Walmart Supports Small Business?

Listening to WNYC yesterday morning, Brian Lehrer was on discussing the prospect of Walmart selling organic produce acquired from small and medium sized local farms who practice sustainable farming.

I’m not entirely sure how I feel about this. Walmart is definitely on the top of my least favorite big box stores list. For a variety of reasons. Over the years we’ve all heard about their not so fabulous business practices from treatment of employees, to outsourcing to China to keep prices down. Lets face it Walmart put small businesses out of business. So hearing the Walmart and support small business in the same sentence is shocking, and quite frankly immediately sets off a few red flashing lights in my mind.  The good news here, in my opinion, is that the whole concept off supporting small local farms has gotten mainstream enough that Walmart wants a piece of the sustainability pie! Great news right!?!

Here’s my problem, big box stores are by nature completely and utterly unsustainable! Stores like Walmart have put entire towns out of business, moved sources for goods from our own towns and surrounding cities to countries on the other side of the world. They thrive off the concept of buying cheap, throwing out, and buying cheap again. Thus filling our landfills with unnecessary waste.

It’s all a bit frustrating. If it takes a superstore like Walmart to revive small farms, to get more farms to practice sustainable farming, then that would truly be fantastic. However I can’t help but be wary of what’s going on. You can read about Walmart’s Sustainable Agriculture Goals here.

I’d love to hear your opinions on this topic.

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5 Responses to “Walmart Supports Small Business?”

  1. Yes– it will be so interesting to see how this plays out! I keep hearing about it and I think mixed feelings are totally healthy and normal!

  2. I don’t know how I feel about WalMart. They put Americans out of work but if they went away many people would have a hard time paying the higher prices of small stores. Yoy’re damned if you do, and damned if you do.

  3. A couple of years ago, we were down in Georgia visiting family and there was no where else to shop but Walmart. It had probably been two years since the last time we were there and the mega-Walmart was a new addition to the landscape. It had a hair salon, grocery store, pharmacy, photo studio, shoes, toys, clothing, bed, bath and cleaning supplies, electronics, TVs, bikes, a restaurant… I had never in my life seen anything like it. Everything you could possibly need; you could have lived in there. The corner store where we used to go to buy milk and basics–PoTeets–was going out of business despite the fact that it was 10 miles away from the new Walmart, there was a grocery store 5 miles in the opposite direction that was still there but every shop on the main strip where the Walmart was was closed. Even if the prices aren’t so much cheaper if you’ve got a car load of kids and a limited time to shop why wouldn’t you just go to Walmart and get everything in one place than make five stops. I know we all want convenience, I know we all need to stretch every dollar but I found the landscape around this Walmart much like my vision of the Apocalypse…barren except for the one bright shining center of the world, Walmart. How do we balance what’s good for the planet and what’s good for our neighbors, who need their small businesses and fair paying jobs, with our desire for the ultimate in convenience?

  4. They’re just trying to put icing on the pile of dog crap that is their business. No thanks.

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