Purely speculative...I dont know if any of the recipients are WalMart employees, though I doubt it considering the community that we serve. Lets say WalMart doesnt give those charitable donations (and yeah...kinda doubt you can blame the DV on WM...but why not). How much benefit to the community are YOU offering?Is it possible that some of that charity would be unnecessary if Wal Mart payed a better wage to its employees?
How about passing on some of that success to the people who helped you achieve it? Like, your employees?
Wal Mart saves the average poor family... what, like 3-5,000 a year?
let's look at walmart's history of helping those in need:We just picked up 360 boxes of food and full sized hams for Christmas dinners this AM for distribution. Picked them up from the Walmart distribution center (they also donated an identical number of dinners and full sized turkeys for Thanksgiving. They funded to homeless shelters Thanksgiving meal. They also are the majority fund-giver of the county Domestic violence coalition and Women's Shelter. Along with McDonald's, they fund most of our prevention programs for at-risk youth (I am sure they claim much of this on their corporate taxes). That doesn't address how much they give in other charitable contributions, how much they pay in state and local taxes, and how many jobs they are responsible for in the community between the Distribution Center and 4 local stores. Not sure what you are looking for in 'worth to a community', but I know what they provide here.
This week the New York Times reported a disheartening story about two of the largest retail chains. You see, instead of taking unsold items to sample sales or donating them to people in need, H&M and Wal-Mart have been throwing them out in giant trash bags. And in the case that someone may stumble on these bags and try to keep or re-sell the items, these companies have gone ahead and slashed up garments, cut off the sleeves of coats, and sliced holes in shoes so they are unwearable. ...
I take my hat off to Sam Walton for being so successful, even if he did kill off countless small businesses along the way and outsource huge amounts of production to China. Good for him. His children, OTOH, did not earn the $20 billion they each inherited.
And neither did the people who somehow feel they're entitled to take the lions share now.
An incident from January 2010 is certainly reason to indict the company.let's look at walmart's history of helping those in need:
H&M and Wal-Mart destroy and trash unsold goods | Work + Money - Yahoo! Shine
let's look at walmart's history of helping those in need:
H&M and Wal-Mart destroy and trash unsold goods | Work + Money - Yahoo! Shine
An incident from January 2010 is certainly reason to indict the company.
Of course...since you were nigh unto tripping over yourself to find a negative report let me help you with a few different ones.
"Walmart and the Walmart Foundation are in the second year of a $2 billion cash and in-kind hunger relief campaign that extends through 2015. The Foundation’s contributions are strategically aimed at ending hunger for the 1 in 6 Americans that do not know where their next meal is coming from. As such, the Foundation seeks to fund initiatives that integrate hunger relief into our four focus areas."
Walmartstores.com: The Walmart Foundation
I see what they do in our community every day. I DONT see whiny ****heads that complain about WalMart supporting the programs we work with.
An incident from January 2010 is certainly reason to indict the company.
Of course...since you were nigh unto tripping over yourself to find a negative report let me help you with a few different ones.
"Walmart and the Walmart Foundation are in the second year of a $2 billion cash and in-kind hunger relief campaign that extends through 2015. The Foundation’s contributions are strategically aimed at ending hunger for the 1 in 6 Americans that do not know where their next meal is coming from. As such, the Foundation seeks to fund initiatives that integrate hunger relief into our four focus areas."
Walmartstores.com: The Walmart Foundation
I see what they do in our community every day. I DONT see whiny ****heads that complain about WalMart supporting the programs we work with.
good to knowJust to note......many times stores MUST do this because of government regulations.
Six Waltons Have More Wealth Than the Bottom 30 % of Americans - Yahoo! News
The 6 sons of Sam Walton (Wal-Mart) are worth more than the bottom 30% of Americans combined. They have more money than 100,000,000 Americans combined.
Yet Obama and Republicans agreed that isn't enough.
I recall Michelle Obama congratulating Wal-Mart and President Obama agreeing that Walton son's just couldn't afford the health care law for their Wal-Mart employees so gave them an exemption. Republicans, of course, believe the Walton's pay too much for taxes already.
We just picked up 360 boxes of food and full sized hams for Christmas dinners this AM for distribution. Picked them up from the Walmart distribution center (they also donated an identical number of dinners and full sized turkeys for Thanksgiving. They funded to homeless shelters Thanksgiving meal. They also are the majority fund-giver of the county Domestic violence coalition and Women's Shelter. Along with McDonald's, they fund most of our prevention programs for at-risk youth (I am sure they claim much of this on their corporate taxes). That doesn't address how much they give in other charitable contributions, how much they pay in state and local taxes, and how many jobs they are responsible for in the community between the Distribution Center and 4 local stores. Not sure what you are looking for in 'worth to a community', but I know what they provide here.
Yeah, and they get paid, in general, very little, some with no benefits. I don't begrudge any man success. Howeverit is a poverty that the people who do the hands on work that make him successful are impoverished or very near it.
Corporations could be doing much more to ensure that the rank and file that make their companies run are properly taken care of, and not merely given as little as they will accept to do the job.
Actually, I believe it's the bottom 47%, ergo the 53%.:2bigcry:Boo hoo sniff sniff...Its not fair that they are rich as we aren't boo hoo sniff sniff.:2bigcry: Boo Hoo sniff sniff I am so jealous, we should tax the living **** out them thar rich people even though the majority of the botton 30% don't pay any federal income taxes waa boo hoo sniff sniff:2bigcry::baby2
If the simple act of accessing wealth distroys it, then I seriously doubt that the wealth existed to begin with. Sort of like a mirage on the highway - by the time you get to where you think the water is, it's moved on down the road.
Not the public that supported his business all those years?
The taxpayers who paid to keep up the roads and highways that made it possible?
The folks who paid the diplomats to ensure reasonably free trade with China, where he obtained so much of the crap he sold?
The people who paid for national security to keep shipping lanes safe and the ports open?
That's commendable. I wonder how many of their own employees are lined up there because they can't make do on their pathetic pay and no benefits.
Might be interesting to know. Also might be interesting to know how many of their employees would be unemployed if it werent for a company like WalMart that takes under educated and unskilled workers and gives them opportunities to work, advance, opportunities for education, etc. I dont see too many of WalMarts opponents breaking any sounmd barriers in their rush to provide viable alternatives...just a whole lot of people whining about their success.That's commendable. I wonder how many of their own employees are lined up there because they can't make do on their pathetic pay and no benefits.