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http://writ.news.findlaw.com/sebok/20040809.html
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/12/23/MNG6DGCJ9L1.DTL
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/1223-07.htm
These are all settled claims with the exception of the sex discrimination suit which is pending. It is also the largest class action suit labor suit every undertaken (1.5 million).
What you don't want to understand, or choose to ignore because it doesn't fit your libertarian beliefs, is that Walmart has a deliberate policy of violating labor laws. They figure they will either get away with it, or the fines will be less than the savings.
Before you continue to promote your theoretical arguments about labor and capital, do a little background reading. If you persist in your fanciful interpretations of corporate behavior you run the risk of not being taken seriously.
When a multi-billion dollar company negotiates with a small town with an annual budget of a few million the town usually doesn't have the ability to defend their position. Walmart can afford to spend more on lawyers to win concessions such as zoning changes than the entire budget of the town. Policies not Politics ---- Daily Landscape
As I said above, Wal-Mart will only get away with what the government allows it to get away with. You've failed to recognize the obvious point -- that Wal-Mart has gone to court and lost in these cases (with the exception of the pending sexual discrimination case). That's how the system is supposed to work. If you allow the company -- any company -- to break the rules, without prosecution, you can't be surprised when it breaks the rules. When you allow people to smoke dope, you can't be surprised when they become less hung-up about smoking dope. I haven't ignored this, in any way. If the company breaks the rules, it should be taken to court to have the plaintiff's claims addressed.
Yes, Wal-Mart can spend more on lawyers. But, at the end of the day, voters and consumers have the power, because the government sets the rules, and Wal-Mart can only sell what consumers will buy.
You can call it "libertarian" or "liberal" or "conservative" or "communist" or "fascist" -- whatever you like -- but the views I'm expressing are none of the above. They're my views related to economic theory and how I think that theory relates to the real world. It has nothing to do with politics, and to cast what I've said aside as ideologically-based is to avoid the real discussion. But that is your right. We can debate ideology, if you'd like, but I'm not going to bring ideological arguments into a discussion of economics. Be nice to America. Or we'll bring democracy to your country.
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