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Made in us
Fixture of Dakka




The person that wrote this must have taken a page from GW:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2013/03/31/of-course-walmart-destroys-retail-jobs-thats-the-darn-point-of-it-all/
   
Made in au
Terrifying Treeman






The Fallen Realm of Umbar

Lets buy some GW shares so we can elect this guy to the board and have him show them how its done.[/sarcasm]

DT:90-S++G++M++B+IPw40k07+D+A+++/cWD-R+T(T)DM+
Horst wrote:This is how trolling happens. A few cheeky posts are made. Then they get more insulting. Eventually, we revert to our primal animal state, hurling feces at each other while shreeking with glee.

 
   
Made in au
Lady of the Lake






Hey guys, burning money is a good thing as well. It keeps people warm.

   
Made in au
Terrifying Treeman






The Fallen Realm of Umbar

Besides once we have taken it off the customers, its not like they care about what happens to it right?

DT:90-S++G++M++B+IPw40k07+D+A+++/cWD-R+T(T)DM+
Horst wrote:This is how trolling happens. A few cheeky posts are made. Then they get more insulting. Eventually, we revert to our primal animal state, hurling feces at each other while shreeking with glee.

 
   
Made in us
Fixture of Dakka




The author better be careful, though. He might get sued for a copyright violation!
   
Made in ca
Depraved Slaanesh Chaos Lord





The author has confused "capitalism" with "the economy" as though those terms are interchangeable; and then goes on to conflate being jobless with being able to do something even better, as though it was that damned income-earning that was holding everyone back.

This is not even remotely interesting. The first paragraph betrays the likelihood that the author has never once worked for a living, and likely lives on the same secluded plane of reality that Gwyneth Paltrow does.
   
Made in gb
Worthiest of Warlock Engineers






preston


Free from GW's tyranny and the hobby is looking better for it
DR:90-S++G+++M++B++I+Pww205++D++A+++/sWD146R++T(T)D+
 
   
Made in la
Witch Hunter in the Shadows





Earth

Whenever I am back in the first world I do pretty much all of my shopping at these two places. Costco and Walmart own. No doubt about it.

   
Made in us
Fixture of Dakka




 azazel the cat wrote:
The author has confused "capitalism" with "the economy" as though those terms are interchangeable; and then goes on to conflate being jobless with being able to do something even better, as though it was that damned income-earning that was holding everyone back.

This is not even remotely interesting. The first paragraph betrays the likelihood that the author has never once worked for a living, and likely lives on the same secluded plane of reality that Gwyneth Paltrow does.


The part about going on from a retail job to cure Cancer caught me, also. It's as though he believes everyone who works retail will just be able to go knock on the door of a research lab and get hired.
   
Made in us
Hangin' with Gork & Mork






 azazel the cat wrote:
lives on the same secluded plane of reality that Gwyneth Paltrow does.


Her website is an amazing example of someone who is completely out of touch with reality. It is amazing, really.

Feeling sad? Why, just jet off to Europe for a month with your famous friends and stay in a castle, like we all do.

Some great Headlines written about her site:

Let Gwyneth Paltrow tidy up your colon

Gwyneth Paltrow Recommends The Unattainable Gwyneth Paltrow Lifestyle

It's time to stop fashioning your ketchup-crusted dishrags into clothes and buy this $90 T-shirt from Gwyneth Paltrow *




*Note, it isn't a print shirt, just a plain white t-shirt. Not even made especially unusual, either, just a $90 plain white T-Shirt.

Amidst the mists and coldest frosts he thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts.
 
   
Made in ca
Zealous Sin-Eater




Montreal

 azazel the cat wrote:
The first paragraph betrays the likelihood that the author has never once worked for a living, and likely lives on the same secluded plane of reality that Gwyneth Paltrow does.


He's an article writer/author and a fellow at the Adam Smith Institute of London. He's also a scandium and other rare earth dealer.

I doubt he's rich, but this entire article seems to make a mockery of whatever degree he has...


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 Ahtman wrote:
Her website is an amazing example of someone who is completely out of touch with reality. It is amazing, really.


What can you expect from someone who'se 'friends' section is actually called 'Elite affiliates'?

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/06/09 21:02:45


[...] for conflict is the great teacher, and pain, the perfect educator.  
   
Made in ca
Stubborn Dark Angels Veteran Sergeant




Ontario

 Kovnik Obama wrote:
 azazel the cat wrote:
The first paragraph betrays the likelihood that the author has never once worked for a living, and likely lives on the same secluded plane of reality that Gwyneth Paltrow does.


He's an article writer/author and a fellow at the Adam Smith Institute of London. He's also a scandium and other rare earth dealer.

I doubt he's rich, but this entire article seems to make a mockery of whatever degree he has...


I personally loved the part where he thought one third of 120 was 33, and this fellow is supposedly an economist of some kind?

DCDA:90-S++G+++MB++I+Pw40k98-D+++A+++/areWD007R++T(S)DM+ 
   
Made in ca
Depraved Slaanesh Chaos Lord





Wow, y'all actually read the whole thing? I made it to the end of the first paragraph and egressed from that cesspool
   
Made in ca
Zealous Sin-Eater




Montreal

 Ratbarf wrote:
I personally loved the part where he thought one third of 120 was 33


Probably one of the less glaring mistakes he made in this gakblog. I mean... He did call Wal-Mart ''a new technology''... He forgot to account for *any* cost of career re-orientation... Or any depreciation of service value...

Basically, his argumentative strategy is :

a) Filling the same need while spending fewer ressources is better.
b) Wal-Mart free human ressources that could be spent on other tasks while providing the same service
c)Costco free 3 times as much ressources as Wal-mart in any given area it inplants itself.
d) Why is everyone bitching about Wal-mart and not about Costco?

 Ratbarf wrote:
and this fellow is supposedly an economist of some kind?


Nah, just a blogger with good relations with a Tatcherite think tank. I can't find any information on his academic formation.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/06/09 23:37:20


[...] for conflict is the great teacher, and pain, the perfect educator.  
   
Made in ca
Renegade Inquisitor with a Bound Daemon





Tied and gagged in the back of your car

 Ahtman wrote:

Let Gwyneth Paltrow tidy up your colon


I would allow this to happen.
   
Made in us
Hangin' with Gork & Mork






 Fafnir wrote:
 Ahtman wrote:

Let Gwyneth Paltrow tidy up your colon


I would allow this to happen.


Sadly, it isn't the way you would like. It is a $450 tin of, essentially, Colon Blow.

Amidst the mists and coldest frosts he thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts.
 
   
Made in ca
Renegade Inquisitor with a Bound Daemon





Tied and gagged in the back of your car

Disappointed... but not entirely dissuaded.
   
Made in ca
Longtime Dakkanaut




Building a blood in water scent

The general thrust of his point is about the trend of labour. He talks about how 80% of humanity used to be farmers but labour-saving technology has reduced that to a fraction.

I don't think (i hope not) that he is literally saying, "lost your job selling Mom&Pop shoes to Wal-Mart? Great now you can cure cancer!"

Rather I think he is talking about the overall shift of humanity from retail into human services and research. This is a generational thing.

Or he is an enormous troll looking for hits.

We were once so close to heaven, St. Peter came out and gave us medals; declaring us "The nicest of the damned".

“Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.'” 
   
Made in us
Fixture of Dakka




feeder wrote:
The general thrust of his point is about the trend of labour. He talks about how 80% of humanity used to be farmers but labour-saving technology has reduced that to a fraction.

I don't think (i hope not) that he is literally saying, "lost your job selling Mom&Pop shoes to Wal-Mart? Great now you can cure cancer!"

Rather I think he is talking about the overall shift of humanity from retail into human services and research. This is a generational thing.

Or he is an enormous troll looking for hits.


It was unfortunate that he used farming as an example of a good shift. As someone who grew up on a farm, I am a bit nervous at the thought of food production being controlled by so few, especially when a lot of that percentage is in the hands of big corporations that decide bio engineered crops are the way to go, like Monsanto.


   
Made in au
Tough Tyrant Guard







 Ratbarf wrote:
 Kovnik Obama wrote:
 azazel the cat wrote:
The first paragraph betrays the likelihood that the author has never once worked for a living, and likely lives on the same secluded plane of reality that Gwyneth Paltrow does.


He's an article writer/author and a fellow at the Adam Smith Institute of London. He's also a scandium and other rare earth dealer.

I doubt he's rich, but this entire article seems to make a mockery of whatever degree he has...


I personally loved the part where he thought one third of 120 was 33, and this fellow is supposedly an economist of some kind?

He said a third of 100 is 33, which it is.

Reading the thread I expected his article to be some deranged screed, but it was pretty straightforwards and seemed to make sense. I'll try to summarise in two points:

1. on a societal level, labour being spent on necessities (like farming or shopkeeping) is labour that can't be spent on what I'll term luxuries, like curing cancer or anything else nonessential. Note that he does not seem to make any claims that you'll get laid off from your job at your grocery store and immediately go and become a cancer researcher. He's only speaking in very general terms. Note that this is pretty much how society developed in the first place.
2. Costco makes over three times as many sales per employee as Walmart, meaning Costco should by extension be putting three times as many smaller local employees out of business as Walmart per Costco employee. He asks why people are not, therefore, complaining about Costco.

That's about it, really.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/06/10 02:58:38


 
   
Made in us
Decrepit Dakkanaut






New Orleans, LA

 Ahtman wrote:
 Fafnir wrote:
 Ahtman wrote:

Let Gwyneth Paltrow tidy up your colon


I would allow this to happen.


Sadly, it isn't the way you would like. It is a $450 tin of, essentially, Colon Blow.


Super Colon Blow, or the regular Colon Blow?


DA:70S+G+M+B++I++Pw40k08+D++A++/fWD-R+T(M)DM+
 
   
Made in ca
Zealous Sin-Eater




Montreal

 HiveFleetPlastic wrote:


Reading the thread I expected his article to be some deranged screed, but it was pretty straightforwards and seemed to make sense. I'll try to summarise in two points:

1. on a societal level, labour being spent on necessities (like farming or shopkeeping) is labour that can't be spent on what I'll term luxuries, like curing cancer or anything else nonessential. Note that he does not seem to make any claims that you'll get laid off from your job at your grocery store and immediately go and become a cancer researcher. He's only speaking in very general terms. Note that this is pretty much how society developed in the first place.
2. Costco makes over three times as many sales per employee as Walmart, meaning Costco should by extension be putting three times as many smaller local employees out of business as Walmart per Costco employee. He asks why people are not, therefore, complaining about Costco.

That's about it, really.


The problem is that there is some enormous gaps in his approach of the subject.

''Well quite. That is indeed the point of this entire capitalism/free markets thing. '' This being said after it was shown to him that Wal-mart increases poverty where it implants itself. I mean, how slowed do you have to be to defend capitalism by saying that capitalism lowering wages and cutting jobs is a good thing? It's as if the readers of Forbes are more likely to be upper management then floor-workers... Oh wait...

''Using less labour to perform one specific task frees up that labour to go and perform other tasks. This is good, this is progress. '' But it isn't when you don't have something else to assign that workforce to. Or the time to train them. And during the mean time those people need money. This is the most glaring flaw in his logic.

''And what is it that WalMart actually is? It’s simply a new technology for retailing goods.'' No it's not. Words have specific meanings. ''Next-gen retailer'' isn't one of ''technology''.

''And yes, when the dust has settled there are now fewer people working in retail than there were before WalMart (or Sears Roebuck). And this is good: for there is now labour available to go and do some of the other things that we might like to have done. Find the cure for cancer, tend to the sick, nurse the elderly, take care of the children: whatever.'' And that's the part where he actually says what you claimed he didn't. If he didn't mean it, then he's even more slowed than I thought, considering that statement makes a pretty damn good job at making a mockery of his entire argument.

[...] for conflict is the great teacher, and pain, the perfect educator.  
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut





Spitsbergen

 kronk wrote:
 Ahtman wrote:
 Fafnir wrote:
 Ahtman wrote:

Let Gwyneth Paltrow tidy up your colon


I would allow this to happen.


Sadly, it isn't the way you would like. It is a $450 tin of, essentially, Colon Blow.


Super Colon Blow, or the regular Colon Blow?




No way it's Super Colon Blow. A graham of Super is gonna be at least 600 bucks. Anything less than that is probably some cheap gak cut with Metamucil. Colon Blow dealers are notorious for ripping people off like that.
   
Made in au
The Dread Evil Lord Varlak





I don't think the article was all that troublesome.

I mean, he's just pointing out something that should be pretty basic knowledge - businesses aren't there to create jobs. They're there to figure out how to do a better job with less resources. While that can mean job cuts in the short term, ultimately having less people working to deliver the same product, and having those people retrain and move in to other economic sectors is what economic growth is.

And yeah, it sucks for people who lose their jobs. Just like it sucked for British people when the tradition of open field agriculture ended and the farms were enclosed, forcing those people to look for work in the cities. It definitely sucked for those caught in that transition, but that drove the industrial revolution, and without it we wouldn't have the modern world.

Now, that doesn't mean that job loss should just be viewed passively by government. Everyone of those newly unemployed people is a part of society, and also a potential worker who can add to the economy. In terms of both social policy and the public good it is good to get them working again, either by helping them develop new skills, or by helping them locate to a place where their skills are needed.

But this idea that we should somehow just stop companies doing things better, because that means job cuts... I agree with the guy in the blog - that idea is just plain wrong.


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 Kovnik Obama wrote:
''Using less labour to perform one specific task frees up that labour to go and perform other tasks. This is good, this is progress. '' But it isn't when you don't have something else to assign that workforce to. Or the time to train them. And during the mean time those people need money. This is the most glaring flaw in his logic.


Well, if you're going to work with the assumption that job lost from the economy will never be recreated elsewhere, then your complaint makes sense.

But your assumption flies in the face of 400 years of economic history. Seriously, they put up those enclosures in Britain and forced a massive portion of the population out of their lives as subsistance farmers... and yet the UK didn't just produce 400 years of inter-generational poverty as those people and their ancestors never ever worked again. They moved in to new industries. This is not only a thing that's possible, it's a thing that happens to almost all of those displaced worked, every single time.

''And what is it that WalMart actually is? It’s simply a new technology for retailing goods.'' No it's not. Words have specific meanings. ''Next-gen retailer'' isn't one of ''technology''.


No, 'technology' is used in that sense in economics and economic history. When dealing with how economies grow, there are three broad categories of drivers of growth - population growth, capital growth, and technology. That last category is broad one, dealing with any kind of innovation that leads to people doing more with less resources.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2013/06/10 04:11:38


“We may observe that the government in a civilized country is much more expensive than in a barbarous one; and when we say that one government is more expensive than another, it is the same as if we said that that one country is farther advanced in improvement than another. To say that the government is expensive and the people not oppressed is to say that the people are rich.”

Adam Smith, who must have been some kind of leftie or something. 
   
Made in us
Dwarf High King with New Book of Grudges




United States

 HiveFleetPlastic wrote:

2. Costco makes over three times as many sales per employee as Walmart, meaning Costco should by extension be putting three times as many smaller local employees out of business as Walmart per Costco employee. He asks why people are not, therefore, complaining about Costco.


The issues of eliminating retail jobs is ancillary, what angers people is Walmart's treatment of its employees. Notably, the average Walmart employee makes ~12 USD/hr and the average Costco employee makes ~17 USD/hr. That this guy chose to ignore that is, at best, lazy journalism.

Life does not cease to be funny when people die any more than it ceases to be serious when people laugh. 
   
Made in us
Hangin' with Gork & Mork






 sebster wrote:
I agree with the guy in the blog - that idea is just plain wrong.


So it seems that what he is saying isn't so bad, and that it is more of an issue that he doesn't know how to write for an audience.

Amidst the mists and coldest frosts he thrusts his fists against the posts and still insists he sees the ghosts.
 
   
Made in au
Crazed Spirit of the Defiler




Eye of Terror

jobs being lost is never a good thing....who was allowed to even write this?

My large scale warhammer/kings of war Blog of the Brass and Rot legions:
http://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/666677.page#8211472 
   
Made in au
Incorporating Wet-Blending






Australia

 Scorpionov wrote:
jobs being lost is never a good thing....who was allowed to even write this?

Someone who knows more about the subject than you, apparently. It's quite simple: the reason a job is good is what it produces (an income for you, and outputs for your employer and their customers), not the job itself. Jobs lost to increased efficiency are thus a good thing, if the lost income is replaced by another source.

Think of a post-scarcity utopia where robots do the work so you don't have to. Does it really matter if you don't have a job, if the work is still being done and you're still getting paid?

"When I became a man I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown up."
-C.S. Lewis 
   
Made in us
Last Remaining Whole C'Tan






Pleasant Valley, Iowa

This is great news!


Automatically Appended Next Post:
 dogma wrote:
The issues of eliminating retail jobs is ancillary, what angers people is Walmart's treatment of its employees. Notably, the average Walmart employee makes ~12 USD/hr and the average Costco employee makes ~17 USD/hr. That this guy chose to ignore that is, at best, lazy journalism.


Another major issue is the cost-shifting they do onto the taxpayer, as an inordinate percentage of Walmart employees are on welfare, food stamps, and other social programs - taxpayers subsidize their profit-taking.

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2013/06/10 13:04:03


 lord_blackfang wrote:
Respect to the guy who subscribed just to post a massive ASCII dong in the chat and immediately get banned.

 Flinty wrote:
The benefit of slate is that its.actually a.rock with rock like properties. The downside is that it's a rock
 
   
Made in us
Longtime Dakkanaut






 AlexHolker wrote:
 Scorpionov wrote:
jobs being lost is never a good thing....who was allowed to even write this?

Someone who knows more about the subject than you, apparently. It's quite simple: the reason a job is good is what it produces (an income for you, and outputs for your employer and their customers), not the job itself. Jobs lost to increased efficiency are thus a good thing, if the lost income is replaced by another source.

Think of a post-scarcity utopia where robots do the work so you don't have to. Does it really matter if you don't have a job, if the work is still being done and you're still getting paid?
Wait, why am I still getting paid if the robot is doing my job?
   
 
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