Dollar Tree donates 89% to the Republican party and 11% to the Democratic party.
Don't give ANY business ANY money if they are supporting our current dictator. Hit 'em where it hurts.
Dollar Tree donates 89% to the Republican party and 11% to the Democratic party.
Don't give ANY business ANY money if they are supporting our current dictator. Hit 'em where it hurts.
Is there any large company that does not donate to the Republican Party?
Costco seems to be good, I get the vibe that Trader Joes would be too but can't find anything concrete
costco is great. They stand up for so many good things. I believe they hit back at all the antitrans shit. Go costco!
So if on average each employee works 37.5 hours a week (likely more but im just picking a common number of hours worked) at 8.32 an hour it would cost 61.568 dollars to pay all 7400 employees for an hours work and 2,308,800 to pay them for a weeks work 52 weeks in a year is 120,057,600 of that profit to pay all of their employees 8.32 an hour....
They made 1,230,000,000 in profit.
Minus 120,057,600 is
1,109,942,400
Meaning the profit they made could cover 9x the salary of 7400 employees with 29,424,000 in change to pay their greedy CEO.
NOTE: numbers need peer review. I do not math.
One thing that isn't on the math side: profit is the money left over after payroll (and all other expenses).
Dollar Tree has about 200,000 employees. Paying each of them $8 an hour for 20 hours a week, 52 weeks a year is ~$1.6 billion. This is just napkin math, taking a guess at where an average hourly employee would be working, hours-wise. Assuming the profit is going straight into company coffers, they could afford to significantly increase pay or hours overall, but the money doesn't stretch as far as our intuition might think. The problem really might not be Dollar Tree specifically, but the system of economy that led to its creation, and the creation of other massive corporations that rest on the back of underpaid workers.
Their only real options as the system stands (not that it wouldn't be moving in the right direction) are to pay less people more money, or increase hours. Their margin is thinner than it looks. Far better to throw the system out than pretend that the $10 million CEO check is anything but a drop in the bucket compared to the crushing reality of shareholder-driven profit margins. Fuck capitalism.
For what it is worth, Dollar Tree only has about 66,000 full-time employees. 134,000 are part time workers, so two thirds, who are not required to be given medical benefits--but are given access to pay premiums for enrollment in the company insurance plan.
It seems obvious to be that a company should have additional taxes imposed on it if its has employees that qualify for financial assistance. Put them on the hook for the costs of supporting their employees one way or another.
Or you could just raise the minimum wage to a point where employees earning it are earning too much for food stamps. That's how the UK does it. They lower the benefits bill by putting the burden on businesses rather than the state.
Usa employers did the math they fire most full-time employees and reduce staffing and only hire part-time workers walmart back in 2011-13 when I worked there only had 8-10 full time employees which were managers and even some department managers would only get 32 hours a week to avoid giving benefits or health insurance. Every one i knew who were full time worked there for 10 + years. Even if you increase minimum wage they will find ways to reduce costs in staffing so you really need to penalize companies
McDonald's and Walmart will lobby against that.
Maybe as a punishment. It wouldn't solve the problem in the correct way unless the taxes were MORE than the cost of paying a livable wage. Because the taxes would, at best and very optimistically, go towards programs that then give out money but only for very specific things like Medicaid or SNAP. It would be better for everyone if those employees just got the money as cash to use as they see fit rather than as a benefit that has to be used on certain kinds of food.
Dollar Trees and Dollar Generals fuck over poor people. Those “cheater” sizes of cleaning supplies or similar cost more for the same amount of product, it’s just that if you are broke you can only afford the tiny ass bottle of laundry detergent or whatever in the short term.
It’s fucking evil. Dollar Generals destroy small towns - drive out competition and intentionally understaff their stores. You replace local grocery stores which might provide several jobs and keeps money in the community with a Dollar General that pays someone subhuman wages to do everything.
The reason that the rich were so rich, Vimes reasoned, was because they managed to spend less money.
Take boots, for example. He earned thirty-eight dollars a month plus allowances. A really good pair of leather boots cost fifty dollars. But an affordable pair of boots, which were sort of OK for a season or two and then leaked like hell when the cardboard gave out, cost about ten dollars. Those were the kind of boots Vimes always bought, and wore until the soles were so thin that he could tell where he was in Ankh-Morpork on a foggy night by the feel of the cobbles.
But the thing was that good boots lasted for years and years. A man who could afford fifty dollars had a pair of boots that’d still be keeping his feet dry in ten years’ time, while the poor man who could only afford cheap boots would have spent a hundred dollars on boots in the same time and would still have wet feet.
Men at Arms
-Sir Terry Pratchett
So anyways, the rich got rich through exploitation of people. This comment leans towards the lies right wingers teach their children that Bill Gates eats homemade sandwiches and wears cheap sweatpants, therefore learn to scrimp and save, implying you'll be rich.
Absolute morons.
It implies literally the opposite, the rich literally buy more expensive products, and further is about a fantasy medieval society going through the beginnings of the Enlightenment and Industrial Revolution.
This particular phenomena has been noted in more detail as a fact of economics, IE it's expensive to be poor, because the poor don't choose low quality products they have to buy them because they can't afford the larger upfront cost.
I like to take virtual tours of dead/dying towns via Street View. The one constant is that the one main Street has one Dollar General with cars in the parking lot, on the outskirts of town. The proper grocery/general stores are all dilapidated husks 'down town'.
This is the only positive thing I can say about dollar general. I've lived in some brutal food deserts and really small towns but God dammit there will always be a dollar general somewhere nearby.
It's not great, or cheap. But man is it ever available.
Dollar Trees and Dollar Generals fuck over poor people. Those “cheater” sizes of cleaning supplies or similar cost more for the same amount of product, it’s just that if you are broke you can only afford the tiny ass bottle of laundry detergent or whatever in the short term.
I'm so glad the "cheap" stores around here don't sell tiny versions of products. It's non-brand name/lower quality or larger quantities to make them cheaper per volume.
For example my current toilet paper brand comes in four packs in the grocery store, with consistently good quality. The "cheap" store sell nine packs of the same stuff for 50% or so more, but you risk getting some that are slightly worse quality than the four packs. It's made in the same factory and is never bad, it's just that the second tier of quality control goes into the bulk ones.
Side note: I know people who have worked in/with soap facilities. And they mix, bottle and ship out dozens of brands. The majority of each type of soap, is made from the same base ingredients. Some are a bit watered down, lack pleasant scent, color or similar. But you can easily find soap that is at half the price of fancy ones, that work just as well(might need tiny bit more, but not enough that you lose money).
Those “cheater” sizes of cleaning supplies or similar cost more for the same amount of product, it’s just that if you are broke you can only afford the tiny ass bottle of laundry detergent or whatever in the short term.
I didn't notice how different the sizes were until I stopped going for years (between 2020 and 2024) and came back to find products that looked ridiculously tiny compared to what I remembered. The covid inflation fest made it way too obvious.
Well, they won't have to worry about relying on medicaid or food stamps anymore
Some poor/working class person will still tell the workers to pull themselves up by the bootstraps. Because some folks are brainwashed by corpo propaganda.
Employees should have to approve executive salary
Agreed. Employees should also have ownership in the company via profit sharing or ESOP.
So you are saying republicans don’t actually have a problem with socialism?
It's kind of infuriating that if you're wealthy you basically get basic income. You can put some of your money in safe stuff (high yield savings, bonds, whatever) and just get more money without working. But a poor person needs to debase themselves for food.
This is exactly why I can't really trust main stream cooperate media anymore. They don't do anything now days. They so often just take things at face value.
"Dollar Tree" is an existing company?! I thought first (I read top to bottom) that it was a metaphor for a company that makes money "like a tree".
It's a store in the US that sells most stuff for $1, for context. Or $1.25 now apparently
John Oliver did a piece on dollar stores about a year ago, if you're interested https://youtu.be/p4QGOHahiVM
Actual journalists would have the easiest time in this timeline
Some More News, and The Humanist Report are making a lot of money being actual journalists. Last Week Tonight, and to a lesser extent The Daily Show are also trying to report what the MSM is ignoring. Perhaps you just aren't looking for the real journalism?
Let's not pretend actual journalism is alive and well when you have ro cite a comedy show as journalists... I agree they do real journalism, but think of how sad the state of affairs is.
The kroger ceo makes like 15 mil
Astaghfirullah wtf is ur minimum wage, I'm pretty sure ur inflation is a lot worse than most countries with MUCH higher wages as well 💀
Minimum wage nationwide in America is $7.25 an hour. Well below poverty line.
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