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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend.... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neeka who wrote (1407)3/8/2004 7:35:56 PM
From: Lazarus_Long  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
There is one thing he IS sure about.

He wants to be President.

n California, Wal-Mart goes on the ballot

Retailer takes its case to voters, hoping to stave off opposition

Shoppers exit a Wal-Mart store in San Marcos , Calif. The world's largest retailer blocked
a proposed ban of its superstores in Contra Costa County, Calif., but lost a vote that
could allow it to open another store in San Marcos. It has faced strong opposition in
California to its strong plans for expansion.

By ALEX VEIGA
The Associated Press
Updated: 04:01 PM PT  March07, 2004

LOS ANGELES - Wal-Mart has a big target on its back, and it's not
from the competition.

The world's largest
retailer has faced
strident opposition
nationwide over its
push to open
Supercenters, which
span nearly twice the
square footage of a
typical Wal-Mart and
sell groceries
alongside other
bargain fare.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
wants to open 40
Supercenters in California over the next few years, and is taking its
plans directly to voters in a state of 35 million people -- representing
the last major untapped market for the behemoth stores.

The lobbying effort paid off in Contra Costa County, a rapidly
growing San Francisco suburb of about 1 million people that voted
last week to allow the big-box stores. And next month, a vote by
Inglewood residents could determine whether a Supercenter is built
in that Los Angeles suburb.

Wal-Mart's first California Supercenter opened Tuesday in La Quinta,
a desert community about 120 miles east of Los Angeles.

Since 1988, Wal-Mart has opened more than 1,500 Supercenters
across the country, drawing opposition from a number of
communities.

The stores are huge one-stop-shopping centers, incorporating a full
supermarket along with the chain's familiar discount inventory.
Wal-Mart contends that consumers benefit by saving on groceries
while shopping for other discount merchandise.

"When voters are asked whether they want the benefits of Wal-Mart
Supercenters, we see time and time again that they say yes," said
Amy Hill, a spokeswoman for the Bentonville-Ark.-based company.

Opponents, however, see a low-wage, low-benefit job mill that will
displace better-paying jobs as independent retailers are driven out
of business. They also contend the super-sized stores will contribute
to suburban sprawl and jammed roadways.

Wal-Mart has a powerful argument, according to Ulysses Yannas, an
analyst with Buckman, Buckman & Reid Inc. The company does bring
down prices, particularly for food, wherever it opens Supercenters,
he said.

"The other thing that does happen is other businesses do come in
because of the huge traffic Wal-Mart attracts," Yannas said.

But that doesn't benefit communities in the long run, said Madeline
Janis-Aparicio, executive director of the Los Angeles Alliance for a
New Economy, a public policy group that is helping coordinate
opposition to the Supercenters.

"There's almost nothing that they do that really helps build
communities, except provide low prices but at an enormous cost,"
she said.

Much of the opposition in California is coming from labor groups that
have united on a national scale against Wal-Mart, which has
strongly resisted efforts to unionize its employees.

Southern California grocery workers were on strike or locked out for
more than four months after three national supermarket operators
pushed to cut labor costs to compete against Wal-Mart. The strike
ended last weekend with the union ceding to the companies' demand
for a separate pay and benefit scale for new hires.

But further progress will depend on whether it can get the public on
its side. "Wal-Mart has taken on California as a battleground, that is
clear," Janis-Aparicio said.

msnbc.msn.com



To: Neeka who wrote (1407)3/8/2004 7:40:04 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
Actually that has crossed my mind M. I've read a few
interviews with his wife where she disputed Kerry's claims
that he doesn't suffer any after effects from Vietnam. She
claimes he still has frequent nightmares & intimated he
has had to seek counsel too.

When you consider how he anguishes over anything war
related, his horrific VVAW lies, & those flip flops, IMO
it's a possibility that he may have PTSD.

In any event, whether he has PTSD or not, I have learned
enough about Kerry to be convinced he is not qualified to
be President.