At last count, every single damn one of mine in my safe.There aren't many Mom and Pop shops left but how many rifles on this forum and the ammo for them comes out of the local Mom and Pop?
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At last count, every single damn one of mine in my safe.There aren't many Mom and Pop shops left but how many rifles on this forum and the ammo for them comes out of the local Mom and Pop?
I grew up in the city in Ohio. We had Murphy's Mart, Montgomery Ward, Woolworth's, Hill's, K-Mart, Sear's and Penny's in the 70's and 80's. In the late 80's I came to Norfolk, we had them and Rose's. Slowly Walmart nd Target came in as the new stores. 30 years of mismanagement killed most of the big chains.
Sear's should have become Amazon, the biggest catalog store in the world missed the internet. K-Mart got out of bankruptcy when they bought a bankrupt Sear's because Sear's was worth more in real estate than they were as a business. Montgomery Wards and Woolworth were losing money to Sear's and Penny's. Oh, Toy's R Us, I bet you think I forgot about them. They had more Chinese made knock off brands than real brands, not to mention over expanding to Baby's R US and Kid's R Us to try to corner a market in clothes and furniture.
There aren't many Mom and Pop shops left but how many rifles on this forum and the ammo for them comes out of the local Mom and Pop?
I didn't call you a liberal. Go back and read again, slowly.I guess Forbes makes shit up.
The above was a list of things I've witnessed.
Whether or not it is defending him or not has no bearing on the veracity.
Deflection isn't a successful tactic, as you also are resorting to insult the hilarity
of you calling me a liberal is ironic.
You also glazed over other points you can't refute.
In short, laughing.
R
Almost all of them.I grew up in the city in Ohio. We had Murphy's Mart, Montgomery Ward, Woolworth's, Hill's, K-Mart, Sear's and Penny's in the 70's and 80's. In the late 80's I came to Norfolk, we had them and Rose's. Slowly Walmart nd Target came in as the new stores. 30 years of mismanagement killed most of the big chains.
Sear's should have become Amazon, the biggest catalog store in the world missed the internet. K-Mart got out of bankruptcy when they bought a bankrupt Sear's because Sear's was worth more in real estate than they were as a business. Montgomery Wards and Woolworth were losing money to Sear's and Penny's. Oh, Toy's R Us, I bet you think I forgot about them. They had more Chinese made knock off brands than real brands, not to mention over expanding to Baby's R US and Kid's R Us to try to corner a market in clothes and furniture.
There aren't many Mom and Pop shops left but how many rifles on this forum and the ammo for them comes out of the local Mom and Pop?
Amazon started of as a website for brick and mortar used book and used music stores to sell online. He got a cut from the vendor. Same plan 20 years later with a lot more vendors and a lot more customers.Bezos was able to convince deep pocket investors to intentionally endure massive losses for an indeterminate period of time in order to corner the online retail market years down the road. It worked, but only because of his virtually unlimited financial backing.
Amazon had to be a new company. Doubtful shareholders of an existing company would go for a strategy like that.
"You defend Trump like libs defend Obozo".I didn't call you a liberal. Go back and read again, slowly.
Depends, does your FFL make a cut or do they get a $35.00 transfer fee? Nothing against shopping online, but we all split purchases to get the best deal. I'm lucky that I have a small fairly active online vendor that has good walk in ammo prices. Of course 25 years ago he started with a table at local gunshows. I have another shop that I have been in three times in 30 years.Does GAP count as a local Mom & Pop?
Amazon started of as a website for brick and mortar used book and used music stores to sell online. He got a cut from the vendor. Same plan 20 years later with a lot more vendors and a lot more customers.
When Sear's started "on line" orders you needed to reference the paper catalog to fill out the form on the website. Other websites were already point and click, you have to wonder if Sear's either didn't want to spend the capital to digitize their catalog or thought it was a passing fad?
Depends, does your FFL make a cut or do they get a $35.00 transfer fee? Nothing against shopping online, but we all split purchases to get the best deal. I'm lucky that I have a small fairly active online vendor that has good walk in ammo prices. Of course 25 years ago he started with a table at local gunshows. I have another shop that I have been in three times in 30 years.
He wouldn't go for what walchinamart has become. He used to come into the store I worked at unannounced, in overalls, beat up old farmers hat.Cant believe old man Sam Walton, the guy that continued to meet his buddies for breakfast in the diner after hitting it big, would go for what Walmart has become.
Walmart is no different than Dollar General or Family Dollar.
They have nothing to offer other than cheap Chinese shit and fuck all of them.
I've seen Walmarts put the local grocer out of business and hold no grudges against anyone for shopping there.
Especially when it comes to food.
Most of the food in your grocery store, whether it's Walmart, Publix or the local guy that's been in business for thirty years sell items that are made/grown in the US of A, with the exception of produce as a lot of that comes from South of the border. But you'll find that anywhere.
Most grocery chains behave in the same manner. I am not an insider, but I believe the term is called "merchandising". The stores essentially rent out shelf space to the food manufacturers/distributors/jobbers and if the suppliers don't like being bent over on the "rent", they are encoureaged to leave and never come back. Around these parts, the only people that you will find stocking the potato chip shelves are wearing shirts/uniforms that say "Frito Lay" (or their competitor's name) on them. The stores don't dirty their hands with that nonsense. Yes, the store personnel will stock the meat section and the baked goods, but that is because the stores own those assets, either on site or remotely located.Read what they do to suppliers.....
Classic example Vlasic pickles.
Suck the supplier into servicing that big lucrative WalMart contract until your total production is allotted to them than start cutting their profit to the point they can no longer function and they no longer have other customers to service....than laugh at them when the request relief.