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1/160 f/16.0 50.0 mm ISO 100

SONY ILCE-6000

E PZ 16-50mm F3.5-5.6 OSS

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supermarket


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136 visits

this photo by John FitzGerald

A Valu-mart other than the one I usually shop at. I love their look.

Andy Rodker, Denis Croissant, Marco F. Delminho, tiabunna and 3 other people have particularly liked this photo


11 comments - The latest ones
 William Sutherland
William Sutherland club
Splendid capture! Stay well!

Admired in: www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
3 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to William Sutherland club
Thanks, William.
3 years ago.
 Ulrich John
Ulrich John club
Fantastic angle !
3 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Ulrich John club
Thanks, Ulrich.
3 years ago.
 tiabunna
tiabunna club
Well composed with the lines and angles, John.
3 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to tiabunna club
Thanks, George.
3 years ago.
 Dinesh
Dinesh club
There is a persistent and terribly damaging myth about our economy, namely, that American economy poverty can, in principle, be eliminated -- if only there is better education, more jobs, more opportunity, and if people will just work hard, save, invest, and pull themselves up by their boot-straps. This is simply false. Our economy as it is presently structured requires substantial poverty.

The present American economy requires that certain jobs have low wages: cleaning houses, caring for children, preparing fast food, picking vegetables, waiting on tables, doing heavy labor, washing dishes, washing cars, gardening, checking groceries, and so on. In order to support the lifestyles of three-quarters of our population, one quarter of our work force must be paid low wages. These are the people who make two-income families possible, because they take care of the house and the children, allow fast food outlets, restaurants, and hotels to exist, and perform other tedious unpleasant, unsafe, and physically difficult jobs that support middle', upper-middle, and upper-class life. ~ Page 421 “Moral Politics” ~ George Lakeoff

If this is not provided to the lowest paid employees, any “Mart” is the same. Buyer’s prices are, may be 5 percent above or lower ….!
3 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Dinesh club
And furthermore, companies like Wal-Mart pay so little that many of their employees are still collecting welfare while they work there. So the people's money is subsidizing the Walton family, who are not exactly a hardship case. A lot of the problem I attribute to the decline of the labour movement, which I gather has been even worse in the States than in Canada. I gather your labour laws are more pro-business, too. And of course when personal income taxes are lowered they're lowered for the richest Americans but not for the poorest.
3 years ago.
 Denis Croissant
Denis Croissant club
Never mind the look, how's their prices????
2 years ago.
John FitzGerald club has replied to Denis Croissant club
They're no screaming hell, Denis, but it's not easy for me to get to a Giant Tiger, I don't know if GT have an equivalent in the UK, but they're bargains, bargains, bargains.
2 years ago.
Denis Croissant club has replied to John FitzGerald club
B&M's probably...we seem to be going through a retail phase where bargains are disagreeable, lots of pound shops are closing and cheap food shops are passed over for the big supermarkets...
2 years ago.

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