George Will lays a huge smack-down on the anti-Wal-Mart campaign being waged by the Democrats:
Their campaign is liberalism as condescension. It is a philosophic repugnance toward markets, because consumer sovereignty results in the masses making messes. Liberals, aghast, see the choices Americans make with their dollars and their ballots and announce — yes, announce — that Americans are sorely in need of more supervision by . . . liberals.
Go read the entire thing — and then come back and try to argue the Democrats position that Wal-Mart is evil.
I disagree with almost everything the Dems stand for. But I can at least usually understand why they believe the things they do and the positions they take.
However, the same cannot be said for their illogical Wal-Mart hate. Except for the Labor Union thugs, I can’t understand how you can hate what Wal-Mart has done to escalate the quality of living for this country’s poor.
As George Will points out:
Wal-Mart, the most prodigious job-creator in the history of the private sector in this galaxy, has almost as many employees (1.3 million) as the U.S. military has uniformed personnel. A McKinsey company study concluded that Wal-Mart accounted for 13 percent of the nation’s productivity gains in the second half of the 1990s, which probably made Wal-Mart about as important as the Federal Reserve in holding down inflation. By lowering consumer prices, Wal-Mart costs about 50 retail jobs among competitors for every 100 jobs Wal-Mart creates . Wal-Mart and its effects save shoppers more than $200 billion a year, dwarfing such government programs as food stamps ($28.6 billion) and the earned-income tax credit ($34.6 billion).
h/t to Blue Crab Boulevard (via Memeorandum)





A smackdown you say…
In his making his case for Wal-Mart I’d like to see him use numbers that weren’t themselves produced by Wal-Mart.
It’s a hilarious (and Rovian) ploy to pivot liberal outrage at Wal-Mart’s labor violations as ‘condescending’. The median male worker earns 50 cents an hour less than in 1979 while the top 5% a male worker is getting $10 an hour more. The decline of labor unions is a large part of this.
We used to pity Third World economies (and their resulting corrupt, inefficient governments) for their extreme income disparities. Now the Republican Party regards this disparity as a goal.
Left by Preston on September 14th, 2006 at 12:05 pm