I would imagine most retail stores (including mom and pop stores) get the majority of their goods from China. I have tried the whole buy exclusively American products thing, and it simply isn't practical. Too many stores carry "made in China" products.
That's an assumption that's not necessarily accurate. Mass merchandisers perhaps, ...but Mom & Pop specialty stores quite frequently market homegrown goods.
If Walmart or any employer is paying less than minimum wage then there are ways to address those illegal practices.
{lol} Sometimes your naiveté can actually be funny.
It's not like Walmart employees and others workers subject to having their labour routinely stolen haven't tried.
I have not studied this, but I doubt there is a significant number of communities where Walmart is (a) the only employer and (b) created less jobs than the stores that could not compete.
There are. And it's even more reprehensible because they originally sold themselves as "Made in America",
then they did the 'Bait & Switch' and now it's all 'Made in China'
Great documentary done by a friend of mine is
Walmart: The High Cost of Low PriceThe Filmaker,
Robert Greenwald is a producer, director and political activist. Greenwald is the founder and president of
Brave New Films, a new media company that uses moving images to educate, influence, and empower viewers to take action around issues that matter. Under Greenwald's direction, Brave New Films has produced a series of short political videos, including the
Fox Attacks and
Real McCain campaigns. One of the more notable Real McCain videos focused on
McCain's Mansions; after Brave New Films produced this video, McCain notoriously said he was not sure how many houses he owned and a media firestorm ensued. In total, Brave New Film's short videos have been viewed over 40 million times in the past two years, inspired hundreds of thousands of people to take action and forced pressing issues into the mainstream media.
In 2008, Brave New Foundation and The Nation produced
This Brave Nation, a documentary series featuring progressive activists in conversation with each other. Greenwald also supervised the construction of the Brave New Studio, a high-tech studio where Brave New Foundation and other organizations can produce content to advance the progressive movement.
In addition, Greenwald is the director/producer of several documentaries:
"Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers" (2006), an expose of what happens when corporations go to war; as well as
"Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price" (2005), detailing the retail giant's assault on families and American values; and
"Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism" (2004), about the right-wing opinion factory known as Fox "News". Millions of viewers have seen these films via grassroots "house parties" and independent online DVD sales, a groundbreaking method of alternative distribution. Greenwald also executive produced a trilogy of political documentaries:
"Unprecedented: The 2000 Election" (2002);
"Uncovered: The War on Iraq" (2003), which he also directed; and "Unconstitutional" (2004).
Prior to his documentary work, Greenwald produced and/or directed more than 55 television movies, miniseries and feature films. Greenwald's films have garnered 25 Emmy nominations, two Golden Globe nominations, the Peabody Award and the Robert Wood Johnson Award. He was awarded the 2002 Producer of the Year Award by the American Film Institute. He has been honored for his activism by the ACLU Foundation of Southern California; the Liberty Hill Foundation; the Los Angeles chapter of the National Lawyers Guild; Physicians for Social Responsibility; Consumer Attorney's Association of Los Angeles; Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy and the Office of the Americas.
In this clip, Robert discusses in a 2005 interview with Salon what made him decide to make the Wal-Mart film