Corporate Labels

Remember the map of “The Biggest Government Employers in Each State” that I reproduced here on the blog a few weeks ago?

After looking at it, CF wrote in with some thought-provoking observations…

Very interesting to see Walmart as such a prominent employer in the country, a company much maligned and labeled as a perfect example of Greedy Corporate Capitalism.

I don’t have a precise definition of what an accusation like that means, but one of the things a company does that is noble, if just a result of the mechanisms of Capitalism, is they hire people.

We can see from this map that Walmart hires a lot of PEOPLE.

Although by contrast to the bad rep Walmart gets, Apple and Facebook are often credited with being GOOD/WOKE corporations.

Here is an interesting fact: The average profit per employee at Apple is $403,328 and the average profit per employee at Facebook is $411,308. In comparison, the average profit per employee at Walmart is $6,910.

Something to think about.

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Anti-Asian Hate Crimes: What’s Going On? 

On May 20, President Biden signed a bill meant to address hate crimes against Asian-Americans. It was supported overwhelmingly (364-62) by both sides of the aisle. It wasn’t clear from anything I read whether the bill has any realistic mechanisms to achieve its goal. We’ll have to see about that.

In the press conference that accompanied the signing, Biden referenced this year’s mass shooting in the Atlanta area that left six Asian-American women dead.

It wasn’t an anti-Asian attack. It was an attack on three particular jerk-off parlors by a nutcase that patronized them. He blamed the shops for his sex addiction – and when he went on his rampage, he killed everyone in them indiscriminately. Asian, White, and Black. If it was a hate crime, it was a self-hate crime.

The script that Biden read that day referenced the ubiquity of video clips on the internet displaying these attacks in ugly detail.

From The Washington Post:

Many Americans have been shocked by publicized surveillance or cellphone video released in the last year of Asian-Americans, many of them elderly, being accosted and beaten by strangers on the streets of US cities, as well as by reports of people spitting on, cursing at, or refusing to serve Asian-Americans and accusing them of causing the pandemic.

I checked out about two dozen of those videos. (There are literally hundreds of them.) As a group, they don’t support the Biden administration narrative: that the attacks were caused by Trump’s rhetoric on the “Chinese virus.”

The great majority – and I mean about 90% of them – were not perpetuated by White men in red hats but by Black people, men and women.

This is obvious to anyone that looks at the videos, but it is something one is not allowed to say.

But I’ve said it. So it begs an answer to the question: Are Blacks in America more anti-Asian than white people?

I doubt it. I suspect the prevalence of Black-on-Asian attacks is about proximity – about the fact that Asians are more likely to be the owners or employees of stores situated in Black neighborhoods.

In fact, most of the videos I saw were about theft: either Asians being beaten on the streets as they were robbed or, less frequently, Blacks upset by what they believed was racial profiling by Asian store owners.

But don’t take my word for it. Decide for yourself:

Bystanders Step in to Protect Asian Man in New York City

Two Witnesses Save Asian Man From Brutal Attack in Oakland

Man Threatened to Stab Undercover Asian NYPD Police Officer

Woman Charged With Hate Crime in Attack on Asian Beauty Store Owner

Asian Man Repeatedly Punched on Manhattan Sidewalk

67-Year-Old Lyft Driver Is Beaten and Robbed at Gas Station

Man Threatened to Stab Undercover Asian NYPD Officer

 

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Execution or Self-Defense? 

The policemen involved in the fatal shooting of Andrew Brown Jr. will not face charges, the Elizabeth City (N. Carolina) DA announced recently.

Brown, who was Black, was killed in April as he tried to flee from deputies that were attempting to serve an arrest warrant. He was shot five times. Once in the back of the head.

The decision not to prosecute the officers was based at least partly on a 45-second clip from police body camera footage. The DA said it demonstrates that the officers were in danger of losing their lives and were defending themselves. The family of Andrew Brown vehemently disagreed. They said it was more like a public execution.

I know nothing about the case other than what I just told you and that 45-second video clip. So I may be wrong. But to me, it looked a lot more like an execution than self-defense.

Again… make your own decision.

Here is the clip.

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