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Wal-Mart under attack from Presidential hopefuls

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The next major U.S. elections are still 14 months away, and already Wal-Mart is being assailed by presidential hopefuls. The global retailer released a letter Tuesday to its 18,000 Iowa employees, claiming several politicians and elected leaders are wrong to criticize Wal-Mart 's wages and health benefits. Several Presidential hopefuls are crossing the state of Iowa this week, and many are slinging mud at Wal-Mart for its stance on employee wages and benefits, in an age-old tactic used to drum up emotion. Nothing to see here, really.

While it remains an employee's choice to work for Wal-Mart and make the decision to receive possibly lower pay and benefits that other companies may offer, politicians nevertheless always seem to latch onto the idea that Wal-Mart is bad because of its wage and benefit policies. Well, Wal-Mart may not have the best wage scale and benefits available -- but whose job is it to see that these kinds of things meet a minimum level? Not government -- that kind of meddling smacks of socialism, and the U.S. is not Europe (yet). Is it the employee's decision? Absolutely. The decision comes down to personal responsibility, a hallmark of this country.

While I may not agree with Wal-Mart on its wage and benefit stance, I also support the employee making the decision to work there and remain there -- at their choosing and not at anyone else's. The recent ridiculousness in the Chicago area is what the anti-Wal-Mart crowd wants, apparently. As a WMT investor, what do you think? Do you want the company you partially own to be dictated what to pay employees and how to administer employee benefits that some claim indirectly subsidize government services like food stamps and Medicaid? Chime in and let me know your thoughts.

Brian White has worked in various executive positions in technology and telecommunications and now focuses on editing and writing.

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Last updated: November 25, 2009: 03:53 PM

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