Johann Drops a Blog

Random ramblings from an idiot

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There’s an article in today’s SJ-R about the grand opening of a new Wal-Mart “super store” in Jacksonville.

How is this news? Is it THAT slow a news day in Central Illinois that our paper has to waste space on opening a store, especially one as shitty as Wal-Mart?

I just do not understand the appeal of Wal-Mart. First of all, any and all Wal-Marts I’ve ever been to are friggin’ dumps. Their aisles are barely big enough for two people to walk side by side comfortably in, let alone if they have carts (or “buggies”, for you Wal-Mart devotees out there). They’re usually set up poorly, though admittedly not as poorly as the Springfield My-jurr is. And I’ve yet to find a Wal-Mart that is staffed by people who are even a fraction as friendly, helpful, or as cheerful as they are portrayed in their TV commercials. And yeah, I know that applies to at least most, if not all, big national stores (Home Depot, fast food places, etc.), but can Wal-Mart employees be a more pissy, surly, and morose bunch of people? I understand that they’ve GOT to be greatly disappointed with their choice of employer, but holy crap. They made the choice to work there; the least they could do is even attempt to embrace it.

There is the aspect of how the “big box” stores like Wal-Mart (and they are not the only one, admittedly) come rolling into unsuspecting towns and put countless “hometown” or “mom and pop” places, many of which had previously been in business for decades or longer, out of business because they simply can’t compete with big national ripoff discount chains.

Then, of course, there is the clientèle. That’s a fancy French word meaning “people who patronize a place of business”. The grand majority of Wal-Mart shoppers that I have observed the few times I’ve been to Wal-Mart seem to be these slack-jawed booger-eating white trash pieces of DNA flotsam and jetsam who consider a trip to Wal-Mart to be the hillbilly equivalent of a Disney vacation. They get dressed up in their best “Who Farted?” t-shirts and their NASCAR ball caps and drag the whole family to Inbred Utopia and spend the whole day there. Yeeeee-haawwwwwww!

I have looked at Wal-Mart ads in the paper; true, they do occasionally have decent prices (aka the “Price Rollback”) on some things at time, but their {gouged} prices aren’t even remotely worth the emotional trauma of setting foot into one of these wastelands. The only thing I ever go into Wal-Mart for is to buy a fishing license once a year, and that’s only if I don’t have time to run by Jim’s Live Bait & Tackle (1016 W. Iles, 787-1951) on the way to Sangchris.

I try my hardest to MAKE the time.

I just can’t understand what the huge appeal is of Wal-Mart. But then, it keeps people out of the stores I do go to, so I guess Wal-Mart does serve one purpose. There is a reason Wal-Mart has the stigma it does (i.e. “Maverick is the Wal-Mart of restaurants”, or “Ford Escorts are the Wal-Mart of cars”, for example… and you can insert the restaurant or car of your choice, or create your own simile- the idea is the same). I dogged on coffee, beer, and water snobs in recent posts; I admit full well I am a “shopping snob” when it comes to Wal-Mart (and not the least bit ashamed of it). Wal-Mart deserves all the negativity it gets, no matter in what form. They make K-Marts look like Bloomingdale’s or Saks.

Construction is still in progress on Wal-Mart #3 in Springfield (to my knowledge, it’s not open yet…). This city barely needs one Wal-Mart, let alone three. Oh, but two of them are “super stores”? Well, lah-dee-freakin’-dah. I’d rather waste gas driving 20 miles out of my way and then pay twice as much than to piss money away at a place like Wal-Mart.

To the SJ-R: surely there could have been SOMETHING more deserving of your ink than the opening of another of these dumps. And to Wal-Mart shoppers: good Lord, people, grow some self-respect and shop at a real store. Like what, you ask? Like damn near anywhere but Wal-Mart.

March 8, 2008 - Posted by Johann | irrational rants | | 19 Comments

19 Comments »

  1. LOL @ “slack-jawed booger-eating white trash pieces of DNA flotsam and jetsam”

    For the most part, I am too proud to go to a Wal-Mart. But I did get my Wii at the Jax Wal-Mart, and I’ve bought “Cars” cars at the Parkway Pointe location.

    I wonder what’s going to replace that Wal-Mart. Hopefully, the developers or managers or whoever is in charge of that stuff has thought ahead.

    Comment by Anonymous Communist | March 9, 2008 | Reply

  2. I, too, am not a Wal-Mart shopper. I agree completely with you on their hit-and-run techniques: opening a store, causing regular stores to close, and then pulling out, leaving a huge empty store and no place else to go to buy what one formerly bought at Wal-Mart, because THEY’RE ALL CLOSED NOW.

    As far as I’m concerned, everything about Wal-Mart is trashy.
    They are not well-known for treating employees right, either.

    I hear the grocery store in the north-end Wal-Mart is pretty good, but I’m not driving nearly 10 miles, using up gas, to buy what I can get at Schnuck’s, closer to home. It may cost a little more, but I make it up with gas savings.

    Another analogy: A newspaper article described the Home Shopping Network as Wal-Mart, and it described QVC as Bloomingdale’s. ‘Nuff said?

    Comment by Marjorie | March 9, 2008 | Reply

  3. AnonCom: Unfortunately, the Parkway Pointe location (IF it does end up closing when the Hazel Dell Road store opens) likely will either sit vacant for six years, or else with my karmic retribution being what it is, they’ll probably open the world’s first 130,000-sq-ft Starbucks super store.

    Marjorie: LOL @ your analogy. I’ll have to take your word for that.
    But you’re right; I’d rather pay more at Schnucks than buy groceries for less at Wal-Mart (especially on the north end). You get what you pay for- Schnucks has better produce, better meats, better employees, and is just a better store period.

    Comment by Johann | March 9, 2008 | Reply

  4. Maybe the State should buy the Wal-Mart box at Parkway Point and turn it into a State Fair annex.

    Comment by SpringfieldZebra | March 9, 2008 | Reply

  5. I went to Wal-Mart once. And that was the end of my Wal-Mart shopping career.

    Comment by Marie | March 9, 2008 | Reply

  6. Zebra: Or turn it into a homeless shelter. It would probably attract a better class of people that way.

    Marie: You are, indeed, infinitely wise beyond your years.

    Comment by Johann | March 9, 2008 | Reply

  7. Glad to see you’re sticking it to Walmart by opting for that decades old hometown mom-and-pop, Schnucks.

    Sorry, couldn’t resist :-) I’m really not as snotty as my comments make me sound.

    Comment by nancy | March 9, 2008 | Reply

  8. Touché, smart ass. Touché. ;)

    Since there are no mom-and-pops in Springfield, I’d still rather pay more at Schnucks than go to The Wal. How’s that?

    And I know you’re not {as snotty}, just like I’m truthfully not as uppity as my posts make me sound. It’s mostly just the “character” I play here. According to AnonCom, I use hyperbole a lot, whatever that means.

    Except as it relates to Wal-Mart–THAT uppityness is legitimate.

    Comment by Johann | March 9, 2008 | Reply

  9. Dude. Food Fantasies, Humphrey’s, Turasky’s, Farmer’s Market (summer), Artina, Food Mart….the list goes on. These are just the ones I could think of off the top of my head. They may not be convenient, and they’re probably not competiviely priced anymore (thanks Walmart!), but the Patch still does offer some local options if you care to support them.

    I have to say, it’s a breath of fresh air to encounter a blogger willing to NOT take offense at every damn comment he doesn’t like. I’m glad you took my comment in the light-hearted manner in which it was intended. Jackass.

    Comment by nancy | March 9, 2008 | Reply

  10. Okay, okay, so I kinda missed one. Or six. Sorry. Sheeesh, some people are so picky… ;)

    And yes, I took your comment as it was intended. I actually DO have a good sense of humor.

    Dip-wad.

    P.S. I have NOT been in the Patch in years. No reason I haven’t been there, just no reason TO be there. I will have to head that way and investigate. Thanks!

    Comment by Johann | March 10, 2008 | Reply

  11. I think by “Patch,” Nancy meant Springpatch, not the Cabbage Patch. Sorry if I’m putting words in your mouth, Nancy.

    Comment by Marjorie | March 10, 2008 | Reply

  12. Oh. Yeah, I see that now. :oops:

    Hey, folks, I never claimed to be intellajint.

    Comment by Johann | March 10, 2008 | Reply

  13. [...] Wal-Mart is a beloved pastime for many. There are numerous reasons for doing [...]

    Pingback by Anonymous Communist » Blog Archive » Papal indulgences, retail-style | March 10, 2008 | Reply

  14. No Marjorie, you didn’t put words in my mouth. I was referring to Springfield, but I went through a bizarre moment of self-doubt when I read Johann’s comment, stunned and unsure how to respond.

    It was kind of a “cinnamon bobka” moment for me…another Patch??????

    Thanks for clarifying for me.

    Comment by nancy | March 10, 2008 | Reply

  15. There’s a lot not to like about Wal-Mart, but it strikes me as a tad hypocritical to boycott them to protest how they’ve altered the local marketplace. Mom and pop don’t have an inalienable right to run a shop, and if people don’t want to shop there anymore, then those are the breaks. Henry Ford put a lot of blacksmiths out of business, so how many of you protest by driving a horse and buggy to work? And what about all of those postal workers you’ve put on unemployment, you evil emailers?

    The times, they change, and only the fittest survive. I like the variety offered by locally-owned stores, and the good ones will find a way to draw a clientele. I’d be in serious mourning if Pizza Hut ever drove Joe’s Pizza out of business, but I’d be more pissed at the people who chose the Hut over Joe’s superior pie, then I would be at YUM! Brands for trying to get a bigger share of the market.

    Comment by Dan at BFS | March 10, 2008 | Reply

  16. At least Schnucks is still family owned. I have met the three brothers that are currently running the whole shebang and I’ve met Doris, the woman who started it all.

    And one reason Schnucks has better employees is because you actually have to take a test to work there. Granted it is based on a seventh grade level but you would be amazed at the number of people who can not pass it.

    Comment by Mrs. Johann | March 10, 2008 | Reply

  17. Nancy: It wasn’t you in the least. I’m just very short-bus slow. Sorry.

    Dan: Cool off, there, tiger.

    I’ve re-read my post several times and I’ve yet to find where I said or even implied that “Mom and Pop have an inalienable right to run a shop”. Maybe I’d be a little more willing to look past Wal-Mart’s putting local independent stores out of business and just chalk it up to “only the fittest survive” if they gave a damn about SOMEONE along the way, but they don’t. Yeah, I know, almost every industry has its “Wal-Mart” in that regard, but Wal-Mart goes out of their way to portray themselves as being so caring and giving to their customers and especially their employees. I just can’t believe the number of people that buy into it.

    If you or anyone else wants to shop there, rock on. Free enterprise, free country. I’m merely saying why I, myself, choose not to shop there. If I’m hypocritical in not doing so even though I drive a car instead of a horse and buggy, or because I use email instead of the USPS, then so be it. That’s my cross to bear. This post is about Wal-Mart, not a 100-plus year-old invention that revolutionized transportation (and industry in general), nor is it about progress or “change” as a blanket concept. The times, they do a-change. Some changes I accept more gracefully than others, that’s all.
    I fully recognize that Wal-Mart neither cares about my decision nor will suffer in spite of it. Contrary to popular belief, one person does NOT make the slightest bit of difference in ANY big picture. It makes ME feel better not to shop there, and that’s what matters. To me.
    Wal-Mart is, in my opinion, a shitty corporation that cares neither about its employees nor its customers. The least they could do is pick one to support while pooping on the other. Instead, they drop their corporate deuce on both.

    Mrs. Johann: I, for one, probably would NOT be amazed at the number of people who cannot pass the test to work at Schnucks. They’re likely Wal-Mart employees trying to make a change.

    Comment by Johann | March 10, 2008 | Reply

  18. My Wal-Mart experience

    It seems everyone has something to say about Wal-Mart, or the people who shop there, or the people who talk about the people who shop there: Bing Bang Boom As…

    Trackback by Disarranging Mine | March 10, 2008 | Reply

  19. I do shop at Walmart only because it’s so close unlike my favorite high class store that is 10 miles out of my way. And if it weren’t so close I wouldn’t shop there quite frankly it is very embarrassing to be in that store because just about everybody that shops there and works there is complete white trash. They put new produce on top of old produce and I’ve bought meat that is brown on the bottom I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had to return rotten food there.

    Comment by Dave Adams | January 25, 2009 | Reply


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