Robbing Wal-Mart
by Randall H. Nunn
A national retail industry trade association recently filed suit challenging a Maryland law designed to coerce Wal-Mart into spending more
money on health care for its employees. The law requires companies with more
than 10,000 employees in Maryland to spend at least 8% of their payroll on
health care or pay the difference to Maryland's Medicaid fund. Wal-Mart is
the only company in Maryland of that size that doesn't meet the 8%
threshold.
Supporters of the Maryland law say it is needed "because some Wal-Mart employees rely on taxpayer-funded Medicaid health
coverage." I would hazard a guess that none of the same people have a
problem with illegal immigrants relying upon state provided health coverage
or other benefits even though they are not paying their fair share of the
cost. Could it be that politics is the motivation behind these health care
laws rather than concern for the taxpayers of the state?
According to news reports, politicians in as many as thirty other states are
considering such legislation. The growing government bureaucracies have an
insatiable appetite for more money to fund more, and ever-growing, programs.
What better place to get some of this money than from corporations that are
generating revenues in their states? The average taxpayer will not squawk
too loudly because he or she is not paying this tax (or so they think). The
best tax is the one someone else has to pay and since Wal-Mart is a faceless
corporation that is the current target of the mainstream media, what better
victim?
At the same time, the governor of Minnesota was reporting that as many as
85,000 illegal immigrants live in his state, at a cost to taxpayers of up to
$188 million a year. One would think that politicians worried about health
care costs would demand action to deal with the problem of illegal
immigration since it results in great costs to all states' taxpayers.
It probably surprises no one that the labor unions in Maryland were heavy
backers of the "anti-Wal-Mart" law. According to news reports, these same
labor unions are pushing for similar legislation around the country. And
when unions talk, Democrats (and some Republicans) jump. So these new laws
are being pushed heavily by special interest groups with political muscle.
One would think the media would alert the citizens of this country to the
pernicious influence of special interest groups lobbying to get special
favors for themselves at the cost of employees and customers of successful
businesses.
Apparently the media are not interested in liberal special interest groups
but only "big oil", non-union companies and, of course, Halliburton. It is
one more glaring example of the double standard used by the mainstream
media.
Randall H. Nunn a Staff Writer for The New Media Alliance. Columns by this
author can be read regularly on TheRealityCheck.org.
Email
the Editor
|