Gone are the days when Walmart would buy up a big parcel of land on the edge of a town, construct a massive big-box supercenter with an 8-acre parking lot and force people to drive to the location. This effectively killed off a lot of the small business in the community.
Now Walmart is feeling the heat from an even bigger competitor: Amazon. The online giant has impacted the traditional retailer to the point that it’s had to close hundreds of stores.
But Walmart is plotting something insidious to reestablish itself as the king of retailers: recreate the downtown area of the communities it once decimated into Walmart Town Centers. Essentially, it would weave itself into the very fabric of town itself.
“We want to provide community space, areas for the community to dwell,” proclaimed the vice president of realty operations for Walmart, L.B. Johnson, in his keynote speech at the most recent International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC) conference in Atlanta.
According to Forbes, the mega-retailer has already started transforming its stores in Loveland, CO., as well as in Washington, Texas, Missouri, Iowa, Arkansas, California and Oregon, into new Town Centers.
“We want to provide pedestrian connectivity from our box to the experiential zones that are planned on our footprint,” Johnson continued on the podium.
“We want to augment these experiences and activities with more food and beverage, with health and fitness, essential services and entertainment.”
This new strategy provides the lower class with a reason to come to Walmart besides purchasing electronics or groceries.
“Give people something to do, then they will shop,” Ken Nisch, chairman of retail design firm JGA, told Forbes.
“But shopping can’t be the thing to do.”
It seems the Town Center concept is the final piece of the puzzle where corporate America has spent decades destroying rural communities across the country through deindustrialization and a prescription opioid crisis. Now, this overreaching strategy could take the more than 5,000 Walmart stores and turn them into Town Centers where the corporate takeover of communities would be complete.
According to the Walmart website, some Town Centers will have a “mobility hub” where people can ride public transportation, rent bicycles or scooters, or use ride-share – much like at an actual town center.
“A transformation is underway,” Johnson said in his speech.
“We are working with the local community to really master plan a vision, not only for Walmart, but shared with the municipality. We are using terms like collaboration space.” And, he added, “We are going to hold ourselves accountable to the community for improving well-being.”
So, it all makes sense, corporations have spent decades deindustrializing regions of America. Now, Walmart wants to rebuild these communities under corporate control. It is also becoming increasingly clear that the system of government under which we live today is a government of the elites, by the bureaucrats and for the corporations. Through Town Centers, Walmart has accelerated the corporate takeover of America.
Source: Zero Hedge