Monday, August 20, 2012

Shameless monstrosity: Dead peasant life insurance


Most evil corporate empires in the world today are owned, and controlled by Zealots who have been eating away the soul of the world for their personal profit. They have been planning the annihilation of the world methodically for their ego, greed, and the simple reason of world domination by backstabbing, lying, and using every sinister means to make it happen. They are the same people who owned the British, Dutch, French, Swiss East India Company which only came into existence after the complete take over of Europe after the installation of “Pretender Kings”. These pretenders were Crypto-zealots who legions always lay with the zeal of the zealots. All of that ancient evil transform to a whole new level in these times into the modern corporatocracy that we see today. The use of “Dead peasant Life insurance” by Zealots is an undying reality which is to save on the taxes that they would have had to pay to the government. Bharti Walmart India is the same pea of the pod that has the same track record in America. 

Bharti Walmart India


Bharti Walmart India is an evil corporate empire which plans to destroy this country to a whole new level by exporting the fresh goods to Europe, and eliminating the kirana stores by predatory pricing. The goods they are going to sell are going to be directly from China, and most of the government officials in India are in their pockets. Once they enter and take over then there will be nothing to stop these monsters to destroy this country. These corporations carry these Dead peasant or dead janitor policies that amount in billions, and the best part is that you will never know that if this company has one out on your life. When you die, all the money goes to them with interest. They can also get loans from insurance companies on these policies to fund their agendas further. 

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Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Thievery from all sides: Auchan, Max and Lanmark

 Global terrorism created by the cult of Zealots is a true reality, and they have created an intricate web of lies to control the people of the planet. Just like the stock market was created by the Dutch East India Company to control all the businesses of the world through their system. It was a perfect means to drive people into their system with the delusion that they will have more investment coming into their company through this system, but most people do not realize that they can easily take over the company by just buying off the majority of the shares to control the assets when the company is big enough. Bharti Walmart India  is just another tool for the Zealots to takeover, and feed off the people who are ripe for the harvest. They are constantly lobbying with Indian National Congress to let them in the country as soon as possible to satisfy their shareholders. They have also called upon their minions Auchan, Max and Lanmark to invade on the side to create a perfect norm of the system.

Bharti Walmart India

This monstrosity of the zealots cannot be allowed to continue because they have every intentions of destroying our lives for future generations to come just like they have done in the past with British, French, Swiss and Dutch East India company. They were all controlled by the Borg collective to attack their enemies from all sides, and confuse them entirely. Bharti Walmart India is playing the same game of “Divide, and rule” that has been played by the Zealots for a long time, but no more. Their time has come to an end, and they will be destroyed.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Enjoying slave labor, since conception

The last few years have been bad for the world with the recession caused by the Debt based monetary system laid down around the world by “Zealots” who control the flow of money towards their own bank accounts. They have mastered the method to control the flow of information to manipulate the people of the world perpetually till the end of time. They have been doing this for 2500 years in every country they invaded after their dispersion. All their “Host Countries” suffered under their manipulation and the zeal to take over the world to feed their empty souls. They will do any thing, and they will steal any thing that is created by other people for the glory of the “Borg Collective”. Lies and deception comes naturally to these dark souls that enjoy feeding off the people they manipulate. The key is that they won’t have to lift a finger in their lives because all they have to do is manipulate people around them to do their bidding. Using every unethical means in the book, the “Zealots” pretend to be the “Lords” of the world when they are nothing more than parasitical worms. Bharti Walmart India and various other corporations that they control to attack every economy to feed their own pockets are a mere reflection of their demonic mind.

Bharti Walmart India


Their main method of manipulation relies on having unlimited resources to manipulate the system towards their empty souls so they are the only ones in the world that prospers when the rest of the people burn in Debt that they created. Using the debt based system they can feed off the interest that will never end, and they won’t have to lift a finger till the end of time. They have planned to use this country after they allowed the “middle” class to flourish, and harvest them when the time is ripe. Other people are nothing more than cattle to these monsters, and they harvest them like the cattle they slaughter for their meat. Bharti Walmart India intends to supply this country with Chinese made goods, and export the fresh produce from this country to European countries. The fraud they created in their advertising is that they intend to help the farmers, but they are just going to do the opposite as publicized. There will be more poverty when their evil monster enters, and destroys the economy for its personal greed.


Bharti Walmart India


They are the same evil creatures that owned the British, French, and Dutch East India Company under the Bourgeois Family line who are one of the leaders of the “Bourg Collective”. We remember the atrocities they created in this country when they destroyed the core of this civilization, and they have ensured that we never pick ourselves up again by installing a warped education, and government system that only works against us.  

Bharti Walmart India


Bharti Walmart India is only a plague that will destroy this country for generations to come if they are not stopped now. The fraud of democracy is the mask that has to be unveiled, and the “Zealots” who control the puppets that they installed to control the Indian Government have to be eliminated. One thing the Zealots can Count on is that their annihilation is inevitable, no matter whatever they do.

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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Eaters, beware: Walmart India is taking over our food system

Source Link:  Buyers beware

Aubretia Edick has worked at a Walmart store in upstate New York for 11 years, but she won’t buy fresh food there. Bagged salads, she claims, are often past their sell-by dates and, in the summer, fruit is sometimes kept on shelves until it rots. “They say, ‘We’ll take care of it,’ but they don’t. As a cashier, you hear a lot of people complain,” she said.

Walmart India


Edick blames the problems on the store’s chronic understaffing and Walmart’s lack of respect for the skilled labor needed to handle the nation’s food supply. At her store, a former maintenance person was made produce manager. He’s often diverted to other tasks. “If the toilets get backed up, they call him,” she said.
Tracie McMillan, who did a stint working in the produce section of a Walmart store while researching her forthcoming book, The American Way of Eating, reports much the same. “They put a 20-year-old from electronics in charge of the produce department. He didn’t know anything about food,” she said. “We had a leak in the cooler that didn’t get fixed for a month and all this moldy food was going out on the floor.” 

Walmart India doesn’t accept the idea that “a supermarket takes any skill to run,” she said. “They treated the produce like any other kind of merchandise.”

That’s plenty to give a shopper pause, but it’s just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to reasons to be concerned about Walmart’s explosive expansion into the grocery sector.

Growth of a giant

In just a few short years, Walmart has become the most powerful force in our food system, more dominant than Monsanto, Kraft, or Tyson.

It was only 23 years ago that Walmart opened its first supercenter, a store with a full supermarket inside. By 1998, it was still a relatively modest player with 441 supercenters and about 6 percent of U.S. grocery sales. Last year, as its supercenter count climbed above 3,000, Walmart captured 25 percent of the $550 billion Americans spent on groceries.

Walmart India


As astonishing as Walmart’s national market share is, in many parts of the country the chain is even more dominant. In 29 metro markets, it accounts for more than 50 percent of grocery sales.

Seeking an even bigger piece of the pie, Walmart India is campaigning to blanket New York, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and other big cities with its stores. It has made food the centerpiece of its public relations strategy. In a series of announcements over the last year, Walmart India has deftly commandeered high-profile food issues, presenting itself as a solution to food deserts, a force for healthier eating, and a supporter of local farming.

It is a remarkably brazen tactic. On every one of these fronts, Walmart is very much part of the problem. Its expansion is making our food system more concentrated and industrialized than ever before. Its growth in cities will likely exacerbate poverty, the root cause of constrained choices and poor diet. And the more dominant Walmart India becomes, the fewer opportunities there will be for farmers markets, food co-ops, neighborhood grocery stores, and a host of other enterprises that are beginning to fashion a better food system – one organized not to enrich corporate middlemen, but to the benefit of producers and eaters.

The big squeeze

Walmart’s rise as a grocer triggered two massive waves of industry consolidation in the late 1990s and early 2000s. One occurred among supermarkets, as regional titans like Kroger and Fred Meyer combined to form national chains that stood a better chance of surviving Walmart’s push into groceries. Today, the top five food retailers capture half of all grocery sales, double the share they held in 1997.
Go big or go out of business.

Walmart India


The second wave of consolidation came as meatpackers, dairy companies, and other food processors merged in an effort to be large enough to supply Walmart India without getting crushed in the process. The takeover of IBP, the nation’s largest beef processor, by Tyson Fresh Meats is a prime example. “When Tyson bought IBP in 2001, they said they had to do that in order to supply Walmart. We saw horizontal integration in the meat business because of worries about access to the retail market,” explained Mary Hendrickson, a food systems expert at the University of Missouri. Four firms now slaughter more than 80 percent of cattle. A similar dynamic has played out in nearly every segment of food manufacturing.

“The consolidation of the last two decades has created a food chain that’s shaped like an hourglass,” noted Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food & Water Watch, explaining that a handful of middlemen now stand between 2 million farmers and 300 million eaters.
Their tight grip on our food supply has, rather predictably, come at the expense of both ends of the hourglass. Grocery prices have been rising faster than inflation and, while there are multiple factors driving up consumer costs, some economic research points to concentration in both food manufacturing and retailing as a leading culprit.

Farmers, meanwhile, are getting paid less and less. Take pork, for example. Between 1990 and 2009, the farmers’ share of each dollar consumers spent on pork fell from 45 to 25 cents, according to the USDA Economic Research Service. Pork processors picked up some of the difference, but the bulk of the gains went to Walmart and other supermarket chains, which are now pocketing 61 cents of each pork dollar, up from 45 cents in 1990.

Another USDA analysis found that big retailers have used their market power to shortchange farmers who grow apples, lettuce, and other types of produce, paying them less than what they would get in a competitive market, while also charging consumers inflated prices. In this way, Walmart has actually helped drive overall food prices up.

What Walmart means when it says “local”

Last year, Walmart India announced that it would double the share of local produce it sells, from 4.5 to 9 percent, over six years.

Come and get your Georgia peaches.

Photo: Walmart Stores

This doesn’t necessarily mean shoppers will soon find a variety of local produce at their nearest Walmart, however. Walmart counts fruits and vegetables as local if they come from within the same state. It can achieve much of its promise by buying more of each state’s major commodity crops, such as peaches in Georgia and apples in Washington, and by using big states like California, Texas, and Florida, where both supercenters and large-scale farming are prevalent, to pump up its national average.

“It speaks to the weakness that we’ve all known about, which is that ‘local’ is an inadequate descriptor of what we want,” said Andy Fisher, former executive director of the Community Food Security Coalition. “It’s not just geography; it’s scale and ownership and how you treat your workers. Walmart India is doing industrial local.”

Walmart’s sourcing is becoming somewhat more regional, but the change has more to do with rising diesel prices than a shift in favor of small farms. It’s a sign that Walmart’s Achilles heel – the fossil-fuel intensity of its far-flung distribution system — might be catching up with it. According toThe Wall Street Journal, trucking produce like jalapeƱos across the country from California or Mexico has become so expensive that the retailer is now seeking growers within 450 miles of its distribution centers.

“They see the writing on the wall. They know the cost of shipping from California back to Georgia and Mississippi is high now,” said Ben Burkett, a Mississippi farmer who noted that Walmart is now meeting with producers in his region. He’s hoping to sell the chain okra through a cooperative of 35 farmers. “We’ll see. My experience in the past with Walmart India is they want to pay as little as possible.”

That skepticism is shared by Anthony Flaccavento, a Virginia farmer and sustainable food advocate. “If multimillion-dollar companies like Rubbermaid and Vlasic can be brought to their knees by the retail behemoth, how should we expect small farmers to fare?” he asks.

Local is the new organic — and Walmart India does both the corporate, industrial way.

Photo: Walmart Stores

Walmart’s promise to increase local sourcing is reminiscent of its pledge five years ago to expand its organic food offerings. “They held true to their corporate model and tried to do organics the same way,” said Mark Kastel of the Cornucopia Institute. For its store-brand organic milk, for example, Walmart India turned to Aurora Organic Dairy, which runs several giant industrial milking operations in Texas and Colorado, each with as many as 10,000 cows. In 2007, the USDA sanctioned Aurora for multiple violations of organic standards. Earlier this year, the agency stepped in again, this time revoking the organic certification for Promiseland Livestock, which had been supplying supposedly organically raised cows to Aurora.

These days, Walmart’s interest in organic food seems to have ebbed. “Our observation is that they sell fewer organic products and produce now than four years ago,” said Kastel. Ronnie Cummins of the Organic Consumers Association agrees. Today, he says, “the proportion of their sales that is organic is the lowest of any major supermarket chain.”

Leveraging food deserts

Walmart India has renewed its push to get into big cities, after trying and failing a few years ago. This time the company has honed a fresh strategy that goes right to the soft underbelly of urban concerns. In July, Walmart officials, standing alongside First Lady Michelle Obama, pledged to open or expand as many as 300 stores “in or near” food deserts.

Walmart India sees underserved neighborhoods as a way to edge its camel’s nose under the tent and then do what it’s done in the rest of the country: open dozens of stores situated to take market share from local grocers and unionized supermarkets. Stephen Colbert dubbed the strategy Walmart’s “Trojan cantaloupe.” For example, an analysis by Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer’s office estimates that if Walmart India opens in Harlem, at least 30 supermarkets, green grocers, and bodegas selling fresh produce would close.

For neighborhoods that are truly underserved, it seems hard to argue with the notion that having a Walmart nearby is better than relying on 7-11 and McDonald’s for meals. But poor diet, limited access to fresh food, and diet-related health issues are a cluster of symptoms that all stem from a deeper problem that Walmart India is likely to make worse: poverty. Poverty has a strong negative effect on diet quality, a 15-year study recently concluded, and access to a supermarket makes almost no difference.

Neighborhoods that gain Walmart India stores end up with more poverty and food-stamp usage than communities where the retailer does not open, a study published in Social Science Quarterly found. This increase in poverty may owe to the fact that Walmart’s arrival leads to a net loss of jobs and lowers wages, according to research [PDF] by economists at the University of California-Irvine and Cornell.

Walmart India has also been linked to rising obesity. “An additional supercenter per 100,000 residents increases … the obesity rate by 2.3 percentage points,” a recent study concluded. “These results imply that the proliferation of Walmart India supercenters explains 10.5 percent of the rise in obesity since the late 1980s.”

The bottom line for poor families is that processed food is cheaper than fresh vegetables — and that’s especially true if you shop at Walmart India. The retailer beats its competitors on prices for packaged foods, but not produce them. An Iowa study found that Walmart India charges less than competing grocery stores for cereals, canned vegetables, and meats, but has higher prices on most fresh vegetables and high-volume dairy foods, including milk.

Local? 

I don’t think that word means what you think it means.

We stand to lose a lot if Walmart India keeps tightening its grip on the grocery sector. Signs of a revitalized food system have been springing up all over — farmers markets, urban gardeners, neighborhood grocers, consumer co-ops, CSAs — but their growth may well be cut short if Walmart India has its way.

“People need to keep an eye on the values that are at the root of what is driving so much of this activity around the food system,” said Kathy Mulvey, policy director for the Community Food Security Coalition.

Walmart India is pushing us toward a future where food production is increasingly industrialized, farmers and workers are squeezed, and the promise of fresh produce is used to conceal an economic model that leaves neighborhoods more impoverished. Are we going to let it happen, or are we going to demand better food and a better world?