• KazuyaDarklight@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    There is something about this that just feels … lazy. Unsurprisingly, I suspect that whoever got tasked with making this wasn’t exactly bought into the project.

    • mean_bean279@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It’s not meant to be overly communicative. It’s meant to target the people who are either on the fence, or hear talk in the break room, but filling them with just the right amount of disinformation. Specifically targeting the people who “don’t want someone else taking their hard earned money” without realizing they would make more than the union due requires by working in a union shop. That’s why they’re using simple language and conveying a monetary cost. They don’t want to put on their “unions fight for more labor to lessen the load” and “unions fight for more than just pay, including some of the best benefits in any career.”

      In marketing and propaganda less is more.

      • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Also, we gain more from understanding why the tactics have been effective than from dismissing them.

        The tactics have been effective, so even while there may be an ironic appeal in characterizing them as “lazy”, the description is not particularly accurate.

    • _stranger_@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It’s like some director asked a manager to ask a PM to ask chatGPT to ask dall-e to make a poster, and after 3 weeks of effort, managed to get the thing to spit this out.

    • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      No guarantees, just overwhelming historic precedent, and common sense conjecture.

      No guarantees though, because unions are too weak and pathetic to provide the same unequivocal guarantees that we expect in every other aspect of our lives.

    • bane_killgrind@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Well yeah, without unions you are guaranteed to be paid less, less benefits and more restrictive rules.

      With unions there’s a negotiation.

    • Chetzemoka@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      In the same way that your lease doesn’t “guarantee” that your landlord will fix the leaking kitchen sink, this is technically true. Which is how they get away with spreading this nonsense.

      Nevermind that having that legal contract gives you the only leverage you could possibly hope to have when you take the landlord to court. Same leverage that a union contract gives you over the corporation you work for.

      • Dojan@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Here in Sweden we have a tenants union. If your landlord is being obstinate, submitting a form with the tenants union’s logo on it as well as a case number will generally get the landlord’s arse in gear. Should that fail, the union will provide legal counsel and even representation, free of charge.

        I pay $7USD a month to be part of the tenant union, and $20USD a month for my workers union.

        My previous landlord was scum, and I made ample use of the tenant union in that period. At one point my landlord reimbursed me $950, in addition to finally getting around and fixing various issues they had to fix. I definitely feel like I’ve gotten my money’s worth from it.

        • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Swedes are lucky to have such effective systems for protecting the population.

          Now, if you really became organized, then landlords would no longer exist.

          • Dojan@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Gods I wish.

            I don’t mind the public landlords that much, since they’re publicly owned and funded, the goal is to provide housing, not profits. However, in the past few decades a lot of it has been privatised. To get a contract with a public landlord can take literal decades of queuing. The up-side of public housing though is that the rent tends to be lower than private contracts. In my last area my contract cost 10500 a month, whereas the public housing of same quality in the same area went in the ballpark of 7000-7800 a month.

            Thus you end up in scenarios like mine; I make enough to be able to afford a mortgage, but since I still need someplace to live I have to rent from a private landlord, meaning I get inflated rents, meaning I have less money left over for the by law required down payment for a mortgage.

            That law, as far as I know, wasn’t a thing before the bubble popped back in the mid/late 00s, and now the bar for owning a home is much higher so the younger generations can’t reach it as easily. Having a supporting family helps of course, but those of us that lack that privilege are shit out of luck. If you want to buy an apartment or a house you’ll also be competing against flippers and wannabe hotels that buy it for AirBNB. It’s all honestly just a load of bullshit.

            We could use another million programme. Boggles the mind to think that the boomers got money handed to them from the government, just so they could build houses. Yet we’re the spoiled ones.

            • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              I have understood that much of the public in Sweden is unaware of how deeply its own country has been affected by austerity and other erosion of policies that support workers. Whereas in other countries, such the US, UK, and Germany, elites have propagated the narrative that austerity is benevolent or necessary, in countries such as Sweden, they have simply denied it has been occurring.

              The populations of Nordic states are extremely proud of their systems, but seem unaware of how fragile they remain, as long as power is concentrated toward the interests of the few.

              • Dojan@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                I can’t speak for the nation as a whole, but I don’t agree on a personal level. The erosion of systems is felt rather keenly. It’s also not attributable to any single political coalition, rather both coalitions are guilty of it. They hamstring systems, point to them as flawed, and when time comes, they’re replaced or supplemented with private alternatives.

                Then they start over on square one again.

                What this serves to do is slowly funnel money out of the public system into private pockets. It’s working great too. We have private schools that are publicly funded. Private clinics that are publicly funded. Private elderly care that’s publicly funded.

                It’s all rubbish.

                • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  I am certain the effects are felt in lived experience, but I was giving a view that much of the population is not consciously aware that the systems are being degraded in favor of elite interests.

    • Everythingispenguins@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Usually not. You can’t union bust but you can advocate for your position. Plus Amazon has fuck you money, they will ask for forgiveness not permission for shit like this.

  • Redx@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    About 15 years ago I was promoted to a dept manager position at Walmart. They rented out a conference room at a nearby hotel and had this whole anti union training. I really didn’t think much of it at the time being as young as I was… but it was pretty much just like this poster. Telling us to report if we seen or heard any talk of organization of a union. Kind of shitty of a thing for a company to do now that I looks back on this.

    • thesprongler@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      And to think, the amount they spend indoctrinating young managers across the country each year could easily cover the union demands.

  • carl_dungeon@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I forgot that Amazon paid so well with good benefits, silly me thought people were pissing in bottles and fear of constant reprisals and firings for not meeting quotas. Amazon, explain to me how your process is better?

    • Zorque@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      There are no jobs where unions make zero sense.

      It’s not just about the contract, but also the ability to better negotiate a contract through collective bargaining. Not to mention the general benefit of a community that you know has your back.

      • Neuromancer@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        It would make zero sense.

        I’m paid a base salary which based on a formula is the same as everyone else’s. I also get commissions. There is zero reason to unionize as I wouldn’t get anything better from the deal.

        If I worked in a non-sales job. I’d see a benefit. If I worked as a developer, or support, etc.

        Sales is treated extremely well as long as you prform

        • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Whatever you are paid is less than the value you create for the company, and the more privileges you have relative to other workers, the more likely the company is to take them away when it wants to reduce costs.

          All of the reasons you have given are not sensible as reasons not to be organized with your coworkers.

          Your company does not care about you, but you and other workers can care about each other.

            • bane_killgrind@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              lol one of my product reps was doing just as well as you, and he got the ax is some restructuring with the minimum notice allowed.

              He’s amazing, and went to work for a competitor basically instantly, but the interruption in cash flow made half a year extremely stressful.

              You represent the top 0.5%, but you still aren’t immune to life changing events. A union would still benefit you, by increasing the stability of your income.

            • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              I have the argument I am paid less than the value I create.

              All businesses exist for the purpose of generating profit for their owners.

              Without workers providing labor to a business, the business could not operate. All value generated from the operation of a company is generated by the labor of workers.

              Profit is the value generated by the labor of workers minus the wages paid to them.

              If the wages paid to workers were not less than the value generated by their labor, then the business could not generate a profit.

              The reasoning is so simple that a child could understand it, and you could understand it too, if you were not so pigheadedly anchored to your narrative about “idiotic communist BS” and “everyone had nothing”.

              I have friends and family who care about me. work is about producing an income to do the things I want to do in life.

              Unless your friends and family would be willing to pay you as much as your income from your job, you profoundly misapprehended the meaning of my comments.

              The very instant conditions change such that your labor is no longer profitable for a company, you lose.

                • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  A business owner takes a risk. They supply the capital to run the company.

                  the owner loses his whole investment and possibly his home.

                  Business owners don’t “supply” capital. Business owners own capital.

                  Anyone who has access to capital is far less vulnerable generally than workers, who have no capital.

                  Workers live under continuous precarity.

                  What is the net worth of the owner of your company? What is the motive for being a business owner? Do you really think you are less likely to become homeless than him or her?

                  The whole the “business owners take all risk” is just some tired neoliberal apologia that is intended to mislead.

    • unfreeradical@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The main purpose of a union is not simply to hold the company to terms it had agreed.

      Unions are the vehicle for workers to negotiate.

      Having a contract is not a meaningful reason not to be organized.

    • Dojan@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Hmm… That is the idea of a union to have guarantees on benefits, work and rules. That is called a contract.

      That’s a very simplistic view on what a union does.

      If I were to lose my job tomorrow, I’d only get a portion of my income after taxes covered by public income insurance. The union covers up to the rest, meaning I won’t have any noticeable loss of income for I believe six months, at which point it goes down to 80% of my income prior to my unemployment.

      I also don’t have to bother negotiating my salary with my employer, unless I personally chose to do so. And should my employer for whatever reason decide to sacrifice me to cover up for some blunder, then the union will deal support me through it, offer legal advice, and even representation.

      That’s still not everything a union does.

    • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      My thoughts exactly! A good contract has all of those things in writing. Shitty contracts do exist however so perhaps that’s their angle there.