Except the Government Accountability Office
released a study confirming what I said, contra your decades-old anecdotal narrative.
A libertarian like sturg would say that such governmental benefits actually
allow Walmart to pay people so poorly; if there weren't safety nets to pick up their slack, the market would force them to pay fair wages to cover what the government currently covers. I personally don't believe that—I think a corporate behemoth like Walmart is always going to **** over their labor pool, and so it as absolutely-hard as they can—but there's at least
merit to the sturg-style argument I'm outlining.
But do you know what you need to counterbalance avaricious ownership, absent strong state-level controls and governmental safety-nets? A strident union to collectively bargain for workers. Which is exactly what MLBPA is doing for its membership—and what we should want all unions to do for their membership. Hate governmental "overreach"? Then you should love strong unions, because they're the market-based solution to excessive and exploitative corporatism.