A Quote by John Warren Kindt

Gambling drains the economy by taking money away from grocery stores and retail businesses and putting it in the hands of an industry that produces no product — © John Warren Kindt
Gambling drains the economy by taking money away from grocery stores and retail businesses and putting it in the hands of an industry that produces no product
High-end boutiques aren't putting small staple stores out of business. What's putting small staple stores out of business is formula retail.
In the UK, tons of records are now sold in grocery stores, because there are no record stores - it's iTunes or the grocery store. And almost every band that had an impact on me was on a major label. There's value in people actually hearing things, as well.
State-sponsored gambling produces no product, no new wealth, and so it makes no genuine contribution to economic development
A politician taking campaign money from gamblers in Nevada is like one taking campaign money from the auto people in Michigan. Gambling is our legal business.
I just want to say that the only thing less popular than putting money into banks is putting money into the auto industry.
When product performance outstrips the ability of customers to use that performance in an industry, the competitive game changes. Under those circumstances you have to decouple components businesses from assembly businesses.
If the Administration does nothing, high gasoline prices will continue to increasingly burden our economy, taking millions of dollars out of the hands of families and putting it straight into the pockets of OPEC.
Many retail stores have consumer trackers that study how long your eyes linger on one product, whether you follow it through by touch, and things that you buy. You can redesign things on a shelf, all by tracking such information.
Nevada has a very dynamic economy, with gambling being the number-one industry, followed closely by blood donorship.
More and more people are opening online stores and online retail businesses. This market is expanding very, very quickly.
The ventures that keep things light and fun, easy to understand, that have a compelling story, a sexy retail product, will have an easier time getting people to rally around them and contribute. A start-up doing something that's difficult to communicate or doesn't offer any kind of retail product will have a tougher go at it.
What I don't want to see is our political system corrupted by gambling money, especially casino gambling money.
Small businesses are the heart and soul of South Carolina's economy - from our bait stores to our restaurants and barber shops.
Globalism is a scheme for impoverishing First World labor and taking power and influence from the hands of the many and putting them in the hands of the few.
Retail businesses have narrow margins. If you cut off a flow of young consumers, it's only a matter of time before the businesses struggle and fail.
The companies that choose to list on Nasdaq are among the most innovative, risk-taking businesses in the world, and they are proof to us all that prudent risk-taking drives our economy forward.
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