"Call Wal-Mart" unwise approach?

Thu, 19 Nov 1998 08:50:36 +0200
Richard Ragland (rragland@csir.co.za)

This to me is really an unwise request from either yourself or some
committee. It is only disruptive and intimidating.

No business in their right mind would publically give out the names of
all their suppliers. The business opposition like vultures would
destroy the company in a matter of days. Wal-Mart would come to an
end. You put them in a lose-lose situation !

If you want to accomplish the same goal, rather through your
intelligencia determine which companies use child labour/sweat shop
production methods and who they sell to. Then politely inform the
company(s) they sell to that they will have to stop buying from "xyz"
company, failing which, you then lead a public campaign against them.

There also should be a representative of concerned citizens working
with Wal Mart on this issue, not someone trying to lead public emotion
with a "let's overthrow the regime" attititude. This is very
unprofessional.

Why is this group picking on Wal-Mart anyway? What about all the
other department stores in the US? It sounds to me as if the
opposition is behind this one already ! !

Just my opinion folks !

Rick

>>> Dale W Wimberley <dale.wimberley@vt.edu> 11/18 11:50 PM >>>
Hi folks! Please forward this to other organizations and individuals
who
may want to participate (and pardon any cross-postings). - Dale
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Please contact Wal-Mart this Friday, November 20, and ask them to
release a
list (including addresses) of all their supplying factories worldwide.
This is a national call-in day for the 1998 Holiday Season of
Conscience to
End Sweatshops and Child Labor.

Contact info: 1-800-WAL-MART (1-800-925-6278) or 501-273-4000
E-mail cserve@walmart.com
Fax 501-273-4894 (caveat: last month they had their fax
disconnected)

What this campaign is NOT:
* It is NOT a boycott
* It is NOT an effort to have Wal-Mart "buy American"

What this campaign IS:
* An effort to make Wal-Mart accountable to us - the consumers of
these products - and to make Wal-Mart's own Code of Conduct
independently verifiable
* An effort to promote a LIVING WAGE for workers in the Third World
and
in the US - an effort to stop US and overseas workers from being
pitted
against each other by RAISING the wages and conditions of THIRD
WORLD
and US sweatshop workers
* An effort to create a space in which workers can empower themselves
- "Employment yes, but ... with dignity!"

The goal of the 1998 Season of Conscience (the People's Right to Know
Campaign) is to press Wal-Mart to release the list of all its
suppliers
worldwide, so that human rights and religious groups can begin to
check
working conditions at these factories. This would give consumers a
way to
discern which products were made in factories where workers' human
rights
were respected. Wal-Mart has a record of contracting with factories
that
use child labor (for example, 13-year-olds in Honduras and 10- to
12-year-olds in Bangladesh), and with factories where workers are
abused
verbally, physically, and sexually at jobs paying subliving wages for
very
long work hours, where unions are repressed. Wal-Mart contracts with
suppliers in at least 49 countries.

Many other U.S. companies besides Wal-Mart have relied on sweatshops
or
child labor, but the 1998 Season of Conscience focuses on Wal-Mart
because
it is the world's largest retailer. If Wal-Mart releases information
on
its suppliers, it will be easier to get these other companies to
follow.
Such information is essential to establish a system of independent
monitoring of factory conditions - a key to stopping worker abuses.

We need AS MANY PEOPLE AS POSSIBLE to contact Wal-Mart this Friday.
PLEASE
PASS ON THIS MESSAGE to other individuals and e-mail lists who may
want to
participate in the campaign. Future Wal-Mart call-ins are scheduled
for
December 18 and January 29.

The People's Right to Know Campaign is spearheaded by the National
Labor
Committee (NLC), the same organization that successfully pressed
Kathie Lee
Gifford to act against the child labor used to make her clothing line.
The
NLC, originally founded in 1981 to support endangered workers in El
Salvador, is backed by many labor unions, religious groups, and human
rights organizations.

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For general information or for copies of campaign materials, contact:

National Labor Committee
275 7th Avenue, 15th floor
New York, NY 10001
(212) 242-3002
Fax (212) 242-3821
E-mail natlabcom@aol.com
www.nlcnet.org

NLC has materials to assist with a wide variety of Wal-Mart actions.

Dale Wimberley
Sociology, VPI & SU
Coalition for Justice, Blacksburg, Virginia