[lbo-talk] Wal-Mart

Yoshie Furuhashi furuhashi.1 at osu.edu
Thu Dec 2 14:30:26 PST 2004



>You can disparage WMT for not making anything, but man can they run
>a supply chain. It's amazing how a bunch of good ol' boys, scornful
>of city slickers and school smarts, managed to put together this
>formidable machine of distribution and accumulation. It's the evil
>genius of American capitalism at its most voracious - making a
>fortune off poverty.
>
>Doug

Unions should attack Wal-Mart's supply chain first before trying to organize Wal-Mart stores and offices.

"By the end of 2001, Wal-Mart will have 78 distribution centers and will employ approximately 25,000 workers" ("Wal-Mart: Driving Down Standards in the Food Industry," July 11, 2000, <http://www.teamster.org/00news/nr_WW_1.htm>).

Employ 156-240 organizers and salt every single Wal-Mart distribution center, implanting 2-3 organizers per center, with the goal of bringing about a nationwide Wal-Mart supply crisis within a couple of years. That should cost $3-4.8 million per year, spending $20,000 per organizer per year (the organizers combining their union paychecks with Wal-Mart wages to survive and organize). At the same time, beef up Jobs with Justice and similar union-community-campus-congregation alliances, and line up support of union locals whose workers' labor comes into direct or indirect contact with the Wal-Mart supply chain.

If unions succeed in organizing Wal-Mart distribution workers, they can use the power to disrupt the supply chain as a lever to organize Wal-Mart store and office clerks. -- Yoshie

* Critical Montages: <http://montages.blogspot.com/> * "Proud of Britain": <http://www.proudofbritain.net/ > and <http://www.proud-of-britain.org.uk/>



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