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Heidi's Journal

heidi
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07/04/2009 14:16 #49187

Fireworks @ Riverside Park
Category: holiday
We didn't have nearly the adventure that (e:Mike,49186) did, but we enjoyed the Friendship Festival and fireworks at Riverside Park last night. Thanks for the suggestion. It was the first time I've taken pix of fireworks with the camera I got last summer. (I need a tripod!) The little festival carnival had more food vendors than anything else and not much local stuff. We were hoping for more of a Riverside cultural experience. The rides were bigger and more plentiful than any of the festivals held in Tioga County.

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dimartiste - 07/10/09 22:57
Really Nice Pictures!
metalpeter - 07/04/09 16:32
That top picture is pretty good.
tinypliny - 07/04/09 15:37
Awesome pics! (Harbour stuff is nowhere as splendid, btw)
paul - 07/04/09 14:29
That top picture is awesome.

07/02/2009 12:52 #49175

Fireworks?
Category: holiday
I'm unexpectedly in Buffalo this weekend and A's coming to visit. He's big into fireworks. So what's the best option? Sounds like Kenmore was really the place to be last weekend. We'd be happy to have company on our fireworks adventure; we'd also be happy to tag along with other folks.




metalpeter - 07/03/09 11:11
Just wanted to ad that I think at least Channel 2. www.wgrz.com and channel 4 have a pretty good list of fireworks going on, at there websites.
leetee - 07/03/09 10:16
Riverside has done a good show over the years. They have a wee carnival at the park, too, if that kinda thing floats your boat. I find, although it can get a bit crowded, seeing the fireworks display from the water can be nice. :o)
metalpeter - 07/02/09 19:59
Not sure of all the places but I know that down by the aud down at the Marina was fun last year.

07/01/2009 15:58 #49142

News from home: Bear on Main Street
Category: tourism
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(photo by Kelly Stemcosky, Wellsboro Gazette)

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(unknown source)


A bear found its way up a tree around 8:30 p.m. Monday night, June 30, in front of Subway on Main Street in Wellsboro [Tioga County, Pa.].

Crowds of people watched from the sidewalk as the borough police, members of the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources and the Game Commission worked to get the bear down safely.

Jacob Brink, 11, and Branden Enck, 10, said they saw the bear near Austin and Purple Streets just minutes before.

"It was walking right down Purple [Street]. It was huge," said Brink.

This bruin headed for high ground, climbing a tree on Main Street, Wellsboro on Monday evening. The animal was subsequently tranquilized, captured and eventually destroyed because of its aggressive tendencies.



(I wasn't there, I didn't see it, it's Wellsboro, the county seat.)

paul - 07/01/09 21:16
I hear they keep coming out to the suburbs here.
heidi - 07/01/09 18:39
Yeah, the first reports I read didn't include the "we killed the bear" part. :-( Seems unnecessary.
theecarey - 07/01/09 18:33
amazing pictures, but I wish the story had a better ending; "destroyed because of its aggressive tendencies"..

I'm with (e:tinypliny)
tinypliny - 07/01/09 17:22
I feel sad for the poor bear. This is a statement on how vicious the human race can be.

06/28/2009 15:51 #49108

The high cost of doing biz with Walmart
Category: economics
http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/77/walmart.html?page=0%2C1


It also is not unheard of for Wal-Mart to demand to examine the private financial records of a supplier, and to insist that its margins are too high and must be cut. And the smaller the supplier, one academic study shows, the greater the likelihood that it will be forced into damaging concessions.



Wal-Mart has also lulled shoppers into ignoring the difference between the price of something and the cost. Its unending focus on price underscores something that Americans are only starting to realize about globalization: Ever-cheaper prices have consequences. Says Steve Dobbins, president of thread maker Carolina Mills: "We want clean air, clear water, good living conditions, the best health care in the world--yet we aren't willing to pay for anything manufactured under those restrictions."



Also has an interesting discussion of Levi's entrance into walmart.

This video discusses similar things from a broader perspective.


What is the Story of Stuff?


From its extraction through sale, use and disposal, all the stuff in our lives affects communities at home and abroad, yet most of this is hidden from view. The Story of Stuff is a 20-minute, fast-paced, fact-filled look at the underside of our production and consumption patterns. The Story of Stuff exposes the connections between a huge number of environmental and social issues, and calls us together to create a more sustainable and just world. It'll teach you something, it'll make you laugh, and it just may change the way you look at all the stuff in your life forever.



Thoughts?
tinypliny - 07/02/09 08:37
(e:libertad), I am really glad that (e:heidi) started this thread and you chipped in with your comments.
Let me unclothe one more anecdotal skeleton from my closet.

Three years back my friend and I had a major disagreement over my shopping habits. My friend saw the walmart documentary and kept insisting that I should be not be shopping at walmart. She started her own personal boycott. We used to shop together but my constant dread of being judged as insensitive, lead me to make stealthy trips to the walmart store when she wasn't around!

It was getting to a point where I was making double grocery trips because wegmans prices were nearly making me bankrupt and I didn't want to seem like I was completely indifferent about the "evils of walmart". Finally, I decided that I had had enough of a hard time for just shopping at a place that helped me meet my nutritional goals. My friend and I went through a "grocery-shopping divorce".

It was winter when this happened - my second winter with snow. In the two months that I didn't shop at walmart, I lost my inclination to cook because all that was affordable were root vegetables and bananas. I don't remember anything at wegmans ever being less than $2.49 a pound those two months. Milk prices climbed to $2.99. I couldn't eat salads because the prices of spinach and greens (other than lettuce - that I don't like) were atrocious.

So yes, those two months were the worst in terms of my eating. I never felt so poor my entire life. I was taking a class on nutritional epidemiology to top all this and I got bitter and resentful about costs in a new country. When you are trying to get by on $20K/year, I don't think you can EVER honestly say that you despise walmart. I never will and I am puzzled that people have such hatred toward them.

I really like my friend a lot. She is an awesome person. My motive behind joining the argument here was not to be divisive or condescending. It was to understand why those two months were so painful as they were. I completely did not understand her and I still am not sure why that documentary influences people so much. Yes, I have watched the documentary and read all of (e:Heidi)'s links but their arguments seem cerebral and remote to me and unaware of what's really the truth behind the success of walmart.

That and all you guys are awesome at even-handed in-depth argument. You remind me of the debating society I was in, back home. :)
jason - 07/02/09 00:18
(e:Libertad),

Nobody has made a personal attack, and nobody has said that people shouldn't criticize Wal*Mart. It isn't necessary to break an argument and isn't productive. Nobody is above criticism - even the critics. I certainly don't approve of many of their business practices and vote with my wallet like you do.

The basis of Wal*Mart's success, and this will help to explain the "What have they ever done for anyone" question, is their position as a cost leader. What they do better than anyone else is enable a wide variety of people to stretch their buck further, improving their quality of life.

For someone to suggest that people worry too much about the cost of the things they buy is to fail to understand why people shop there to begin with. And yeah, I have a problem with criticism that doesn't lead to a constructive solution. If the Wal*Mart critic's position is that the company shouldn't exist, whether they realize it or not they are telling millions of American families "screw your lifestyle". There had better damn well be a constructive alternative to solve that problem because the consumers have already spoken concerning what they want.

Now - it was probably unfair of me to say that the activists are behaving in a condescending manner. I'll take that part back, but not the aloof thing, which to me is plainly evident. They aren't looking down on the low income shoppers concerning this issue, but their lifestyle is merely a secondary concern at best. It isn't an ill considered argument when people like the author plainly say they don't understand why people worry about money or why people shop at the store.
libertad - 07/01/09 21:33
I certainly would not consider myself "upper-middle to upper class", nor would I condemn a poor person or a wealthy one for shopping where they want to or need to. I think a lot of activists actually are on the poorer side when you think about it.

I'm not so sure why we should not criticize Walmart. Nobody really has said why our life is so much better with them. It is almost as if poor people had no place to shop before Walmart came and saved them. It is more divisiveness and personal attacks as usual.

(e:heidi), I think the article and the documentary explain why Walmart and their psychology is damaging to poor people, to consumer choice, the environment and availability of quality products.
jason - 07/01/09 10:58
My thoughts on Wal*Mart:

I'm not particularly offended by them. Shitting on Wal*Mart is not the common man's endeavor. It's the milieu of upper-middle to upper class activists who can afford to not shop there, and probably would never consider shopping there anyway. I'm sure Wal*Mart feels very worried about toothless threats. How aloof does someone have to be to say that people worry too much about the cost of things? Where's their fucking head at? It has the unmistakable stench of condescension towards poor people, wrapped around them like a blanket. I'm more inclined to tell them to take a hike than to tell the less fortunate among us where they should be shopping and why.

Now - the sex discrimination stuff - if the plaintiffs turn out to be correct, in a company consisting of 2 women for every 1 man, I'll be right alongside you giving them hell for it. Will it stop me from buying TP or Deodorant there when it's on the way? Probably not.
tinypliny - 07/01/09 10:35
(e:heidi), all my arguments are based completely on my experience as a customer at walmart in the first two years of my life here. I am not sure that I would have been able to get through the month without help from my family, had it not been for walmart - and I wasn't even buying anything non-perishable!

I don't shop at walmart anymore simply because its too far away and I can get all my perishable groceries here. Before pricerite came into the picture, living in Buffalo was nearly 2.5 times as costly as living in Rochester because (and just because) of my grocery trips! I think it would not be a stretch to say that I lived the past two years nearly cheque-to-cheque.

I guess people might say that maybe I could eat cheaper but that is not a option I am willing to consider at any cost. So yes, eating healthy and balanced does cost this much in the US and in my limited view, walmart helped me eat well when I couldn't afford everything at Wegmans.

As for its impact on the economy, I honestly am making some assumptions as you point out. I don't know all the reasons why people seek jobs at Walmart. However, from your anecdotes, can you honestly claim that its walmart's fault that these people are employed with walmart? It seems to me like walmart is viewed as a sort of fallback/extra-cash job when things are not going so well in life. In this scenario, if I were to seek a job at walmart, should I expect that they pay me according to my qualifications, reagardless of the job I am employed for?

I am aware that sounds like reverse argument to just support my stance, but I really am very interested in this whole argument. I am interested in knowing why people think that pointing fingers at companies who monopolize a certain sector of the economy is okay while persistently ignoring the lack of regulations in that particular sector. Is it not possible that the lack of of definite standards and regulations have lead to this monopoly in the first place?

To present an analogy, if there are no regulations in place for who can buy an electronic cigarette at this point, and if kids <10 years end up getting those cigarettes, would you blame the cigarette company? or the lack of regulations?

Similarly, if people are not getting the benefits they "deserve" for a particular job, who is setting the rules for what they deserve? The argument that walmart is a "trendsetter" doesn't make any sense to me because by claiming that, in essence, you are saying that regulations have allowed walmart to do whatever they please. In a capitalistic economy isn't that what companies do? Gain the maximum profit without breaking rules?

All this actually leads me to another thought. So this uprising against walmart is not really what it seems on the surface. Maybe it is an activist statement against the lack of regulations in the industry. This fight is perhaps best fought with the governing administration, not walmart. (Of course, there is always the whole evil facet of industry lobbying and I have no idea how that will factor into the outcome of all this activism.)
heidi - 06/30/09 16:41
(e:tinypliny) - As someone who knows many people who work at Walmart...no, compensation and qualifications are not related. One woman I know who staffs the check-out row has a teaching degree & certificate and lots of substitute teaching experience. She's one of those great, devoted, smart people who should be a teacher but because her teeth aren't upper-middle-class perfect, she keeps getting denied full-time teaching jobs that she's completely qualified for. My retired high school history teacher and his retired 2nd grade teacher wife both work there for "fun", holding those jobs when they don't need them (full state teachers pensions + social security) and are essentially taking them from people who do need them and are "qualified" for them. Another person I know who is now heading up the management ranks isn't any more qualified than his peers, but he's white, male, attractive in both looks and personality, and willing and able to move around the country. One of my high school classmates has better qualifications - way more walmart experience as a dept head - but because she isn't willing/able to travel and move with her junior-high-school aged daughter, can't move up in the management hierarchy.

For a more statistical view: :::link:::

About the walmart sex discrimination case
:::link:::
tinypliny - 06/30/09 15:53
So (e:mike) (and (e:vincent) from the comment graveyard), you are saying it proliferates evil non-compensation practices by arm-twisting and coercion? I see your point of views but I am still hesistant about the validity of arguing that compensation is not commensurate with the qualifications of people who seek jobs at walmart.

Quite recently, there was this whole discussion about how employees in auto companies make several times more money when compared with people employed in other industries with the same qualifications. We all know where that insane ship is headed. Who decides what is the right compensation for a particular qualification or job? Does US have national standards? If not, shouldn't there be national standards for compensation so that companies cannot flout them? Does the responsibility to ensure proper recompense lie with a private corporation alone? Is this evil coercion you talk of reflect a market which is wildly de-regulated and out of control or just the evil measures of one corporation alone?

The bottomline is, while concentrating our sabres at walmart, are we all missing that the governing administrators and regulators of industry are clearly not doing their part?
mike - 06/30/09 00:54
I don't want to write a lot about this right now but many of you know how i feel about walmart. i did my senior thesis on them and through that found there is some good to go along with the bad. But one problem I have with the argument that they are good for poorer people because they provide them with low cost everything is that they create more poor people in the first place that then need to shop there. They are a major force in whittling down wages, benefits and the such. They are number one and they set the standard of how little you can do or care about employees. With the way they can affecte manufacturers of products they sell they can extend those benefits/lack thereof to the companies from which they buy forcing behemoths like tupperware to adapt to walmarts model or close. this may not even have made lots of sense right now. bleh i hate walmart. totally just a gut reaction if nothing else.
metalpeter - 06/29/09 19:57
Wal-Mart does get a lot of bad press and some of it they deserve and some of it they don't. But to be fair in this comment, the company I work for Wal-Mart is one of Many of them, they are one of our big Customers, but not our only big customer.

Is it sad that someone Making clothes gets 12 Cents and day or what ever, yes that is. But what ever those working conditions are, they are the standard for that country. People like to say things like how bad it is for those people and this and that, but what if Wal-Mart didn't buy from them and they had no Job that would be a lot worse.

The Aurgment of well they come into a town, and then all the local places close is very true. But see it isn't that simple. Why did this people in the town instead of being loyal to the local place that sells Nails and Hammers and saws go to Wal-Mart?

It is true that Wal-Mart is Very Damaneding and that some companies have gone out of business doing to much stuff their way. But why did that company decide to do that?

Things aren't all ways as cut and dry as they seem is all I'm saying.
tinypliny - 06/29/09 17:08
Life is a study in opposition. Oppose or die!
james - 06/29/09 17:06
I am in opposition to everything.
tinypliny - 06/29/09 14:40
And just because all of this sounds abstract, let me give you a concrete personal example. I care a LOT about what I eat. You cannot imagine the amount of time I spend in thinking about ingredients, cooking, nutrients, balance and food in general. My grocery store expeditions are elaborate, planned and sometimes they are just pure research. I just go and read the ingredients out of the back of containers to just get an idea about what's in it and make judgements about whether or not I should be eating it.

An idealistic scenario to me would be to eat NO artificial components and cook everything from scratch, use minimal amount of oils and boil everything. However, all this research and thinking and knowing doesn't stop me from indulging in crazy junk food at times because I am not perfect. I cannot discipline myself all the time. I try but I fail. That doesn't mean I didn't have a choice. I had plenty!

The other side of the coin was when I was on an 8 hour Greyhound trip. For some inexplicable reason, Greyhound trips have some shady deal with Burger King. That's where they stop all the time - every single stop. I had 3 apples and I ate them all. I desperately wanted some energy to keep going, so in one of the stops, when I ran out of apples, I had to buy a pack of french fries. Idealistically, I would have packed all my food in advance and foreseen this scenario. However, I didn't do any of this and ate those fries anyway because I was irresponsible earlier about not respecting my idealistic goals about eating.

If I was 100% idealistic all the time, can you imagine the change I could bring into my life? Can you imagine the change that ALL of us can bring into our lives?
tinypliny - 06/29/09 14:21
I labelled consumer choice as an idealistic objective only in the context of people who don't really have a choice. When any of us buys something we have a choice of buying a slightly expensive version or a cheaper version. However, opting for a slightly more expensive version because it appeals to your morals is an idealistic goal for people with limited resources. It is a worthy idea but the means to carry out that idea doesn't exist.

I agree with you that everyone (regardless of how limited or unlimited their resources are) has moral values and personal judgements. You may well disagree with someone's policies and yet do business with them (either as a consumer or as a seller). However, constantly placing your moral values above and over your financial means is idealistic. In wavering from your moral judgement, you just demonstrate that idealism is not always practical.


Yes, it is idealistic to expect change without taking any action. What if you can't take any action because you are limited by means? Then the whole concept of action is a worthy idea but not really practical for some people. It is also idealistic to expect that corporations would change just because there are objections being raised about their business model by a section of the population that doesn't primary do business with them. I don't know if this whole issue has a solution because boycotting Walmart is an idealistic but impractical option for many.

In fact, if you think beyond country and continent lines on a global scale, this is just the dynamics of a a capitalistic economy playing out. Those who can meet the demand with plentiful and cheaper supply survive, and others lose. A socialist economy is idealism in this scenario - very desirable but imminently impractical because some of us are too human, some are too flawed, some are too greedy and yet some are too limited to embrace worthy ideals.

Change is highly desirable but we cannot achieve it till the majority have the resources and act on their moral values ALL the time.
libertad - 06/29/09 13:57
Tiny, I don't see what is so idealistic about consumer choice as a means for change. It would be idealistic to expect change without taking any action. Even for shoppers who are having a hard time getting by and do shop at Walmart they are still presented with choices. Obviously, the more money you have, the more you can base your choices on your moral values but that doesn't mean that moral values cannot come into play with those with limited resources. BTW, if you are OK with Walmart's practices than there is no reason not to shop there. We all have different values. If you do not agree with Walmart's practices I think that you can still feel that way and make purchases there when needed. We make so many choices as consumers we can't always base those choices on how we feel about who makes or sells the items or we just may never get anything we want or need when we want them. It really is just a balance and about how strongly we feel about our moral values in comparison to how much we want or need something. My own personal example would be I really wanted water shoes immediately and that want tipped the scale enough that I went to buy them at Walmart despite my ill feelings towards the company. It was a choice I made and am living with as the shoes are cheap crap that have already lost their insoles after one use.

joshua - 06/29/09 11:47
(e:tiny) this may be one of the most perceptive comments you've ever written. I've changed my mind about not commenting.

People have this perception about Wal-Mart being this monolithic brut with the people that they buy from, but by and large it is absolutely ridiculous. Almost without exception, the criticisms come from union organizations or NGOs with a similar axe to grind. I'm puzzled at how the article presents certain business practices as if they are unusual or unethical; for example, telling a supplier what they're willing to pay for their product, or being picky about the packaging, etc. That stuff isn't unusual to ANY degree.

Some of the items in this article are utter fabrications (such as Wal-Mart examining private financial records of suppliers to scrutinize margins being "not unheard of" - NOT TRUE). Quoting academic studies they won't name is pretty flimsy as well - I can tell you from personal experience that these large, monolithic companies also keep scores of American small to mid-size businesses afloat. "Damaging concessions" is union speak.

The article mentions price vs. cost - only people that can afford to shop elsewhere have the luxury of considering these things, which is an astute point that (e:tiny) made. For all of the ridiculous loony talk about Wal-Mart being an evil corporation, I think the millions of people who rely on W-M would disagree about the necessity for a cost leader in the market. People refuse, REFUSE! to accept that W-M actually has done a lot of good for poor people in our country because of their opposition to globalization, which in my own personal opinion is really weak. It's as if the fact that W-M facilities a better lifestyle for the more destitute among us, at some point, will become irrelevant because in some eyes the "costs" eventually outweigh the gains. Tell that to single parents or seniors on a fixed income - this is why people opposed to W-M constantly make counterintuitive arguments that are ultimately ineffective.

Now, the effects of globalization are real and people should consider them. One of the regular criticisms about W-M (or really, multinational corporations) that is absolutely true is that at some point the cost competition gets so severe that American companies can no longer compete. I've been to American factories where literally the machines were being boxed up to be sent to China as I was there. It's sad and not pretty too see.

To a degree I'm with the libs on the globalization front, but for me the most important thing is to be realistic about what can ultimately be done about it. The cat is out of the bag, so to speak, with respect to globalization. The article quotes a manufacturer who suggests that people want this or that but don't want to pay for it - exactly. I'd suggest that the average person who frets about globalization and making that criticism also don't want to pay for it. I don't see anyone up for paying $60 for a 5-pack of plain white t-shirts, etc. regardless of ideology.
tinypliny - 06/29/09 09:57
I agree 100% that their business model might not be environmentally sound or even locally sustainable, but if the other options come at a very steep short-term price, then just worrying about walmart's practices is not going to do anyone any good.

It's a very idealist thing to say that we need to change our attitude as a consumer. However, the ones who would usually be receptive to change are not the customers who are forced to shop at walmart.

Tackling this problem at its roots involves examining just why it is that people shop there anyway. The answer is frightening close to the answer to why people spend more than they can or need. The answer is an unwillingness to sacrifice some things for others. The answer is peer envy and societal "standards" that are terribly hard to meet without a certain amount of wealth. The answer is changing our personality enough to live with extreme discipline. Can anyone do all of this when they are hungry and their 5 kids are screaming for school supplies? I don't know if that question has a clear cut answer.
tinypliny - 06/29/09 09:42
I don't think they are a horrible company. Maybe I have a biased perception of this all but I think they are a classic example of how to successfully run a global profitable business. You can go on and on about how their prices are low because

a) They don't provide any benefits to their employees. Well, these employees are at walmart because they have accepted those conditions. When a company is not oppressing its employees by fining them if they choose to switch jobs, I don't see the un-ethical part of it. It's a thankless job that pays less. But its much better than being unemployed.

b) They source their products from abroad. Yes. That's how they keep their prices low. If you have a problem with that, just don't buy from them.

c) Conditions of overseas workers are no good either. That is true as well. But have you ever stopped to consider what the condition of any such worker in any manufacturing job is, overseas? This is not to say that I am supporting these conditions. This is to make a point that painting walmart as a sole villain is an unfair thing to do.

If people want lower prices, and a company is able to give them these lower prices by applying a global business model, then I think the company has achieved it's goal. The world is not populated by the rich alone. I see walmart as creating an economy around the poor across continents. If you can afford higher prices, walmart is completely out of your sphere.

If you have ever been in a position where buying a pair of shoes puts you in a financial position where you are wondering if you would be able to make it through meals for the rest of the week, then walmart comes to your rescue. Try being concerned about where these shoes are coming from in that position.
joshua - 06/29/09 09:10
Lord... no comment.
libertad - 06/28/09 21:59
We as the consumers are more powerful than Walmart.

That being said, I just bought water shoes for Zoar Valley at Walmart. The reason being is that both Target and Payless did not have them or anything similar in anything close to my size. I needed them right then so I made the choice to go there. There are also times where I have been desperate for a lower price and have gone there. All in all I have not spent a ton of money at Walmart and I don't plan on going there if at all possible in the future because I do think they are a horrible, horrible company.

I posted about Wal-Mart a while ago. :::link:::
hodown - 06/28/09 19:13
Did you watch the documentary? I think youd enjoy it if not..
tinypliny - 06/28/09 16:21
"We want clean air, clear water, good living conditions, the best health care in the world--yet we aren't willing to pay for anything manufactured under those restrictions."

Precisely. Nothing in Walmart that is cheaper than the usual is manufactured under any of these restrictions...

06/23/2009 16:33 #49042

Cool sticker
Category: tourism


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(e:Janelle) - China, M* & I thank you! It was a disgusting 99 degrees in Raleigh this weekend.

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paul - 06/28/09 16:46
That is a cute sticker. It would make a cute teeshirt.