The Walmart Monopoly Arc: From Small-Town Promise to Dependency Machine
Sam Walton sold America a promise. A simple one. Lower prices. Small-town access. A store where working families could stretch a dollar a little farther. In the beginning, that promise felt real. Walmart did not arrive wearing the face of a monopoly. It arrived wearing the face of convenience. It showed up in towns that had been ignored by larger retailers. It offered shelves packed with goods, prices that undercut local stores, and the feeling that regular people were finally getting a better deal. But the problem with dependency is that it rarely looks like dependency at first. It looks like savings. One local hardware store closes. Then the family grocery. Then the small pharmacy. Then the downtown clothing shop. Then the independent suppliers vanish because they can no longer compete with the scale, pressure, and purchasing power of the giant down the road. And by the time people realize what disappeared, they are already standing in the checkout line of the only place left. ...