{
    "href": "/post/2009/05/12/wal-mart-reality-check/",
    "relId": "2009/05/12/wal-mart-reality-check",
    "title": "Wal-Mart reality check",
    "author": "pmjones",
    "markup": "html",
    "tags": [
        {
            "href": "/tag/economics/",
            "relId": "economics",
            "title": "Economics",
            "author": null,
            "created": null,
            "updated": [],
            "markup": "markdown"
        },
        {
            "href": "/tag/education/",
            "relId": "education",
            "title": "Education",
            "author": null,
            "created": null,
            "updated": [],
            "markup": "markdown"
        }
    ],
    "created": "2009-05-13 00:09:35 UTC",
    "updated": [
        "2009-05-13 00:09:35 UTC"
    ],
    "html": "<blockquote><p>To my mind, the real scandal is not that a large corporation doesn't pay people more. The scandal is that so many people have so little economic value. Despite (or because of) a free public school system, millions of teenagers enter the work force without marketable skills. So why would anyone expect them to be well paid?</p></blockquote>\n<p>via <a href=\"http://www.cafehayek.com/hayek/2009/05/walmart-reality-check.html\">Cafe Hayek: Wal-Mart reality check</a>.</p>\n"
}
