More that the store was inconveniencing regular customers by roping off aisles where there were no "Black Friday" deals going on. A private business has every right to do these sort of things, of course. But it's probably not good business practice to make a regular customers have to practically jump through hoops in order to get simple laundry detergent.
This Walmart is in a middle to upper-middle class area so I doubt the people there were poor, though it is possible they could be from some of the more out-lying areas without Walmarts where class structure might dip down to lower-middle and upper-lower classes.
It's just more to see people so adamant and lining up to get whatever trivial thing it was that was on sale. It puts things into perspective to compare what people in other countries line-up for (real things that matter) or even what people in this country line up for (food, shelter, jobs, a bed) and then to see these people lining up for and staking "claim" to some cheaply-priced consumer electronic.
It just amazing to me that people here are so... petty. There was a news story in last Wednesday night about man camped out on the side-walk of a Best Buy with the intentions of sleeping there until the store opened early Friday morning/late Thursday night to ensure he was first in line for whatever deals Best Buy was running.
It's just incredible to me that people do such things given all of the problems that there are there in even just metropolitan area. To speak nothing of the state, the country as a whole or elsewhere in the world.
It really boggles my mind as I can't comprehend the mind-set behind it. It's like trying to divide by zero. I can't do it.
And I'm hardly a person of great wealths myself and I like a good deal as much as the next guy but if I miss out on a deal I shrug it off and move on. I'm not one who is going to ensure he gets to a Best Buy at midnight to make sure I'm the first to get a cheap Blu-Ray player that'll probably be broken in a year.
I find it amusing, shocking and little bit sad.
If someone is so poor, so destitute that they have to do these things for meaningless consumer goods then maybe they shouldn't be spending $25 on a Blu-Ray player and, instead, they should be spending it on food, to pay a utility bill, to pay rent, to save towards a better car, whatever.
And this sort of stuff I know has been going on for a long time (see above re: the video of mobs over Cabbage-Patch dolls) and it still just amazes me.