veronica_rich (
veronica_rich) wrote2008-11-29 03:09 pm
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What? Just ... no
Wherein I rant and you can look at me like I'm bugeyed or touched in the head (which I probably am, but at least it's usually for a good cause). Fortunately, it's not a long one.
Would someone tell me HOW one can participate in such a press of people in a crowded space that nobody at all notices that the ground beneath them no longer feels like floor and instead, like human? I need an explanation other than "well, you just don't know that big a crowd ..." Because yes, I do; I really do. I was in the Hong Kong equivalent of Times Square the Saturday right before Easter Sunday in 2001. There were thousands of us in the streets, *literally* in a press of people, to the point if you didn't want to lose track of your group, you physically held on to one of them, and so forth. And I still was aware of the fact there was always concrete or asphalt beneath my sneakers, NOT a person-lump. (For which I would have stopped or at least yelled and pointed.)
No offense to retail workers on my list, but let's face it - working as an associate at Wal-Mart is not the kind of job that's worth being killed while doing. Reporting in a war zone, governmental spy, Army captain, jet pilot, space shuttle crew ... these all come with certain risks. BUT WORKING A GODDAMNED MINIMUM-WAGE JOB SHOULD NOT. Especially not serving a bunch of assholes who can't be bothered to give up a fucking $12 Tickle Me Elmo or whatever, to stop and check on someone being trampled to death.
Dad said, "If I were that guy's family, I believe I'd end up owning Wal-Mart, or at least a healthy percentage of the company." You know, it's one of the few times I agree with him. Hopefully several enterprising lawyers licensed in New York were watching and are salivating at the possibility of filing that lawsuit. (Although what would really be great is if there had been a security camera trained on the area that could pick up individual crushers well enough to identify them as co-defendants.)
Would someone tell me HOW one can participate in such a press of people in a crowded space that nobody at all notices that the ground beneath them no longer feels like floor and instead, like human? I need an explanation other than "well, you just don't know that big a crowd ..." Because yes, I do; I really do. I was in the Hong Kong equivalent of Times Square the Saturday right before Easter Sunday in 2001. There were thousands of us in the streets, *literally* in a press of people, to the point if you didn't want to lose track of your group, you physically held on to one of them, and so forth. And I still was aware of the fact there was always concrete or asphalt beneath my sneakers, NOT a person-lump. (For which I would have stopped or at least yelled and pointed.)
No offense to retail workers on my list, but let's face it - working as an associate at Wal-Mart is not the kind of job that's worth being killed while doing. Reporting in a war zone, governmental spy, Army captain, jet pilot, space shuttle crew ... these all come with certain risks. BUT WORKING A GODDAMNED MINIMUM-WAGE JOB SHOULD NOT. Especially not serving a bunch of assholes who can't be bothered to give up a fucking $12 Tickle Me Elmo or whatever, to stop and check on someone being trampled to death.
Dad said, "If I were that guy's family, I believe I'd end up owning Wal-Mart, or at least a healthy percentage of the company." You know, it's one of the few times I agree with him. Hopefully several enterprising lawyers licensed in New York were watching and are salivating at the possibility of filing that lawsuit. (Although what would really be great is if there had been a security camera trained on the area that could pick up individual crushers well enough to identify them as co-defendants.)
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I really REALLY hope so. I hope someone can stick it to Wally-World big time. (I don't even shop there unless I've got no other choice.)
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Hindsight's 20:20, but the sad reality is that once somebody's down, there's not much (if anything) that can be done. The solution has to be prevention!
And for several hundred people crowding outside, they have maybe three of those $200 HD-TVs in stock. Black Friday is not a sale. It's a contest. It needs to be acknowledged and treated as such, and a safer means of competition substituted.
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This video is really enlightening (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dB-CFFM68zs). These guys have no idea what's going on at the head of the line (and would have no way of knowing). They're just continuing to move forward.
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As much as this was a mob mentality, it is also the fault of Walmart. They created this frenzy. They are the ones who advertised these deeply discounted products and then only chose to only have a few available. They are the ones who did not have adaquate security.
There is absolutely nothing inside that store that is A)worth standing in line at the ass-crack of dawn for and B)worth anyone's life. I hope the people who stormed the doors feel like shit for what they did. I hope those people have a crappy holiday, because the family of this man will not be having a happy holiday.
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Having worked more than my share of minimum wage jobs though, I know that I would not have been the one trying to hold the crowds back. If I saw that writing on the wall, I would have gotten the hell out of the way. There isn't enough money (or jobs) on earth that would make me think my life was worth less than a 200 dollar TV.
It is a sad testament to people that right now we are more concerned with "stuff" than we are with each other and that we think we need to fight over a 200 dollar TV like jackels over a zebra.
edited to fix a typo.
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I hope you're right about the lawyers, GOD I hope so.
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And agreed 100% on the lawyers.
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Something I saw said that someone took the doors off the tracks (it said "workers" but that doesn't make sense). If it was the crowd, whoever did that should be charged with something.
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Just a couple of days ago I was reading an article on 'shopping rage syndrome' and how retailers were supposed to be taking precautions for Black Friday. Doesn't seem like that actually worked out to well.
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THis is sad, I hope that the autopsy will show that the man was trampled before he had a heart attack. WM will try and find a way out of giing the family anything, you know, because they're corporate bastards who don't follow the rules. Pisses me off.