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This seems to be a uniquely Walmart experience. I don’t experience it anywhere else in the States.

I no longer shop there and I know of many people who feel the same way. It’s the only store I avoid because of “the feeling of human suffering.” Walmart’s stores are cold and uninviting, the employees don’t look happy to be there, and the shoppers don’t either.

I don’t believe the people inside a Walmart are a representative sample of Americans, the store self selects for people who are willing to shop at a Walmart.




It is not even a Walmart experience. It is a Online Walmart tall tale.

I shop at walmart all the time, in all area's poor, rich, middle class, are there fat people, sure. Are they "Dead zombies looking hobbled to their mobility scooters" .... I think the OP fancies themselves a fiction writer..


I wish I was lying. Multiple people almost bumped into me and I did the Midwestern “oop my bad,” and these people didn’t even flinch or acknowledge my existence. I just felt so bad for them.


This. And the demographics change wildly depending on what day of the week and time you go.


It's funny how nice one Walmart is in a nicer area, compared to one in a not-bad but not-great area just 15 miles away (the bad areas don't even have them)

One is clean and the other looks like a bomb went off. Dirty floors, merchandise laying all over, employees nowhere to be found...

Doesn't even seem like the nice one is a Walmart.


The nicer Walmarts usually have more checkout lanes open too. The lower-income Walmart near me has one open lane and then 15-20 uScans.


> This seems to be a uniquely Walmart experience. I don’t experience it anywhere else in the States.

Literally 95% of the US shops at Walmart, so... you might be in a very small bubble


> Literally 95% of the US shops at Walmart, so... you might be in a very small bubble

Possibly. But your statistic tells me nothing about the foot traffic in a Walmart. 95% shop at Walmart, of that cohort how many shop there regularly? How many shop there for occasional purchases vs treating it as their primary store for staple items? On a random sample of days, how representative of that 95% is the foot traffic you’ll find there?

Personally I share OPs view of Walmarts, I don’t go in them because they make me feel bad about the world. I don’t get that feeling other places.


> On a random sample of days, how representative of that 95% is the foot traffic you’ll find there?

Very, since the more likely someone is to be a regular shopper there, the more likely you are to run into them on any given visit. That is simply an artifact of statistics.

> Personally I share OPs view of Walmarts, I don’t go in them because they make me feel bad about the world. I don’t get that feeling other places.

Do you get that feeling at the DMV? Maybe at the doctor's office or pharmacy? You are bumping into a true cross-section of the US population. Take note of the feelings you get and why, and understand that this is what the US is, not just what you see in the bubble


For a large amount of rural America, it’s the only option.

That or a Dollar General with its bountiful selection of bananas and limes.


Why do you insist on lying?

Walmart is rarely the Only option. Where there is a Walmart, 90% of the time there is a Kroger (or Kroger Brand) Store, or Mejier (if in the Midwest), or some other store close by...


A solid chunk of the US population lives in a food desert. They're lucky to even have a Walmart within driving distance. You've clearly never had to walk a few miles on highway to reach the nearest grocery store. I can tell you from experience it's not particularly fun.

Not sure why you're minimizing this reality. 1 in 6 Americans don't know where their next meal is coming from. https://www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/publications/42711/12716_ap...


I am not reading a 600 page, 15 year old report of out dated info, however a search of the report shows zero references to "1 in 6 Americans " nor "next meal"

So if you have a source to back that actual claim I would be happy to look at it, and likely refute why it is cherry picking data

>>A solid chunk of the US population lives in a food desert.

Food Deserts are a political term, largely attributed to urban not rural area's and ever every study you find talking about Food Deserts I can find at least 1 if not more refuting that actual data.


Why do you insist on being rude?


Because you are spreading misinformation and FUD for no reason.




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