Sunday, January 19, 2014

COSTCO, WHERE TOILET PAPER AND ECSTATIC EMPLOYEES CAN BOTH BE FOUND IN BULK


How this week's cover got made

Most people love the reasonable prices and more important the quality of customer service at Costco. 

Instead of their competitors such as WalMart who prey on their employees and customers as victims, 
Costco actually give you the best bang for your buck.

This is not an ad for Costco but instead shares with you additional information of the secret price codes and what they mean, so that you can  empower yourself to save even more money.

The price signs at Costco will clue you in to the best deals and help you save money shopping for "stuff".

Costco like many other stores, runs some of their merchandise at close out prices. Unfortunately they don't make it easy for the shopper to know which items are marked down.

Most of us have no idea which items are being sold at these lower prices. You can't tell by simply looking at the price sign on a product that it is a mark down, special priced item, rebate item, discontinued item or which items will not be replenished when the current stock is sold.

Photos From Costco
Most regular priced items have a 99 ending
Most regular priced items have a 99 ending
Look for items that have a 97 ending, they are mark-downs.
Look for items that have a 97 ending, they are mark-downs.
Watch for odd pricing like those that end in a 79  or a 49 ending, they are special purchase items
Watch for odd pricing like those that end in a 79 or a 49 ending, they are special purchase items
Notice the different prices on this table. Which ones are the best deals?
Notice the different prices on this table. Which ones are the best deals?
Look to see if there is a * on the upper right side of the sign.  If you see one, it means this item is not being reordered.
Look to see if there is a * on the upper right side of the sign. If you see one, it means this item is not being reordered.


Florida Store shows the original price before the mark-down.  They must have read this article.
Florida Store shows the original price before the mark-down.  They must have read this article.
Florida Store shows the original prices above before the mark-down.

When you visit your Costco store, pay special attention to the price signs for every item you see.

You will notice that most end with a 99¢ ending, this is the regular priced merchandise. You will also see some with a 79¢ ending, others a 97¢ ending and so on. In this article you will find out how to understand the codes in these prices so you can determine with are the best deals.

You are going to look for items that now have a 97¢ ending. Regular priced items usually end with a 99¢ ending but not always. However, the ones with the 97¢ endings are those items that did not sell and must be cleared out. They are marked-down, but unlike all other retailers, Costco doesn't like you to know this, so the don't put the original prices with a slash and then the new price as many stores do. 

Look to see if there is a asterisk * on the upper right side of the sign. If you see one, it means this item is not being reordered and what ever stock they have in the store will be sold and not replaced. This is a tip off that it might be a marked down item, but not always, but it does let you know that once these are gone there will be no more.

Now you will watch for odd pricing like those that end in a 79¢ ending. You will also see they have others at 49¢, 89¢ and others. These usually mean that these items have a special price on them because Costco got a special deal from the manufacturer. In other words they were a special purchase and the buyers really killed their vendors for this price.

Items that are not selling as well as they should are a prime target for a mark-down. Costco will go back to the vendor (manufacturer) and request an allowance from them to enable them to reduce the price of those items. These will be the items to look for and usually the ones with the .97¢ endings.

Joe Carcello has a great job as the CEO of Costco. The 59-year-old has an annual salary of $52,700, gets five weeks of vacation a year, and is looking forward to retiring on the sizable nest egg in his 401(k), which his employer augments with matching funds. After 26 years at his company, he’s not worried about layoffs. 

This wouldn’t be remarkable except that Carcello works in retail, one of the stingiest industries in America, with some of the most dissatisfied workers. On May 29, Wal-Mart Stores (WMT) employees in Miami, Boston, and the San Francisco Bay Area began a week long strike. (A Walmart spokesman told MSNBC the strike was a “publicity stunt.”) Workers at an Amazon.com (AMZN) fulfillment center in Leipzig, Germany, also recently held strikes to demand higher pay and better benefits. (An Amazon spokesman says its employees earn more than the average warehouse worker.)

In its 30-year history, Carcello’s employer, Costco, has never had significant labor troubles. Most of it's employees seem happy and it is because the way they are treated, financially, emotionally.

Costco pays its hourly workers an average of $20.89 an hour, not including overtime (vs. the minimum wage of $7.25 an hour). By comparison, Walmart said its average wage for full-time employees in the U.S. is $12.67 an hour, according to a letter it sent in April to activist Ralph Nader.

Eighty-eight percent of Costco employees have company-sponsored health insurance; Walmart says that “more than half” of its do. Costco workers with coverage pay premiums that amount to less than 10 percent of the overall cost of their plans. It treats its employees well in the belief that a happier work environment will result in a more profitable company.

Is this anyway to run a Company Costco, yes, it treats its employees fairly, and sees it customers as the reasons for the financial success enjoyed by Corporate Costco whose shares have doubled in the last year on Wall Street.

It's that simple, success can be a win win situation for everyone without there be a rip off, slave, arrogant mentality by those who manage any business. Makes me wonder why most Corporations simply give phony "lip service" to this management ethic of treating your staff and customers like you would want to be treated. 

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

MY COUNTRY TIS OF THEE SWEET LAND OF SECRECY




The government of the United States has always portrayed our Country as the "land of the free" and a model of democracy at its best.

Those of us who have had personal involvement with various parts of our government have known for a long time that our so called democracy is a fraud.

For many decades our government under both Democratic and Republican Administrations has perpetuated the concept that we the people are who they serve and that the Constitution is the rule of the land.

In reality the opposite has been true. We the people have been spoon fed lies about the things that government chooses to tell us, while they hide the truths of what actually happens .

The recent Edward Snowdon (CLICK HERE)  and Aaron Swartz cases (CLICK HERE) clearly show what happens to citizens of our Country who expose the truth. They are either harassed to death, labeled as traitors, and crucified by the sheep known as the media.

At best, government represents a risk to the people it rules.

Even under a tightly written constitution and popular vigilance both of which are easier to imagine than to achieve, government officials will always have the incentive and opportunity to push the limits and loosen the constraints.

But if their purpose is to protect us, why worry?

                                SEE ME, HEAR ME, TOUCH ME


Taking one example such as recent revelation detailing the spying on all Americans who use any form of electronic communication, the government has told us that it is only tracking “metadata” such as the time and place of the calls, and not the actual content of the calls.

C'mon, are we really that stupid? Does anyone actually believe what the government says, that they can be trusted with protecting our freedoms and our privacy?

Technology experts say that “metadata” can be more revealing than the content of your actual phone calls.
For example, the ACLU notes:
A Massachusetts Institute of Technology study a few years back found that reviewing people’s social networking contacts alone was sufficient to determine their sexual orientation. Consider, metadata from email communications was sufficient to identify the mistress of then-CIA Director David Petraeus and then drive him out of office.
The “who,” “when” and “how frequently” of communications are often more revealing than what is said or written. Calls between a reporter and a government whistle blower, for example, may reveal a relationship that can be incriminating all on its own.
  Repeated calls to Alcoholics Anonymous, hot lines for gay teens, abortion clinics or a gambling bookie may tell you all you need to know about a person’s problems. If a politician were revealed to have repeatedly called a phone sex hot line after 2:00 a.m., no one would need to know what was said on the call before drawing conclusions. In addition sophisticated data-mining technologies have compounded the privacy implications by allowing the government to analyze terabytes of metadata and reveal far more details about a person’s life than ever before.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation points out:
What [government officials] are trying to say is that disclosure of metadata—the details about phone calls, without the actual voice—isn’t a big deal, not something for Americans to get upset about if the government knows. Let’s take a closer look at what they are saying:
  • They know you rang a phone sex service at 2:24 am and spoke for 18 minutes. But they don’t know what you talked about.
  • They know you called the suicide prevention hot line from the Golden Gate Bridge. But the topic of the call remains a secret.
  • They know you spoke with an HIV testing service, then your doctor, then your health insurance company in the same hour. But they don’t know what was discussed.
  • They know you received a call from the local NRA office while it was having a campaign against gun legislation, and then called your senators and congressional representatives immediately after. But the content of those calls remains safe from government intrusion.
  • They know you called a gynecologist, spoke for a half hour, and then called the local Planned Parenthood‘s number later that day. But nobody knows what you spoke about.
Sorry, your phone records also known as a the supposedly benign phrase “metadata" can reveal a lot more about the content of your calls than the government is implying.
Metadata provides enough context to know some of the most intimate details of your lives. And the government has given no assurances that this data will never be correlated with other easily obtained data.
New York Magazine explains:
“When you take all those records of who’s communicating with who, you can build social networks and communities for everyone in the world,” mathematician and NSA whistle-blower William Binney — “one of the best analysts in history,” who left the agency in 2001 amid privacy concerns — told Daily Intelligencer. “And when you marry it up with the content,” which he is convinced the NSA is collecting as well, “you have leverage against everybody in the country.”
“You are unique in the world,” Binney explained, based on the identifying attributes of the machines you use. “If I want to know who’s in the tea party, I can put together the metadata and see who’s communicating with who. I can construct the network of the tea party. If I want to pass that data to the IRS, then I can do that. That’s the danger here.”
At The New Yorker, Jane Mayer quoted mathematician and engineer Susan Landau’s hypothetical: “For example, she said, in the world of business, a pattern of phone calls from key executives can reveal impending corporate takeovers. Personal phone calls can also reveal sensitive medical information: ‘You can see a call to a gynecologist, and then a call to an oncologist, and then a call to close family members.’” [Landau gives a more detailed explanation here.]
“There’s a lot you can infer,” Binney continued. “If you’re calling a physician and he’s a heart specialist, you can infer someone is having heart problems. It’s all in the databases.” The data, he said, is “all compiled by code. The software does it all from the beginning — they have dossiers of everyone in the country. That’s done automatically. When you want to investigate or target somebody, a human becomes involved.”

“The public doesn’t understand,” Landau told Mayer. “It’s much more intrusive than content.”
The Guardian reports:
The information collected on the AP [in the recent scandal regarding the government spying on reporters] was telephony metadata: precisely what the court order against Verizon shows is being collected by the NSA on millions of Americans every day.

Discussing the use of GPS data collected from mobile phones, an appellate court noted that even location information on its own could reveal a person’s secrets: “A person who knows all of another’s travels can deduce whether he is a weekly churchgoer, a heavy drinker, a regular at the gym, an unfaithful husband, an outpatient receiving medical treatment, an associate of particular individuals or political groups,” it read, “and not just one such fact about a person, but all such facts.”
ARS Technica noted:
The ACLU filed a declaration by Princeton Computer Science Prof. Edward Felten to support its quest for a preliminary injunction in that lawsuit. Felten, a former technical director of the Federal Trade Commission, has testified to Congress several times on technology issues, and he explained why “metadata” really is a big deal.

There are already programs that make it easy for law enforcement and intelligence agencies to analyze such data, like IBM’s Analyst’s Notebook. IBM offers courses on how to use Analyst’s Notebook to understand call data better.
Unlike the actual contents of calls and e-mails, the metadata about those calls often can’t be hidden. And it can be incredibly revealing, sometimes more so than the actual content.

Knowing who you’re calling reveals information that isn’t supposed to be public. Inspectors general at nearly every federal agency, including the NSA, “have hot lines through which misconduct, waste, and fraud can be reported.” Hot lines exist for people who suffer from addictions to alcohol, drugs, or gambling; for victims of rape and domestic violence; and for people considering suicide.
Text messages can measure donations to churches, to Planned Parenthood, or to a particular political candidate.
Felten points out what should be obvious to those arguing “it’s just metadata”—the most important piece of information in these situations is the recipient of the call.
The metadata gets more powerful as you collect it in bulk. For instance, showing a call to a bookie means a surveillance target probably made a bet. But “analysis of metadata over time could reveal that the target has a gambling problem, particularly if the call records also reveal a number of calls made to payday loan services.”

The data can even reveal the most intimate details about people’s romantic lives. Felten writes:
Consider the following hypothetical example: A young woman calls her gynecologist; then immediately calls her mother; then a man who, during the past few months, she had repeatedly spoken to on the telephone after 11pm; followed by a call to a family planning center that also offers abortions. A likely storyline emerges that would not be as evident by examining the record of a single telephone call.
With a five-year database of telephony data, these patterns can be evinced with “even the most basic analytic techniques,” he notes.
By collecting data from the ACLU in particular, the government could identify the “John Does” in the organization’s lawsuits that have John Doe plaintiffs. They could expose litigation strategy by revealing that the ACLU was calling registered sex offenders, or parents of students of color in a particular school district, or people linked to a protest movement.
Indeed, the government’s spying on our metadata violates our right to freedom of expression, guaranteed by numerous laws and charters including the U.S. Constitution, the European Convention on Human Rights, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and international law, including articles 20 and 23 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and Conventions 87 and 98 of the International Labor Organization.

Remember, a U.S. federal judge found that the statute allowing indefinite detention of Americans without due process has a “chilling effect” on free speech. Top reporters have said that they are less likely to interview controversial people, for fear of being accused of “supporting” terrorists.

Given the insanely broad list of actions and beliefs which may get one labeled as a “potential terrorist” by local, state or federal law enforcement, the free association of Americans is being chilled. For example, people may be less willing to call their niece calling to end the Fed, their Occupy-attending aunt, their Tea Party-promoting cousin, their anti-war teacher, or their anti-fracking uncle.

Foreign Policy reported this week that metadata may not catch terrorists, but it’s great at busting journalists and their sources:
The National Security Agency says that the telephone metadata it collects on every American is essential for finding terrorists. And that’s debatable. [Indeed, top counter-terrorism experts say that all of this spying , and that it actually hurts U.S. counter-terror efforts (more here and here).] But this we know for sure: Metadata is very useful for tracking journalists and discovering their sources.
A former FBI agent and bomb technician pleaded guilty to leaking classified information to the Associated Press about a successful CIA operation in Yemen. As it turns out, phone metadata was the key to finding him.

The real reason the government is going after leakers is because it can. Investigators today have greater access to phone records and e-mails than they did before Obama took office, allowing them to follow digital data trails straight to the source.

In a highly controversial move, investigators secretly obtained a subpoena for phone records of AP reporters and editors.
Once investigators looked at that phone metadata, they got their big break in the case.

It’s no wonder that the Obama administration is so aggressive in punishing leakers so often. Metadata is the closest thing to a smoking gun that they’re likely to have, absent a wiretap or a copy of an email in which the source is clearly seen giving a reporter classified information.

If you’re looking for a case study in the power of metadata,this is a perfect example.
Top experts have said that mass surveillance sets up the technological framework allowing for “turnkey tyranny”.
Spying on Americans’ metadata destroys our constitutional right to freedom of association and virtually everything the Founding Fathers fought for.

Computer experts have used an analogy to explain how powerful metadata is: the English monarchy could have stopped the Founding Fathers in their tracks if they only possessed “metadata” regarding which colonist talked to whom.

I don't think the kind of society most of us want, one in which we assume a government official is looking over our shoulders?

Democracy deserted our Nation along time ago, simply mouthing the  brain washed, hollow words that we are a free Country is a meaningless illusion, a big lie, because the actions of our government tell the ugly truth about how little freedom we actually have.