by 2cher » Tue 22 Dec 2009, 16:45:15
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sixstrings', '
')The working classes shop at Walmart because...
They shop at wal-mart because they want cheap, not quality. When you vote for cheap over quality again and again and again, it sends a message upstream and before you know it you wind up with Big Macs & Hot Pockets, plywood McMansion exurbs built by illegal aliens, lead painted toys, and melamine in baby formula.
For instance, my dad, unsatisfied by the worn down toaster we were using, decides to buy a new toaster. Sure, the new toaster looks good out of the box. But within the first week of using it the knob snaps off. Then he buys a couple new chairs for the living room. Turns out one of them didn't have the metal threading installed for one of the screw-on feet. My dad is a frugal shopper and that's what happens to you when you shop based on price alone.
In a normal universe, because of population increase and "peak everything", you'd have price inflation. Instead, in order for everybody to keep up appearances, we resort to this sleight of hand. Furniture is made of sawdust and glue with a cheap woodgrain sticker applied, and sold for what solid wood furniture used to sell for. Food portions shrink, either with or without the box. Everything shifts from metal to plastic (I remember the first time I saw an all-plastic VCR, insane). You name it, someone will try it. It's "they don't make em like they used to" write large. And you wonder why people jones for Steampunk, even if it's faux steampunk.
We're basically living on the equivalent of movie props rather than real products.
I would love to spend three times more than what something is worth, but as the old axiom goes, poor people have poor ways.