Talk:Criticism of Walmart
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Criticism of Walmart was one of the Social sciences and society good articles, but it has been removed from the list. There are suggestions below for improving the article to meet the good article criteria. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Midtown Walmart was nominated for deletion. The discussion was closed on 29 April 2017 with a consensus to merge. Its contents were merged into Criticism of Walmart. The original page is now a redirect to this page. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected article, please see its history; for its talk page, see here. |
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Biased by definition of the title
The very title of this article states it as a biased view point, containing only criticism of Walmart. In this article numerous complaints against Walmart are described but it is rarely mentioned what Walmart did to address those issues, nor are any beneficial activities of Walmart mentioned, such as:
Hurricane Katrina ravaged America’s Gulf Coast. The storm hit some of Walmart’s stores and clubs. Some of the company’s employees lost their homes and savings; a few lost their lives. Still, Walmart associates in the region rose to meet the challenges.
One store manager in Waveland, Mississippi, took a bulldozer to clear a path into and through her store, finding every dry item she could to give to neighbors who needed shoes, socks, food and water. "She didn’t call the Home Office and ask permission," Scott noted. "She just did the right thing."
In Katrina’s aftermath, government agencies, relief agencies and communities turned to Walmart (and other companies) to help. Walmart, with its sophisticated and highly efficient logistics operation, was able to get supplies to where they were needed far faster than federal and state agencies could. It was a shining moment for the company, and some much-needed positive press. [1]
I do not work for Walmart, but upon reading this article it simply struct me as biased, one sided and unfair. There are statements such as:
While Walmart did "stabilize" the landslide, many residents said that Walmart merely stabilized the hillside so that it could continue with work to build the store.
What information did these residents have as to Walmart's motive? How was this landslide Walmart's fault? Might this not have happened to anyone attempting to construct a building on this site? Was there any reason to think that an attempt to build on the site would cause such a landslide? If that were even the case, would not the responsibility fall upon the city's build and zoning department to deny the construction request, or insist that certain precautions be taken? And after all this despite the unsubstantiated claim that "Walmart merely stabilized the hillside so that it could continue with work to build the store", the store was not constructed on this site, but was built somewhere else. Doesn't this run counter to the claim that "Walmart merely stabilized the hillside so that it could continue with work to build the store"?
This is one example, if you read through this article, you will see many other places where it is stated that so and so claims that… and opponents say…, etc. Just because they say it does not make it so. Perhaps instead of an article that is titled "Criticism of Walmart" it should be titled "The Reputation of Walmart" and should included at least some discussion of things that Walmart is trying to do right like the Katrina example I gave above. Don't get me wrong,I think Walmart has many issues, not the least of which is that many of their products are imported, taking jobs away from US workers, but I think the subject deserves a fair discussion, and this article is not it.
To quote "Criticism of Wikipedia"
The purpose of the Wikipedia project has been criticized for the uneven handling, acceptance, and retention of articles about controversial subjects.
and
Further concerns are that the organization allows the participation of anonymous editors (facilitating editorial vandalism); the existence of social stratification (allowing cliques); and over-complicated rules (allowing editorial quarrels), which conditions permit the misuse of Wikipedia.
Unreliable content; in “Wikipedia: The Dumbing Down of World Knowledge” (2010), Edwin Black characterized the editorial content of articles as a mixture of “truth, half-truth, and some falsehoods”.[1] — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.115.249.137 (talk • contribs) 19 November 2015 10:52 (UTC)
References
- ^ Makower, Joel. "Chairman and Executive Editor at GreenBiz Group". LinkedIn. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
Walmartsucks.com page
Walmartsucks.com was a website created by a "a disgruntled customer" which created a long running dispute with Wal-Mart.[1] Wal-Mart filed a case with the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) against the walmartsucks.com website.[2] Wal-mart accused Kenneth J. Harvey, owner of walmartsucks.com, of attempting to extort money from Wal-Mart. Harvey asked Wal-Mart for 5 million dollars for the site. Harvey said it was "as a joke", what representatives of Wal-Mart called "extortion". "The WIPO [later] changed its opinion in light of US law."[3][4][5]
Background
"Wal-Mart's attorneys sent a letter threatening necessary action unless "[Richard L. Hatch]" (aka Kenneth J. Harvey) took [walmartsucks.com] down within 48 hours. Wal-Mart Stores then dropped efforts to close the site."[6][7]
COURT IN SESSION; intellectual property rights, litigation; Statistical Data Included Risk Management February 1, 2001:
- "Take Walmartsucks.com. This highly critical site includes complaints and news articles in addition to airing dirty laundry that uses the names of Wal-Mart's upper-echelon management. Everyone has the right to express their opinion, but can they get away with using your trademarked name? Right now, they can.
Harvey, states the web domain walmartsucks.com was bought in June 2006 by Wal-Mart, and asks how.[2]
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH I don't know who added this information about the walmartsucks site (as they didn't sign it), but I was on that site while these things were going down. Walmart had been trying for years to get rid of it, with no success. THEN WMS suffered a cyberattack which knocked it offline, and walmart immediately swooped in and filed with WIPO (which one of my friends at the time managed to insert himself into and WIPO CCed copies of everything to him) falsely claiming that WMS was a sales referral site. The owner of WMS eventually lost it to walmart, so he changed the name to "wallyWorldSucks" - which ALSO mysteriously disappeared from the internet 97.107.37.1 (talk) 23:08, 19 April 2023 (UTC)
Notes
- ^ Dave Johnson, How to respond to unhappy customers online, CBS News, (January 31, 2013).
- ^ Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. wallmartcanadasucks.com and Kenneth J. Harvey Case No. D2000-1104
- ^ [1], Radford.
- ^ REVENGE BY ANY OTHER WEB SITE NAME . . .;STORE SPAT BECOMES A WORLDWIDE DISPUTE, SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER (October 02, 2000). "...a case in which a cybersquatter in July (2000) lost the use of several variations of the name "walmartsucks" because the squatter demanded that Wal-Mart pay a ransom to stop him from publishing offensive material under the registered names."
- ^ What's in a name?: A lot if it's your Internet domain name, St. John's Telegram (Newfoundland) (November 20, 2002). "...long-running domain dispute between Wal-Mart and Harvey over such domain names as walmartsucks.com and walmartcanadasucks.com. The cases were heard by two different panels -- Wal-Mart won the rights to the former name, while losing on the latter. These days, Harvey maintains another Web site called walmartsucks.org that encourages Wal-Mart customers to e-mail horror stories about the department store giant."
- ^ France, Mike; Muller, Joann. A Site for Soreheads As "hate sites" target companies, managers are inventing defenses, Business Week, (April 12, 1999).
- ^ Richard L. Hatch was not his real name, Kenneth J. Harvey was, see court case.
External links
- Walmartsucks.com on Archive.org: June 12, 2004, shut down: June 14, 2004
Separate Walmart Labor relations article?
Given that bulk of criticism of Walmart is labor related, would it make sense to trim a section of this article into Walmart labor relations? There's comparable situation at Amazon Inc., Criticism of Amazon and Amazon worker organization. In general, am otherwise interested in documenting the Organized Labor, i.e trade union activity at Walmart in a future article, but that may be a further separate article given the wealth of research/resources. ~ 🦝 Shushugah (he/him • talk) 17:43, 27 December 2021 (UTC)
Additions
I suggest we add a section summarizing the information present on the Walmart opioids settlement article. Roasted (talk) 06:27, 29 May 2023 (UTC)
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