Bourbon Guy
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 374
- Location
- Chicago
I'm going to be a bit contrary on this one. I am not so sure that what happened to small town retail, with the introduction of Walmart, is terribly different from what happened to all the little locally owned restaurants when chain restaurants showed up.
More often than not, the chain-restaurant food was better quality, consistently cooked, the restrooms were cleaner, and the wait staff were more service oriented because they were actually trained to serve, in a training regimen that had been developed to insure a quality dining experience. The surly waitress, the hung-over cook dropping cigarette ashes into the food, the food that looked and tasted differently each time you ordered it, and the general attitude that they were doing you a favor by serving you .... how we all long for the good old days.
Small towns that have something to offer their residents survive and thrive. Those that do not, don't. If there is only one plant in town providing all the jobs, and the town dies when it closes, then it didn't really have anything else to offer, did it? They could have attempted to deversify their employment base. And by the way, when Walmart opens a new store, the locals are not frog-marched to the door and forced to buy. They go there because Walmart is offering something better, either in selection or service. The local merchants who lose business are generally open when it is convenient for them, not their customers, and all the unsold stuff on their shelves is clearly not anything they want to buy.
More often than not, the chain-restaurant food was better quality, consistently cooked, the restrooms were cleaner, and the wait staff were more service oriented because they were actually trained to serve, in a training regimen that had been developed to insure a quality dining experience. The surly waitress, the hung-over cook dropping cigarette ashes into the food, the food that looked and tasted differently each time you ordered it, and the general attitude that they were doing you a favor by serving you .... how we all long for the good old days.
Small towns that have something to offer their residents survive and thrive. Those that do not, don't. If there is only one plant in town providing all the jobs, and the town dies when it closes, then it didn't really have anything else to offer, did it? They could have attempted to deversify their employment base. And by the way, when Walmart opens a new store, the locals are not frog-marched to the door and forced to buy. They go there because Walmart is offering something better, either in selection or service. The local merchants who lose business are generally open when it is convenient for them, not their customers, and all the unsold stuff on their shelves is clearly not anything they want to buy.