Archive for category environment
Smashion Week
Posted by zoboxrox in environment, international, politics, science on September 23rd, 2009
So I guess last week was Fashion Week. People all over the city buzzed about it, including 75% of the men I know (look for future blog: what is happening to the heterosexual male?), but to be honest I could care less. All I see when I look at the pictures from a fashion show are incredibely sick-looking models who could use a hug and a hamburger. THIS WEEK, however, the President is in town for his first UN appearance, and I find that MUCH MORE EXCITING!
Here’s why: For the first time in over eight years, we have a representative in the International Community who isn’t retarded (no offense to retarded people, but yeah, Bush is one of you [by the way, the definition of retarded is slow or stupid, not handicapped.... please dont come back at me with a whole bunch of pc nonsense. If Bush were handicapped, at least he would have an excuse]). The Times:
The United States is ready to begin a new era of engagement with the world, President Obama said Wednesday in a sweeping address to the United Nations General Assembly in which he sought to clearly delineate differences between his administration and that of former President George W. Bush.
People are eager to judge Obama: he hasn’t done enough, he’s breaking his promises, he’s more moderate than he allowed, nothing has changed. Tell that to the rest of the world.
“We have re-engaged the United Nations,” Mr. Obama said, to cheers from world leaders and delegates in the cavernous hall of the General Assembly….
An array of world leaders sat in the hall for Mr. Obama’s speech, which was often interrupted by applause…
….For Mr. Obama personally [Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi] had only warm words, calling on the collected nations to welcome “our son” on his first United Nations appearance.
Even Qaddafi, who’s not really that nice a guy (apparently no one cares about Lockerbie these days), can’t get enough. And its not because Obama is a celebrity, despite what you may have heard.
For one, there’s climate change, an issue that sat on the sidelines for eight years while our former administration pretended there was nothing wrong (how can man change the climate, when god controls the universe…?). Again, from the Times:
The United States — the world’s largest emitter in historical terms — is acknowledging its responsibility to help the poorest and most vulnerable nations reduce emissions without sacrificing growth….
Mr. Obama recognizes the urgency of the problem. He will have to work hard to persuade a Democratic-controlled Senate (the House has acted) to see it as well and to pass strong legislation committing the United States to binding cuts in greenhouse gases….
Since we’re all breathing the same air, drinking the same water (ok, not really), and living under the same sun, people around the world are relieved that we finally have a President who is not basing his evnironmental policy on the End Times.

Now that’s what I call fashion.
While You Were Mourning…
Posted by zoboxrox in environment, health, international, malfunction, miracle, not news, politics, religion, science, tragedy on July 2nd, 2009

So my favorite eatery has captioned CNN on their television at all times (hence, my favorite) and while the 24/7 media channel has a tendency to be a little hokey, perhaps overblown, and often downright dramatic (but no news is good news right?), I respect them simply for the fact that they are huge enough to sink their perfectly manicured, yet often clumsy, claws into most every major news item au current. I can’t help myself, then, from feeling majorly disappointed that this generally satisfactory and overly accessible outlet for information is, at this very moment, reporting “BREAKING NEWS: VIDEO OF MICHAEL JACKSON’S FINAL REHEARSAL RELEASED.” (Here it is if you’re curious… entertaining, but not news)
I have to ask myself, is this really breaking news? And don’t get me wrong, I love MJ. I was a die hard Jackson fan even when it was embarrassing to admit. My list of favorite songs include some of the lesser known, deeper felt (”She’s Out of My Life” now has a whole new meaning), and I’m proud to say that while its not a consistent ability, I have successfully moonwalked on occasion. BUT — before I am a Michael Jackson fan, I am a citizen of the world, and my deeper concern lies in what has happened in the week since his untimely passing. So here is the list of Top 5 News Events that occurred while you were mourning:
1. Lets start with the ridiculously important act by the House last Friday, June 26, which, after years of ignoring the inconvenient truth, passed H.R. 2454, or The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009. While the act itself is far (far far far far) from perfect, and in truth it dragged itself across the finish line at the last second, winning by only seven votes, it is hugely significant because it is the first time Congress has formally recognized what every other thinking American knows as Global Warming, Climate Change, the Greenhouse Effect (remember that one?), the End of the World, etc:
The vote was the first time either house of Congress had approved a bill meant to curb the heat-trapping gases scientists have linked to climate change. The legislation, which passed despite deep divisions among Democrats, could lead to profound changes in many sectors of the economy, including electric power generation, agriculture, manufacturing and construction.
President Obama hailed the House passage of the bill as “a bold and necessary step.” He said in a statement that he looked forward to Senate action that would send a bill to his desk “so that we can say, at long last, that this was the moment when we decided to confront America’s energy challenge and reclaim America’s future.”
But I bet a lot of people didn’t hear about this. After all, we’d only had a day since Michael’s passing. Who cares about… you know, the world…?
2. Two days later, on Sunday June 28th, a little place called Honduras, you may have heard of it, its part of our continent, went ahead and had themselves a coup.
Back story is as follows: Left-leaning President Manuel Zelaya (think Chavez, with a mustache) was pushing for legislative reform which would allow him to lift the term restrictions for presidents, enabling him to run again (think Mayor Bloomberg, without the cash). Apparently the military found this completely unacceptable, and in the middle of the night, took over the government and exiled Zelaya to Costa Rica (actually, that sounds pretty nice).
In the first military coup in Central America since the end of the cold war, soldiers stormed the presidential palace in the capital, Tegucigalpa, early in the morning, disarming the presidential guard, waking Mr. Zelaya and putting him on a plane to Costa Rica.
Mr. Zelaya, a leftist aligned with President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, angrily denounced the coup as illegal. “I am the president of Honduras,” he insisted at the airport in San José, Costa Rica, still wearing his pajamas….
Church services were canceled and most people stayed home. Several thousand protesters supporting the president faced off against soldiers outside the presidential palace, burning tires.
The government television station and a television station that supports the president were taken off the air. Television and radio stations broadcast no news. Only wealthy Hondurans with access to the Internet and cable television were able to follow the day’s events.
Normally a coup would be pretty big news — HUGE. Remember in Pretty Woman when she goes back into the store to tell them what a mistake they’ve made by not letting her shop — HUGE MISTAKE — well this is huge the way that was.
3. Another two days later, in the early morning of Tuesday June 30, a passenger plane, an Airbus 310 to be exact, carrying 153 people, crashed on its way from Yemen to the Comoros Islands. 
While normally this would be an instant global tragedy for the world to rubberneck, the story becomes even more unbelievable, as a sole survivor, a 14 year old girl who can barely swim, is rescued, found floating in the Indian Ocean. The young woman, Bahia Bakari, was traveling with her mother and three siblings, all of whom are believed to be dead, and cannot explain how it is she managed to stay alive.
A severely bruised young girl believed to be the only survivor of an Indian Ocean p
lane crash flew back Thursday to Paris, where she was embraced gently by her father, who tried to lift her spirits with a joke.
Bahia Bakari, 12, returned to France from the Comoros Islands on a French government plane. The Falcon-900 jet with medical facilities left the archipelago nation, a former French colony, and arrived at Le Bourget airport just north of Paris…
Bahia, described by her father as a fragile girl who could barely swim, spent over 13 hours in the water clinging to wreckage before she was rescued. She was found suffering from hypothermia, a fractured collarbone and widespread bruises to her face, elbow and foot….
“In the midst of the mourning, there is Bahia. It is a miracle, it is an absolutely extraordinary battle for survival,” France’s cooperation minister, Alain Joyandet, who flew back with her, said at the airport. “It’s an enormous message that she sends to the world … almost nothing is impossible.”
And yet, there are people who don’t even know this story, haven’t even heard of Bahia, because Michael Jackson died last week, and there’s only so much room for misery in one’s life.
4. Later that very same day, Al Franken defeated Norm Coleman in the final battle of the war for the Minnesota Senate Seat.


Apparently Coleman had to dip into his dental fund to continue the lawsuit, and when pressed with the idea that he may be required to shell out even more cash, decided to call it quits, like a true conservative. Obama now has 60 friends in the Senate. He can basically do anything he wants. Even Bush never had it this good. And while I’m sure people know this happened, no one really seems to care. All of the passion Americans have put into politics over the past year, seems to have died with MJ.
5. Finally, the people of Iran continued to struggle for basic human rights, like freedom, and fairness, and safety. They continued to protest, continued to recieve beatings, continued to be kidnapped, murdered, or worst of all, disappeared. They continued to document their troubles as well, but couldn’t post the images online, their main resource at this time, because the inernet had basically crashed with Michael Jackson frenzy.
So here’s a little video someone put up on YouTube to remind us all, its not over, its only just begun.
(Amanda — don’t watch this)
Happy Earth Day
Posted by zoboxrox in environment, health, politics, science on April 22nd, 2009
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Even though we should be aware of the environment everyday, considering, you know, its all around us, we still choose but one day a the year to come together and celebrate it. So every Earth Day thousands of first graders go out and plant a tree or set a butterfly loose. This year Barack Obama did a little bit more.
President Obama marked Earth Day Wednesday by announcing a new initiative to lease federal waters for the purpose of generating electricity from wind and ocean currents.
The president announced the initiative, to be administered by the Interior Department, while reiterating his pledge to push for a comprehensive energy plan that encourages the development of alternative fuel sources, cuts dependence on foreign oil, addresses climate change, and creates new jobs.
Wind power can generate 20 percent of the country’s electricity by 2030 and support 250,000 jobs…
Now, while it annoys me that we judge whether or not to pursue a more environmental road by how costly or job creative it is (in the end, none of that will matter), I suppose it needs to be stressed considering this rather shocking study by Rasmussen.
Just one-out-of-three voters (34%) now believe global warming is caused by human activity, the lowest finding yet in Rasmussen Reports national surveying.
Sixty-two percent (62%) of all Americans believe global warming is at least a somewhat serious problem, with 33% who say it’s Very Serious. Thirty-five percent (35%) say it’s a not a serious problem.
Half (49%) of Americans think the president believes climate change is caused primarily by human activity. This is the first time that belief has fallen below 50% since the president took office. 19% say Obama attributes global warming to long-term planetary trends.
Glacier in Patagonia, Argentina 1928 & 2004. Photo: Greenpeace
That shirt that reads “mankind” should probably just read “Americans.” Our inability to take blame, or even responsibility, for anything is remarkable. As is our tendency to ignore and forget. So as a result, our president must take the steps for us, even if the majority of us don’t believe there’s a problem. And he must lead by example. And he, unlike so many of us, must be willing admit that he is wrong. 
Pirates of the Arabian
Posted by zoboxrox in crime, environment, human rights, international, malfunction, military, politics on April 15th, 2009

Sorry I’ve been MIA the past week, I was captured by pirates. Bad joke, too soon? Not really, unless you are one of those pirates. In what could be considered Obama’s first…what were the exact words?…”International Crisis” (thank you Biden) he has proven himself a respectable Commander in Chief, and seems to have pleased both ends of the spectrum with his recent action in regards to the hostage situation off the coast of Somalia. And while everyone is pretty content with the result of the simple yet resounding military action (Navy SEALS are pretty badasss) and Obama himself has promised to “halt the rise of piracy“, there seems to be a general lack of interest in WHY this occurred in the first place. So cheers to the State Department, welcome home Captain Phillips, and good shooting Navy Snipers, but there is an ugly truth about piracy in the Indian Ocean, and though we love our Action Adventures here in the US, this story is not as simple as good guys versus bad ones, and no one looks like Johnny Depp.

Here is Africa. On the easternmost coast, The Horn of Africa, jutting up into the Arabian Sea, is Somalia, one of the poorest countries in the world. Notice its proximity to the Middle East, and most especially its access to the trade routes to and from Saudi Arabia. What, might you ask, is all the fighting about? Did you guess oil? If so, you’re actually wrong.
To understand the current climate in Somalia, a little history is required, and while it dates back over 2000 years, for our purposes we can begin in 1990, when the ongoing civil war first broke out in the East African nation. After the complete collapse of central government and a disruption in agriculture and food distribution, Somalia saw a prolonged period of widespread famine. First, and perhaps most memorably in 1992, when UNISOM I was established by the UN and UNITAF by the US, but then again in 1996, and 1999, and 2001, and 2006, and 2008.

The proximity of Somalia to the ocean is a major factor in its economic development, and a modern fishing industry helped fuel the country’s economy through previous periods of drought. With the dissolution of the central government, however, the waters off Somalia became ungoverned, quite obviously. This allowed for two very serious problems to occur simultaneously in the waters off the coast.
Following the massive tsunami of December 2004, there have emerged allegations that after the outbreak of the Somali Civil War in the late 1980s, Somalia’s long, remote shoreline was used as a dump site for the disposal of toxic waste. The huge waves which battered northern Somalia after the tsunami brought with them tons of nuclear and toxic waste that was dumped in Somali waters, by several European firms. The European Green Party followed up these allegations by presenting before the press and the European Parliament in Strasbourg copies of contracts signed by two European companies — the Italian Swiss firm, Achair Partners, and an Italian waste broker, Progresso — and representatives of the warlords then in power, to accept 10 million tons of toxic waste in exchange for $80 million (then about £60 million)….there are far higher than normal cases of respiratory infections, mouth ulcers and bleeding, abdominal hemorrhages and unusual skin infections among many inhabitants of the areas around the northeastern towns– diseases consistent with radiation sickness….
At the same time, illegal trawlers began fishing Somalia’s seas with an estimated $300 million of tuna, shrimp, and lobster being taken each year depleting stocks previously available to local fishermen. Through interception with speedboats, Somali fishermen tried to either dissuade the dumpers and trawlers or levy a “tax” on them as compensation. In an interview, Sugule Ali, one of the pirate leaders explained “We don’t consider ourselves sea bandits. We consider sea bandits (to be) those who illegally fish and dump in our seas.” Peter Lehr, a Somalia piracy expert at the University of St. Andrews says “It’s almost like a resource swap, Somalis collect up to $100 million a year from pirate ransoms off their coasts and the Europeans and Asians poach around $300 million a year in fish from Somali waters.“
So while the people of Somalia were literally starving to death, a multitude of European and Asian countries saw the opportunity to fish illegally and dump toxic waste off the Horn of Africa. NOT VERY NICE! Democracy Now has a really good interview about this very subject that I suggest to anyone who is interested in the whole truth, and not just the sliver we’re fed.
Sympathy for the Devil
Posted by zoboxrox in charity, environment, health, human rights, international, politics on January 21st, 2009
Pinch me. Am I dreaming? I knew this day would come, but I never knew how good it would actually feel. For as long as I can remember, there’s either been a dick or a Bush in the White House, but now, as cliche as it sounds, it really does seem like things are starting to change. Despite the darkness of the past twenty-five eight years, however, there have been some moments of light. It took me a while to composite this list, but here is my Top 5 best things George Walker Bush did while in office.
- PEPFAR (Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief): Established
in 2003, PEPFAR (which really is the dumbest acronym I’ve ever heard… “Emergency Plan”? Sounds like something my seven year old cousin would say) was a 5 year commitment of $15 billion to those countries in Africa and the Caribbean that are the most devastated by HIV/AIDS, which include South Africa, Rwanda, Namibia, Botswana, and Haiti, to name a few. In 2008, PEPFAR was renewed and expanded to $48 Billion through 2013. US Foreign Aid is now three times what it was when Clinton left office. And despite criticism for its abstinence-only programs, etc., Joe Biden himself has called PEPFAR “the single most significant thing the president has ever done.” When you consider how Bush Sr. handled the domestic AIDS epidemic during his own presidency, it is remarkable how much his son has done. To read more about the program go here, here, or here. - Protection of Oceans: Days before leaving office, President Bush made environmental history as the number one conservator of marine wilderness. President Bush, perhaps aware of his otherwise dismal record of environmentalism, took it upon himself to build his legacy as the greatest protector of oceans in the history of conservation, creating the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands National Monument. Since 2006 the Bush admin has preserved nearly 200,000 sq miles of Pacific Ocean, adding three new “marine monuments” on January 6, 2008. Under the Antiquities Act (signed into law under Theodore Roosevelt, often cited for his role in the creation of the National Park) the President can designate an area restricted or protected by executive order.

- Diversified Cabinet: During the eight years he was in office, Bush appointed the most diverse cabinet in history, up until now. Colin Powell, followed by Condoleeza Rice, was our country’s first African American Secretary of State; Alberto Gonzales, our first Hispanic Attorney General. Former Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao, who was born in Taiwan, is the first Asian American woman ever appointed to the cabinet. In a bizarre moment during the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Kanye West famously blurted out on live television, “George Bush doesn’t care about black people.” I beg to differ! It seems pretty clear to me that, while Bush may not care about poor people, in his own special Texan country way, he really isn’t a racist.

- Signs Gay Rights Law: I can barely believe it myself, but on December 23 Bush signed into law the the Worker, Retiree and Employer Recovery Act of 2008, which makes it mandatory for businesses to roll over retirement benefits to a same-sex partner in the event of the employee’s death. I imagine Dick Cheney was out having his annual cardiac arrest that day, because somehow this relative victory for gay rights passed without much controversy or discussion. The website GayPatriot.com, which describes itself as the Internet home for the gay conservative, goes as far as to suggest “by signing this into law, President George W. Bush has, by law, done more for gays than any other President in history.”

- …: Well, five things was actually fairly hard to come up with. I could be cynical and say the greatest thing, perhaps, that Bush has done is temporarily cripple the Republican Party, contributing to the Democratic success in the 2008 election. I could say, he’s done so much damage to this country the only direction we have left to go is upward. I could say that he created an atmosphere of political discourse unlike any other time in my generation. I guess, as far as 80% of the country is concerned, the best thing Former President George Bush ever did was wave goodbye, one final time.

Blessed Art Thou Among Men
Posted by zoboxrox in economy, environment, malfunction, politics on December 24th, 2008
When someone up there likes you, things tend to fall into place. Such is the situation Barack Obama is currently enjoying. With 82% approval of his transition to power, he has the inverse popularity of Bush. Those who don’t like him are far enough to the left or right that they are more or less politically insignificant. And even as a Leftie, I must say, he really is doing well, making lots of good choices, having great people around him, but there’s something else going on here, and while I’m not spiritual or superstitious, even I have to wonder, is there someone up there on Obama’s side?
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The President-elect recently unveiled his administration’s plans for job creation and economic growth in the near future, and they surprised some people by bringing the country’s infrastructure onto front stage, in what some are calling a 21st century New Deal. Now most people I think tend to complain about the condition of their roads, public schools, and our bridges are starting to look as old as they are, but unless you go to Norway or Japan, the poor quality of American infrastructure does not come across as an immediate crisis seeking national attention, compared with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the economic recession, the healthcare crisis, etc., and there were a fair number of people asking “Why this?”
And then - BAM - we get a strong reminder as to why exactly this might be a good idea. If you live in suburban-D.C. Maryland then you are perhaps a weary driver today, as yesterday there’s a chance you experienced quite an unusual ride to work.
A massive water main break in Cabin John, Maryland, near the communities of Potomac and Bethesda, unleashed the flood during rush-hour Tuesday morning.
The water main, 66 inches in diameter, unleashed the wall of water just before 8 a.m. that, at its height, was four feet high and 60 to 70 feet wide, Montgomery County police said.
Or you live in Tennessee and had to move out of your home as a result of toxic sludge:
A wall holding back 80 acres of sludge from a coal plant in central Tennessee broke this week, spilling more than 500 million gallons of waste into the surrounding area.
Environmental Protection Agency officials are on the scene and expect the cleanup to to take four to six weeks.
The retention wall breached early Monday, sending the sludge downhill and damaging 15 homes. All the residents were evacuated, and three homes were deemed uninhabitable.
Or you live in Atlanta and are still shaky after a pedestrian bridge collapsed five days ago. Perhaps even you live in New Orleans and you remember when the levees broke. Maybe your children go to a crumbling school, you have no form of public transit in your town, you sit in traffic for four hours a day and spend more money on gas then you make in a days work. The best thing about rebuilding American infrastructure is that it is a populist approach to improving the daily lives of Americans, it will ultimately benefit everyone. How Obama is that?!
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So watching the flood waters on CNN Breaking News Flash Drama Screen at my local coffee shop yesterday, I was once again forced to ask myself: Is it possible Obama really is blessed?
10 Things I Hate About Wal-Mart
Posted by zoboxrox in corporate america, crime, environment, human rights, malfunction on December 1st, 2008
As you have probably read or heard or talked about, a Long Island based Wal-Mart employee was killed this past weekend, on Black Friday, by a mob of frantic holiday shoppers. While this incident probably has as much to do with the desperation of an economically depressed crowd, who stampeded 34 year old Jdimytai Damour to death, it is also a pretty good illustration of why and how Wal-Mart is the worst place in the entire world: people are literally willing to kill each other for discount prices.
So here’s my top ten countdown of reasons why I would rather live without a single material item than promote the evil that is Wal-Mart (most, by the way, can be found in the awesome documentary, Wal-Mart: High Cost of Low Prices):
1. Wal-Mart = most dangerous place to shop
If you think this is the first time someone has been killed in a Wal-Mart, think again. In fact, Wal-Mart is notorious for the high rate of crime that occurs in its parking lots all across America.
For years, public reports have chronicled the terrible problem of crimes at Wal-Mart stores. Horrific reports of rape, murder, kidnappings, robbery and assault at Wal-Mart stores. For many police officials, the issue of crimes at Wal-Mart stores has been “overwhelming”
In the first seven months of 2005, nearly 100 violent crimes were reported, many of which could have been avoided by the addition of a security guard, extra lighting, or better surveillance systems. Here are two more great facts:
- National estimates indicate that almost 1 million criminal/police incidents occurred at Wal-Mart stores in 2004 – or 2 criminal/police incidents per minute in 2004;
- Wal-Mart could implement roving security patrols at all stores nation-wide at an estimated cost of 4 cents a customer visit.
What makes these crazy pills even harder to swallow is the fact that while Wal-Mart is basically
absent when it comes to security outside of their stores, inside, there is not a single area that is not under carefully monitored watch. This has prevented any type of organizing by employees from taking place, which brings me to point 2…
2. Working Conditions for Wal-Mart “Associates” are HORRENDOUS
In 2006, Wal-Mart was paying their nearly 2 million full-time hourly Associates an average of $10.11/hour. At 34 hours per week, with overtime strongly discouraged by the company, the typical Wal-Mart employee was bringing in around $18,000/year. In addition, with a 75% turnover rate within the first year, they have very few veteran employees who have acquired pay raises over their time with the company.
Wal-Mart employees earn 20% less than what the average retail worker earns, and over $10,000 less than what the average two-person family needs to make its most basic needs
Meanwhile, in 2008 Wal-Mart stood as the world’s largest retailer and brought in $378 billion in sales. The Walton’s, worth about $23 billion each, have a combined wealth of around $100 billion, or $100,000,000,000.00 and topped the 400 richest Americans list at numbers 4-7. These figures make them by far the wealthiest family in the US and second in the world.
Yet for some reason, they insist on underpaying their employees, creating unnecessary and expensive legal troubles. There are so many law-suits against Wal-Mart, listing them all here would take hours, but here are a few examples from the great site, Wal-Mart Watch:
Wal-Mart Violated Worker Rights More than 2 Million Times, Minnesota Judge Rules Wal-Mart violated the law more than 2 million times over a six-year period by denying workers time for breaks and forcing them to work “off the clock” for no pay, a Minnesota judge has ruled. Dakota County District Judge Robert King ordered the company to pay $6.5 million in back pay. In addition, Wal-Mart faces fines as high as $2 billion for the wage-and-hour violations.
Family Leave Laws. Wal-Mart has received numerous fines for violating the Family and Medical Leave Act in locations all over the country — firing workers while on federally protected medical leave. In 2005, Wal-Mart was fined $188,000 by the California Fair Employment and Housing Commission for violating California state law by failing to reinstate a woman after she completed her maternity leave.
Off-the-Clock Work. In 2000, Wal-Mart paid $50 million to settle a lawsuit that involved 69,000 workers in Colorado who had allegedly been forced to work off the clock. In 2002, a federal grand jury in Oregon found Wal-Mart employees were forced to work off the clock and awarded back pay to 83 workers. In December 2005, Wal-Mart was ordered to pay $172 million to 116,000 current and former California workers for violating a 2001 state law that requires employers to give 30-minute, unpaid lunch breaks to employees who work at least six hours. In the United States, Wal-Mart has 53 class action lawsuits over wage and hour violations
Despite - or more likely because of - the numerous legal infractions commited by Wal-Mart, they have completely prevented their Associates from forming any type of union, and have closed entire stores instead of allowing their employees to organize.
3. More employees of Wal-Mart are under federal assistance programs than any other company
Because of the ridiculously low wages and the suprisingly (well, really?) high cost of Wal-Mart’s health care package, they actually encourage their workers to seek public assistance as opposed to covering their children, for instance:
A memo written by Susan Chambers, Wal-Mart Executive Vice President for Benefits, for the Wal-Mart Board of Directors, said: “We also have a significant number of Associates and their children who receive health insurance through public-assistance programs. Five percent of our Associates are on Medicaid compared to an average for national employers of 4 percent. Twenty-seven percent of Associates’ children are on such programs, compared to a national average of 22 percent. In total, 46 percent of Associates’ children are either on Medicaid or are uninsured. Wal-Mart’s critics an easily exploit some aspects of our benefits offering to make their case; in other words, our critics are correct in some of their observations. Specifically, our coverage is expensive for low-income families, and Wal-Mart has a significant percentage of associates and their children on public assistance.” [Susan Chambers Memo to the Wal-Mart Board of Directors; New York Times, 10/26/05]
Costco, in comparison, insures over 80% of their employees and pays nearly $17.00/hour, yet is able to provide the kind of low prices for which Wal-Mart is famous. The difference? Lee Scott, Wal-Mart’s CEO brought in $5.3 million last year not including stock options, incentives, bonuses, etc.; Costco’s CEO Jim Sinegal received $350,000.
Wal-Mart, therefore, costs American tax-payers nearly $1,557,000,000,00 annually. In California alone, the public assistance used by Wal-Mart employees cost $86 million in 2004.
4. Wal-Mart consistently discriminates against minority groups
Wage disputes are not the only law suits Wal-Mart is currently facing. On top of the fact that they underpay, under-insure, and under-protect their workers, they also openly discriminate when it comes to climbing the proverbial ladder: Edith Arana, an African American woman Associate, was famously told by a manager, “There’s no place for people like you in management.” The best known of these cases is Dukes vs. Wal-Mart, which seeks damages of $11 billion dollars and represents over 1.6 million women who have at some point since 1998 worked for the corporate giant.
Additionally, Wal-Mart is one of a few national retailers that does not provide health care benefits to same-sex domestic partners. They were recently given a low score of 40 by the Human Rights Campaign, who discouraged their readers from shopping at Wal-Mart until fairer standards were reached.
And who can forget when Wal-Mart attempted to sue their former employee, Debbie Shank, for the $420,000.00 her family collected after she suffered severe brain damage from a traffic collision.
Two years after the accident, Shank and her husband, Jim, were awarded about $1 million in a
lawsuit against the trucking company involved in the crash. After legal fees were paid, $417,000 was placed in a trust to pay for Debbie Shank’s long-term care.
Wal-Mart had paid out about $470,000 for Shank’s medical expenses and later sued for the same amount. However, the court ruled it can only recoup what is left in the family’s trust.
The Shanks didn’t notice in the fine print of Wal-Mart’s health plan policy that the company has the right to recoup medical expenses if an employee collects damages in a lawsuit.
5. Wal-Mart destroys local businesses, and in turn, entire communites
Because of their “daily low prices,” which we now know come at the cost of the workers, shoppers, tax-payers, as well as the companies which manufacture the goods and inventors who sell their patents, Wal-Mart has a tradition of destroying the local economies of small-town America. The low priced goods force competitors to either drop their own prices or try to compete based on other criteria, such as customer service and quality products. Here are some stats:
- A study of small and rural towns in Iowa showed lost sales for local businesses ranging from -17.2% in small towns to -61.4% in rural areas, amounting to a total dollar loss of $2.46 BILLION over a 13-year period.
- In Iowa, retail businesses in several categories experienced a decline of up to 59% over a 13-year period.
- In Mississippi, local food stores in counties hosting a Wal-Mart supercenter lost sales of up to 17 percent over 5 years
- For every gain in sales by a Supercenter, there are corresponding losses in sales for local and/or family businesses
- In Maine, Wal-Mart captured an average $7.8 million from local/family businesses in their host towns during the first year of operation.
6. Imports Products/Exports Jobs:
In 2004, Wal-Mart imported $18 billion worth of goods, making it the countries 8th largest trading partner, ranking it ahead of Russia and Canada. By constantly requiring manufacturers to drop their wholesale prices, Wal-Mart is actually encouraging the out-sourcing of jobs…
China is a godsend for companies like Wal-Mart because low Chinese production costs let it widen profit margins. Wal-Mart can’t really widen profit margins by raising its own prices very much, but it can widen profit margins by lowering costs, and going to China is a great solution for lowering the costs…
7. Use
s Sweat Shops, Prison Labor, and Child Workers
…which means the people making the goods in Wal-Mart are for the most part working in sweatshop conditions.
“There have also been reports of teenagers in Bangladesh working in sweatshops 80 hours per week at $0.14 per hour, for Wal-Mart supplier Beximco. In 1994, Guatemalan, Wendy Diaz reported that she had been working for Wal-Mart at $0.30 per hour at age 13.”
It does not take outsourcing, however, for Wal-Mart to violate child labor laws:
- An internal Wal-Mart audit found “extensive violations of child-labor laws and state regulations requiring time for breaks and meals.
- One week of time records from 25,000 employees in July 2000 found 1,371 instances of minors working too late, during school hours, or for too many hours in a day. There were 60,767 missed breaks and 15,705 lost meal times.
- Wal-Mart agreed to pay $135,540 to settle child labor violation charges in January 2005 for allegedly breaking child labor laws in 24 incidents.
- Wal-Mart has also been fined $205,650 for 1,436 violations of child labor laws in Maine for the period 1995 to 1998. The settlement represents the largest number of citations as well as the largest fine ever issued by the Maine Department of Labor for child labor violations.
8. Loves destroying the Earth:
- 1999: All new WAL-MART construction halted in state of PENNSYLVANIA due to Environmental Violations
- 2001: EPA orders WAL-MART to pay $1.0 MILLION fine for Clean Water Violations in: TEXAS, OKLAHOMA AND MASSACHUSETTS
- 2004: WAL-MART fined $3.1 MILLION by EPA, the largest ever for a retailer, for Clean Water Act violations in TEXAS, COLORADO, CALIFORNIA, DELAWARE, MICHIGAN, SOUTH DAKOTA, NEW JERSEY, TENNESSEE and UTAH
- 2005: Connecticut EPA orders WAL-MART to pay $1.15 MILLION for Clean Water Act violations in 22 stores
9. Censors its products
Under what they call Product Selection, Wal-Mart dictates what its customers can and cannot buy, and it usually conforms to the standards of, say, the Christian Right.
For example, in 2003, Wal-Mart removed certain men’s magazines from their shelves, such as Maxim, FHM, and Stuff, citing customer complaints regarding their racy content. Later that year, they decided to partly obscure the covers of Redbook, Cosmopolitan, and Marie Claire on store shelves due to “customer concerns” and refused to stock an issue of Sports Illustrated’s
swimsuit special because it took exception to one photograph.
Since 1991, Wal-Mart also has not carried music albums marked with the Recording Industry Association of America’s (RIAA’s) Parental Advisory Label (contradictory to the allowance of R-rated movies and video games rated Mature), although they carry edited versions of such albums, with obscenities removed or overdubbed with less offensive lyrics…
In 1999, Wal-Mart announced that it would not stock emergency contraception pills in its pharmacies, not citing any particular reasons except for a “business decision” that was made earlier.The move was criticized by family planning advocates, citing that women in small towns where Wal-Mart pharmacies had little competition would have greater difficulties in obtaining the drug.
Yet despite their obvious attention to detail, Wal-Mart decided to continue selling the notoriously anti-Semetic text, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, until 2004.
10. Gives practically nothing back to the community, yet donates millions to conservative politicians
And finally, according to Business Week, the Waltons have given less than 1% of their wealth to charity; Bill Gates has given 58%. In 2005, Wal-Mart employees gave over $5 million to The Critical Need Fund for Associates, set up to help fellow workers in times of crisis, like a hurricane. The Walton Family gave $6,000.
Meanwhile, in 2004, “led by Sam Walton’s only daughter, Alice, the family spent $3.2 million on lobbying, conservative causes and candidates for last year’s federal elections.”
So next time you go to Wal-Mart to save, just remember what its actually costing….




lane crash flew back Thursday to Paris, where she was embraced gently by her father, who tried to lift her spirits with a joke.

Glacier in Patagonia, Argentina 1928 & 2004. Photo: Greenpeace













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