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<font color=purple>Dreams in <img src=http://photo
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2005
- Messages
- 7,311
poohandwendy said:ITA...as far as Walart protecting themselves...um how about fighting the stupid lawsuits by standing up for what is right? NO retailer should be held responsible for household goods used in a manner that they are not intended for. PERIOD. If these big companies would fight these lawsuits, they would succeed in sending a message that you just cannot hold everyone else responsible for your own personal actions.
Sorry, but retailers checking for ID is not going to keep kids who want to huff things from getting a hold of them. These products are found in EVERY household in the nation. They are NOT contraband or controlled substances. Parents need to protect their children, not retailers.
For what it's worth, Wal-Mart does fight lawsuits filed against them, and they do it very aggressively. Here's an older article about this very subject:
http://www.nfsi.org/walmart/Lawsuits a volume business at Wal-Mart.htm
I worked on a marketing tour this summer that had appearances exclusively at Wal-Mart Supercenters, and heard stories of some of the things people try to pull in order to be able to sue Wal-Mart that made my jaw drop (e.g. one man had an elaborate system of tubes running down inside his pants leg; they were connected to something that basically amounted to a glorified water gun (had a trigger and everything), and every so often, he'd shoot a blast of water out the bottom of his pants leg and then have his wife perform a slip 'n' fall in the resultant puddle. At one point, he had lawsuits pending in something like 6 states.) I wish I could remember the figures, but the number of lawsuits Wal-Mart faces daily is exponentially higher than what was listed in the article I linked here (I want to say it was something like 2500 new suits filed every day). As a result, they now have hundreds of lawyers on staff who do nothing but contest these frivolous lawsuits.
Just FYI...
