonderland / wasteland of prefab landfill merch, not only the world's largest and most powerful retailer and the most aggressive snarling frightening happy-place marketer and quite possibly the most hideously overlit soul-draining monster empire you will ever know in your entire lifetime, but also the very multibillion-dollar pseudo-Christian kingdom that censors their offerings and refuses to sell certain music CDs and bans "risque" beer-'n'-babes mags like Maxim and FHM and Stuff, because, you know, pretty girls are evil.

And Wal-Mart just recently decided to cover up the covers of other, less garish but apparently equally "naughty" women's mags like Elle and Cosmo (which, BTW, is owned by Hearst, as is SFGate) and Mademoiselle
due to racy or suggestive images -- but will not, presumably, cover up the truly dangerous and psychologically debilitating mags like Better
Homes & Gardens, Mary-Kate and Ashley and Cake Decorating & Dog Mange Monthly. Go figure.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2003/06/06/national1013EDT0533.DTLnl=fix

We must try to focus. We must zero in. Innumerable are the intellectual
insults and karmic assaults Wal-Mart represents, and hence we shall concentrate on the censorship issue. Because it matters. We wish it didn't. But it does.

It might seem mild. It might seem innocuous, this magazine cover-up, this prosaic Bible-lickin' censorship, merely representing Wal-Mart's ostensible pro-family nightmarish dystopian mega-ethos of perky corporate sweatshop happiness and their infamous claim that they are merely responding to their customers' wishes when they remove products,
block out words, cover up those horrible boobies.

People complain, they claims, customers call in and bitch that their kid might've seen a racy magazine cover and asked one too many questions about just what "orgasm" or maybe "pleasure" or even "happiness" means, and the parent was all flustered and humiliated and confused and hence Wal-Mart, being the good falsely sanctimonious citizen, not wanting to offend the American Family, covers up the mags or removes them ntirely. How thoughtful.

Except there's a bit more to it than that. Except the groups that complain about the mags are often the same ones that cheer Wal-Mart's censorship decisions, groups like the Tupelo, Miss.-based American Family Association (AFA - afa.net), one of those desperately hyper-Christian anti-choice anti-gay anti-porn asexual pseudo-ethical groups representing "traditional" family values -- like, you know, massive reeling intolerance. And hellfire. And the end of icky tongue kissing.

And, of course, the safety of America's checkout lanes. This is what they really care about. Because as we all know, if there's one overlooked extant hot spot of debased American culture, it's our unbridled freewheelin' checkout lanes. Shield your eyes, little Timmy, it's the new issue of Glamour. Gasp.

Of course it shouldn't matter. Of course we shouldn't care. There is no shortage of Maxims or Cosmos in the world, and if you don't like Wal-Mart, hey, don't shop there, and if you live in one of the smallish Midwest towns the gluttonous and voracious Walton family hell-beast has invaded like a plague and you have no real remaining shopping options because Wal-Mart has killed all the small family-owned competition, well, too bad for you.

Here is why it matters. Here is why you should care. Because Wal-Mart is not merely a store. Wal-Mart is not merely a hollow and deeply frightening Christian-values mega-retailer that makes you feel like you
need a karmic shower and soul de-lousing immediately upon exiting the
vacuum-sealed whooshing glass doors.

Wal-Mart shapes ideas. They affect mind-sets. They influence cultural
perspectives. This is frightening and wrong. They ban (or "sanitize") the latest Marilyn Manson CD? They don't carry Maxim? Then for 100 million benumbed Wal-Mart regulars, Marilyn and Maxim might as well not even exist. Why not choose a nice issue of, say, Guns & Ammo and the new Shania Twain instead? There there, Timmy. Now hush up and let Daddy
buy some bullets and a vat of Cheez Doodles.

Do you understand? Do you see the danger? That's 100 million customers
per year, $200 billion in annual sales, 3,000 stores and growing fast, and isn't it just wickedly telling that the state with the largest number of Wal-Marts in the entire country is, by a wide, wide margin, Texas? Pretty much says it all, really.

http://pbs.org/itvs/storewars/stores2.html

Wal-Mart manipulates the culture. They represent a type of cultural myopia and a prefab brand of hollow sexless Americana and a value
system that does nothing to promote any core conviction you genuinely
care about, and censorship decisions like theirs are a threat to all that is good and sexy and alternative and righteous and naked and I don't care how cheesy sexist frat-boy stupid Maxim magazine is, its message isn't 1/100th as poisonous or dangerous as much of the deleterious junk Wal-Mart hawks, the AFA lifestyle they endorse.

http://pbs.org/itvs/storewars/stores3_2.html#censor

Let's put it this way. Wal-Mart is all too happy to pummel customers with mountains of toxic processed foods and Teen People and giant tins of barbecued popcorn and sweatshop-made T-shirts and gaudy porcelain-clown bookends and giant bins full of stuffed teddy bears made in Malaysia.

http://pbs.org/itvs/storewars/stores3.html#sweat

All well and good. Hey, they're a discount retailer, after all. Horrible landfill merchandise and giant ads for Doritos and tons upon tons of plastic crap you really don't need intermixed with a few things you actually do, and deep deep deep this nation is in a BushCo recession so of course Wal-Mart is flourishing.

Of course, they also sell guns. Did we mention the guns? Oh yes. How's
that for a message -- hey kids, don't look at the impossibly pretty half-naked Photoshopped model on the cover of Elle because your undereducated little mind might get corrupted and you're just not ready
for the word "sex" in bold 48-point Helvetica. But here, have a nice Remington .22. Now scamper off and go kill something, sweetie.

Wal-Mart is, in short, deciding what America needs based on the shockingly uptight whims and intolerant perspectives of the hard Right.
This is why you should worry. This is why you should care. The arbiter of taste for much of the country is not the media. It is not the movies. It is not Britney or Keanu or MTV.

It is a giant suckass superstore, one that aggressively works every single day to drain out any semblance of voice or personality or alternative viewpoint and works harder than any other company in the nation to kowtow to the masses and keep the nation in a nice big hole of casual blind lockstep sameness without the nation even knowing any better. Ah, just like BushCo. Just like America.

Except, you know, cheaper.
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 1,507 • Replies: 14
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cjhsa
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Jun, 2003 09:35 am
I may not like it either BBB, but the fact is, it's their store, they can do whatever they want, sell whatever they want. Just shop somewhere else.
0 Replies
 
snood
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Jun, 2003 11:11 am
I like Wal-Mart. I think you can shop there and appreciate some of the deals you can get without necessarily being a trailer-trash, knuckle-dragging, inbreeding, mindless Christian dogma-espousing lowlife.

Each his own.
0 Replies
 
patiodog
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Jun, 2003 11:21 am
Watch it, bud, I grew up in a trailer, and I want to firebomb a Walmart as much as the next radical commie pinko fag hippie.
0 Replies
 
cjhsa
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Jun, 2003 11:42 am
By the way, the Walmart near where I live currently doesn't sell guns. At first they did, then they pulled them, then they brought them back, only to pull them again.

As long as they sell ammo, I really don't care...
0 Replies
 
CodeBorg
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Jun, 2003 06:31 pm
We need a two-party system. Perhaps the liberals can take over Target, and create a large enough constituency to balance the effects of Wal-Mart within our system.

A third or fourth party might be nice too. With beer this time.
0 Replies
 
littlek
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Jun, 2003 09:12 pm
Let's do Target WITH beer.....? I love target. And they're a good biz, too, I've heard.
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Jun, 2003 08:55 am
Wal-Mart ordered to recognize meat cutter union
Judge Orders Wal-Mart to Recognize Union Formed in Texas by Meat Cutters
The Associated Press - Jun 19, 2003

JACKSONVILLE, Texas (AP) - A judge has ruled that a Wal-Mart store here must reopen its meat-cutting department and bargain with unionized butchers whose jobs disappeared when the chain switched to using prepackaged meat. Judge Keltner Locke, a National Labor Relations Board administrative law judge, ordered the retail chain Wednesday to meet with the butchers and negotiate over the effects of the change.

"This is a historic decision - the first bargaining order issued against Wal-Mart in the United States," union leader Johnny Rodriguez said in a statement. "It is a victory for all Wal-Mart workers who are fighting for a voice at work."

In 2000, seven of the 10 butchers at the Jacksonville store voted to join the United Food and Commercial Workers union. The vote marked the only union success at a Wal-Mart store.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. soon announced it was closing its meat-cutting departments across the country. Many of the butchers were reassigned to meat stockers.

Wal-Mart downplayed the latest ruling, describing it as "limited."

"Wal-Mart has consistently contended that the union should never have been certified in Jacksonville because the election result was improperly influenced by union misconduct and because the bargaining unit requested was improperly narrow," the company said in a release. "This portion of the ruling will be appealed."

In recent months, organized labor has escalated efforts to unionize Wal-Mart stores after five years of failing to even dent the world's largest retailer's armor.
--------
On the Net:
Wal-Mart: http://www.walmart.com
United Food and Commercial Workers: http://www.ufcw.org
This story can be found at: http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGA69KFO4HD.html
0 Replies
 
patiodog
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Jun, 2003 09:26 am
The one Target middle manager I know hates the place.
0 Replies
 
Scrat
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Jun, 2003 03:47 pm
RE: "In A Wal-Mart Kind Of Hell"...

So many words, so little point. Rolling Eyes
0 Replies
 
cjhsa
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Jun, 2003 03:51 pm
I'll give the meatcutters this much, if they can win their jobs back, improve the quality of the meat sold, and reduce the price, more power to 'em. That brine injected, irradiated, prepackaged and overpriced horsemeat they sell now isn't worth buying.
0 Replies
 
cjhsa
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Jun, 2003 03:54 pm
Of the "hypermarkets" that have gone into the grocery biz, I prefer Meijer big time over Wal Mart, especially for meat. Unfortunately they don't have the market coverage WM does. They were the original "hypermarket" and I don't know what prevented them from growing the way WM has. Management decisions, I guess.
0 Replies
 
patiodog
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Jun, 2003 03:55 pm
You know they've started putting red dye in salmon to make it look more like, um, salmon?

Thing is, it looks more like a My Little Pony afterbirth. Who thinks up these things?
0 Replies
 
patiodog
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Jun, 2003 03:56 pm
We've got Fred Meyer here. Great deals. Definitely not unionized, though, and it shows both in their prices and in their, um, service.
0 Replies
 
cjhsa
 
  1  
Reply Thu 19 Jun, 2003 04:02 pm
The Wal-Mart near here doesn't sell groceries. That's fine, there's enough competition as is and I don't want to lose any of the mom & pop shops such as my favorite local german butcher (not unionized either, great service, great stuff, high prices, but not bad).
0 Replies
 
 

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