Anonymous wrote:It's because the people that work there give the worst ever customer service, the parking there is horrific and if you go there after five o' clock and on any given weekend, you need to keep your temper on check or you could get arrested for inciting a riot!
Plus, a lot of their generic things are pretty cheap.
In spite of all this, this is my favorite place to go.
I lovingly call it my second home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i was so excited to get the dc walmart down nearby union station. been going regularly since its december opening. in the past like three months though its turn into crap. i dare not seek assistance from an associate. once i left the customer service line and the associate knew i stepped away to get a larger size, she leaves, goes on break or whatever. the associate left is like oh she's gone.
Oh. Well that's the DC unskilled labor force for you. No work ethic and lazy. Try a rural walmat you all make fun of. People there know a hard days work and have self respect.
Facts bro, they hurt and make you feel uncomfortable. But that doesn't change a damn thing.
Anonymous wrote:i was so excited to get the dc walmart down nearby union station. been going regularly since its december opening. in the past like three months though its turn into crap. i dare not seek assistance from an associate. once i left the customer service line and the associate knew i stepped away to get a larger size, she leaves, goes on break or whatever. the associate left is like oh she's gone.
Anonymous wrote:It's because the people that work there give the worst ever customer service, the parking there is horrific and if you go there after five o' clock and on any given weekend, you need to keep your temper on check or you could get arrested for inciting a riot!
Plus, a lot of their generic things are pretty cheap.
In spite of all this, this is my favorite place to go.
I lovingly call it my second home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I went shopping at Walmart and they have all the same stuff you'll find at a Target, Harris Teeter or wherever. All the major brands: P&G, Johnson & Johnson etc. So why do DCUMers say that the store is full of crap? It's exactly the same stuff you buy at Giant on Conn. except you don't see pretentious people flaunting their dual degrees from HYP in poli sci/history.
Actually, many of the name-brand products you see at Wal-Mart are a lower quality than you see at other stores…the manufacturers produce a separate line for Wal-Mart to meet its price demands. They use more cardboard than plastic and more plastic than metal, thinner fabrics, single rows of stitching instead of double, glue instead of fasteners, etc. etc. Electronics have fewer features. Products have shorter warranties. And once manufacturers change what they do for Wal-Mart, they often start doing it for other stores, which is why the quality of so many consumer goods is shoddier today than it was 20 years ago.
Citation please.
NP but if you don't know that Walmart is widely known for having entirely separate lines of products created just for them, you've been living under a rock. In some instances, major manufacturers setup entire production facilities just to produce items for Walmart that don't adhere to their normal standards
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Bummer. The brand just went belly up, huh, rather than move overseas and continue operation?
Regardless, yes, I like my cheap Tylenol, ziplock and cotton blend socks. I do not wish to overpay .30 more an item for these things so 1. "Your father" can maintain an executive salary of x+1 and (2) so that Kenny in Ohio can hang onto his job manufacturing socks. Kenny needs to retrain in IT or health care.
I'm a Christian, and what you wrote is completely contrary to my religion. I believe in helping others, even if there's a cost to me. If it were simple to retrain workers, and cheap, there wouldn't be loads of laid-off, unemployed, partly-employed, underemployed workers whose manufacturing jobs moved overseas.
The price of those cheap socks and other goods is too high for the environment and for the good of our social fabric in this country. Pay more for goods made by ompanies that treat their employees fairly and pay them well enough to live decently. Those crappy socks you love so much were made by workers who barely have enough to eat, have no decent housing, no access to health care, no health insurance, no future. I couldn't wear those things in good conscience.
Anonymous wrote:My issues with Walmart is that it is both the biggest employer of people on food stamps, and the company that raises the most revenue from SNAP benefit dollars. In a sense, SNAP benefits serve as a stimulus to Walmart so they don't need to pay their employees a living wage. On top of that, members of the founding family are among the seven richest people in the United states.
While other companies are just as bad in terms of their minimum wage workers, no other company operates on the sheer scale that Walmart does. I just think it's a symbol of what is wrong with this country right now.