Nick Gillespie | February 27, 2006
I'll be on CNBC's Market Watch in less than an hour, yapping about Wal-Mart's new employee healthcare plan and related issues.
Reason's Julian Sanchez reviewed the anti-Wal-Mart flick The High Cost of Low Price here.
And a decade ago, I reported on the "superstore wars" then busting out in these United States like an Iraqi insurgency.
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Ok, here's the plan. Nick, you say that the Wal-Mart stock price
should SURGE in response to these developments. Folks know how
smart you are, Reason is, libertarians are in general-it should
work. We'll position ourselves long and wait...
;)
Surely you'll come out against this extra cost, and the threat
it poses to low low prices.
And since we all know that every dollar spent at Wally World over
the past three decades counts as a vote against employee health
care, you'll no doubt paste the company for ignoring its customers'
expressed preference.
Wow... after 10+ years of watching Squawk Box, I've got a newfound respect for Mark Haines.
46% of Wally employees are on medicare. What % of all people are on medicare? What % would be on medicare if Wallys didn't exist?
46% of Wally employees are on medicare.
Then something's wrong with Medicare. Down with old people!
What % of all people are on Medicare?
Although this isn't a real answer, 46% happens to be the same value
I've seen for the percentage of all U.S. medical bills paid by
taxpayers.
It makes my follicles hurt.
Offering jobs = burdening government health plans.
It pains me that an argument so obviously based on nothing but
gimme gimme gimme has traction.
Good job Nick! What a breath of fresh air. A condensed expose on
the superiority of markets, and the deleterious effects of
government intervention in healthcare. And after defending
Wal-Mart, Nick criticized where criticism s disserved -WalMart's
acceptance of government subsidization. Let's all get a hold of
CNBC and ask them to have Nick on as a regular...
CNBC viewer services at 877-251-5685. (toll free)
MorningCall@CNBC.com
Nick,
That ten-year old article refers to "Home Deport" in the headline.
Lonewacko might enjoy that.
I fully agreed with Andrew Grossman on Wal-Mart lack of social
concern in their health care issue. I also know that health issue
will inpact all of us including Mark, while the Walton family gets
richer.
I know that it is a traded company but so are other companies, it
is when we think that money is the almighty god that society goes
down the tube and everyone suffers.
Thank you.
Pat
Pat,
However concerned Wal-Mart is. Nick had the workable ideas about
making healthcare available and affordable. Who's Mark?
...Oh, ya mean Mark Haines. Mark really called him on it when Grossman started sounding like a back-biting politician.
Pat just needs to watch the South Park episode about
"Wall*Mart."
One of my favorites.
All I know is that my box of Wal-Mart bran flakes that has been
$1.50 for years just set me back an extra 7 cents. That's quite a
bit more of a leap than my cost of living raise for 2006.
Won't be long before I'll be spending more time in the pet food
aisle.
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