I'll have to agree with the OP.
WalMart offers "doorbuster" specials. Limited quantities. Wal Mart likes the crowds those specials generate. Walmart doesn't have enough security to handle to inevitable mob scene which results. One WalMart customer used Mace in an attempt to secure merchandise. A few years ago a WalMart security guard (rent a cop) was trampled to death.
Time to set the record straight...
Discount stores, such as Walmart and Target, simply have limited floor space in which to hold pallets full of Black Friday specials. And in a tight economy, demand will always exceed supply.
As for the pepper spray (not mace) incident, it is now being reported that the sprayer could have been using it in self-defense. Whether or not that's the truth may be never known, as this case will most likely be thrown-out.
COSTCO has more then enough merchandise to meet demand but it's not priced so low as to attract mobs of customers, some of which are just buying to resell.
Not a fair argument, as Costco is a full-blown warehouse, which can handle way more merchandise that the typcial discount stores. Plus, unlike Walmart, Costco's core clientele are higher-income families. And, for the record, Costco does not offer "traditional" Black Friday specials -- instead, they give members a sheet of coupons that discounts merchandise they routinely carry.
BEST BUY generally gives out numbered coupons at some point during the night.
Yes, they do, as does AAFES (Military BX/PX) stores -- this, IMO, is a good system. But keep in mind, to get the coupons, one has to secure a good place in line, which in Best Buy's case means some people are camping-out in front of the store (in tents) as early as the Tuesday prior to Thanksgiving.
A store can skip the "blockbuster" sales or have an orderly system for determining which customers get to purchase the items.
WalMart does neither. A deliberate free for all.
Like I said, it's not so much the stores, as it is the customers -- Walmart wants to the be the first choice for shoppers of all incomes, and they'll do whatever it takes to secure that spot. And from the looks of things, Target is wanting bigger shares of that pie than they've had in the past, as they are rapidly expanding their fresh grocery departments around the USA.
CORPORATE GREED or at least CORPORATE IRRESPONSIBILITY is the way Wal Mart operates. Market goods in a way which all but guarantees the exact situations we see every year. Not have the kind of (massive) security necessary.
Now, you're just trying to get yourself noticed with the "all caps" thing -- it's not corporate greed -- it's the greed of the consumers -- whether they are trying to get a cheap deal on conmsumer goods, or if they want to resell the thing on eBay, or something...
As for security, I have three Target stores within an 8-mile radius of my home -- all three had local police departments posted by their front door to prevent "line cutters" from jumping-in. It worked better, this year than in previous years.
Selling a $500 TV for $200. Almost the same thing as saying the first 20 customers who get to a specific part of the store get $300.
Those, my friend, are called "loss leaders" -- they are intended to get the customer in the store, so they can spend a couple of hundred dollars on other things...
In today's climate, it's easy for folks like Lewisc to point the finger at corporations such as Walmart because they are -- well -- corporations. But, let's not forget that despite rough economic conditions, we also live in a world of "instant gratification", meaning that a lot people do not use their heads and will skip a mortgage or utility payment to buy something they may not need -- or, to take that trip to Disney World...