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1leggeddog t1_iybbp5q wrote

Amazon: "ok, we promise we won't do it again"

Amazon the next day: "Lets fire more employees that try to unionize. We can afford it."

593

LazzzyButtons t1_iybeiqp wrote

It is your right to form a union. source. You still have this right!

The only reason why Amazon employees aren’t doing it, or any other workers under a corporation, is because you are an “at-will” employee and they can fire you at any time for any reason.

Truth of the matter is that they can fire you for any reason at all, and not just because you formed a union. They could just fire you because last months numbers were down and now they need to let some people go and you happen to be in that batch. They would fire you in a second.

Corporate will fuck you over! Why not fuck them by joining a union?

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Badtrainwreck t1_iybexkm wrote

Why? If the US government can piss on Unions why not just let it be a free for all? Fuck the American worker am I right?

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mugen__870 t1_iybi5fh wrote

Fines based on percentages might help.

Oh you made $500 billion last year? Your fine will be 20% of that. That’ll put a halt on those record profits real quick.

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byteminer t1_iybilo6 wrote

They will appeal it all the way to SCOTUS if they have to and SCOTUS will say America has a rich heritage and tradition fucking over unions and reverse it.

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Baby_Fark t1_iybj42d wrote

I’m sure Amazon is shaking in its space boots.

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Thatguyxlii t1_iybk3as wrote

Corporate friendly Supreme Court will overturn it. Because "fuck the workers and the poor" is the GOP motto.

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mjh2901 t1_iybm1p2 wrote

He has to get congress to OK it, I wonder if the republicans will vote no in the house just to cause El Presidente a nightmarish problem.... Frankly I am hoping they get that idea and follow through.

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Glad-Degree-4270 t1_iybm24z wrote

I have a friend who teaches at the college of Staten Islam’s and many students work for Amazon. The anti union misinformation campaign is huge in those facilities.

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JuNk3T t1_iybmt1u wrote

you are right that employment is, as you say, at-will, the timing between an employee's union activities and their termination is going to be quite relevant so long as they were a well performing employee. Whether that is the basis for a law suit however will depend on the law in the employee's area. For a union, negotiation power arises out of how "disposable" the unionized employees are and how many employees are a member of a union. Once unionization is achieved, it gets harder for an employee to terminate en masse at will without bringing the union into it.

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ptd163 t1_iybobyh wrote

>Oh you made $500 billion last year? Your fine will be 20% of that. That’ll put a halt on those record profits real quick.

Everyone keeps missing the point. Fines should not just be a percentage of revenue. Corporations just build in extra margin and revenue to account for the fine like they do now. What needs to happen is ALL illegal revenue is immediately forfeited. This solves them building in extra margin and revenue. It doesn't matter what they've made if they have to forfeit it.

After that the actual fine, which has NO LIMIT, is imposed ON TOP OF the already forfeited revenue as a punitive measure to discourage further violations. Only then will corporations take fine seriously.

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unlock0 t1_iybrsnq wrote

People that will never be able to afford to retire give zero fucks about the people profiting from their misery.

I don't even consider myself very pro union but you simply don't have a very good argument here.

0

Yomat t1_iybt3pb wrote

Stop or we’ll fine you… $200! Yeah, that’ll teach you!

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downonthesecond t1_iybt8vu wrote

Maybe Amazon can piggy-back on Congress' bill to keep railroad workers from striking.

−1

Halt-CatchFire t1_iybtffa wrote

I mean, back in the day when the state and the business owners conspired to screw over union men, we took up arms and burned motherfuckers houses down.

The capitalist class has gotten to comfortable. They've been so used to being untouchable for so long that they're not scared any more.

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ramilehti t1_iybu0as wrote

I agree. The initial fine should be percentage based. A low percentage for the first infraction. And then grow exponentially for each subsequent infraction. Without limit.

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LordCharidarn t1_iybvxuy wrote

Don’t invest in shitty companies? Why should shareholders get benefits of owning part of a company, but not have to suffer consequences when the company does something bad?

Jail time for the people that made the decision and dissolution of the company seem fair. Investment firms that handle retirement funds would be quick start relabeling risk assessments based on this new paradigm, so I don’t think it would hurt as many innocent people as you think.

Besides, if you are profiting from the misbehavior of a company (earning wealth through owning stock) why should you be allowed to have that wealth that was earned though misbehavior?

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Weary_Horse5749 t1_iybw3lb wrote

Amazon seems to be a sinking ship at this point anyways

0

mcpat21 t1_iybw9nv wrote

Amazon tomorrow: Sends Cease and Desist letter to US Supreme Court

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youwantitwhen t1_iybxbi2 wrote

You must do both.

People dont think they will go to jail either.

Honestly my opinion is to simply put the company out of business entirely.

Corporations will smarten up within hours.

1

Hella4nia t1_iybxw6s wrote

Do Joe Biden next

−5

ArcturusTheRed t1_iybxwh9 wrote

I think this sounds great in theory, but tricky in execution. How do you calculate the amount of illegal revenue gained by union busting, or anti-trust activity? I imagine you could get 100 experts to try and figure it out and they’d each have a different number.

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Alundil t1_iybzfdh wrote

Now do Starbucks

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InGordWeTrust t1_iybztks wrote

Again? They don't care. Fine them billions.

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--harumph-- t1_iyc0afu wrote

Can he issue the same order to Biden and Congress?

1

intellifone t1_iyc45r5 wrote

Or what? Fines should be increased every single time this shit happens with no limit. Jail time for people in the company who do it more than once.

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ukezi t1_iyc98e2 wrote

My guess is that the current Scotus would say that the federal government hasn't any jurisdiction over labor relations because it's not explicitly in the constitution and declares nlra unconstitutional. For that they would have to reverse NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. but that didn't stop them before.

California and the other blue states will have replacement laws in place the moment the decision comes down and the red states continue their way back into the 1800s.

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S3HN5UCHT t1_iycetn5 wrote

Now it’s time for them to do it to the railroad conglomerates

1

Yokepearl t1_iycf5jf wrote

“Sry Americans, don’t be afraid of organizing (but be afraid of organizing”

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noplay12 t1_iycffx8 wrote

The current labor laws are toothless unless the penalty is criminalized in addition to fines.

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ZeroExist t1_iycjkq5 wrote

That’s why they are there it’s a step by step plan, get caught, use the cheap fall guy, advertise the suffering, play the victim, executives kept safe, keep profits that’s the whole scheme nowadays

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wasdninja t1_iycjmot wrote

Lots of things are tricky but that doesn't stop us from giving it a good try anyway. As long as the punishments aren't too low its way better than the pathetic shit in place right now.

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n0fearfrontier t1_iycmemy wrote

Why do people want to work there? Abandon and boycott.

0

mcampo84 t1_iyctngy wrote

Amazon: sure we’ll get right on that

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ricktor67 t1_iycxmqg wrote

This right here. The 1099 scam that has infested america was done to control wages(by making you compete for your job every 2 years at contract renewal time), and preventing any way to unionize(while making sure the corporation has zero liability for anything).

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ThePrankMonkey t1_iyczbsy wrote

Joe Biden wants congress to prevent a rail strike by forcing the union to accept the terms offered by the robber barons. The workers just want better sick days and a raise, but the terms Biden wants them to accept include insane restrictions like scheduling sick time off 30 days in advance and only on Tuesdays or Thursdays. Also, that's only like one day a year. The raise is 24%, but they haven't had one since 2019 and the inflation is like 19% since then so it's barely a raise.

Biden COULD force the companies to accept better work conditions for employees, but that would hurt their ability to give themselves $200M bonuses.

https://www.npr.org/2022/11/29/1139693779/biden-congress-rail-strike-meeting-white-house-funding-bill

0

AmnesiaCane t1_iyd3hcl wrote

I'm an employment law attorney, my favorite reason someone was fired so far was "My boss said I could take the day off to attend my mom's funeral and fired me after I came back." And that's perfectly legal and there was nothing I could do for her. If you don't have a union, form one.

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talltad t1_iydasil wrote

Two of the richest men in the world are just shitting on employment laws and their employees and everyone is just kinda watching it happen. What has happened to us?

0

LurkBot9000 t1_iydbgys wrote

Im not a lawyer: Isnt anti-union retaliation already illegal?

If its illegal why would anyone ask them to stop instead of applying penalties?

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NoahCharlie t1_iydcavq wrote

their only profitable buisness is Amazon web services

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DannyElJaxon t1_iydecdq wrote

Make them SWEAAAAATTYYYYYYYSssssSssSWWWEAAAAAT!

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grampsgarcia t1_iydelu8 wrote

This is really a solution we don't use but would definitely work. Executives going to prison for their companies breaking laws; they are in charge so they do the time.

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Jasoman t1_iydexi7 wrote

What US going to do make them go out of Business lol just workflow fines and keep truckin.

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FriendlyDespot t1_iydh6gc wrote

You can't "just" pay a settlement. There's the NLRB and other potential civil suits to deal with, and both parties have to accept it. And even if they do settle, that sort of proves the point that it's unlawful to terminate employees ostensibly for "at-will" reasons when it's actually retaliation for organising.

0

Deranged40 t1_iydi3ym wrote

Nope. This is why you get fired for just suggesting you might--well before you actually join a union.

And then amazon is just gonna pay the fine. Because it's literally more profitable to do the "illegal" thing. I have to quote "illegal" because that word means something very different when talking about normal people who normally can't afford to habitually break the law

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Deranged40 t1_iydib3f wrote

> You can't "just" pay a settlement.

Sure you can. Amazon has fired countless people for attempting to unionize. Sure it's unlawful, but to Amazon, that means "there's a cost associated". It's not like someone's gonna go to jail for it. Show me those discovery documents!

Oh, what's that? Amazon settled out of court? On literally all of the previous cases? very weird.

>There's the NLRB and other potential civil suits to deal with

Amazon has an entire legal team on payroll. They get paid to do nothing at all if not for ongoing litigation. And that litigation will almost certainly bankrupt the ex employees.

It's a fucked system we have, and until that barrier is broken and a union gets successfully formed, Amazon has the upper hand at all turns.

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Serpenta91 t1_iydiddu wrote

Instead of blaming a company for your low wage job, you should consider what changes you can make to yourself to make your labor worth more.

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Deranged40 t1_iydj2n3 wrote

> It's still illegal.

That only means it costs money! "Illegal" means "cost more". And that cost is still considerably less than allowing a union.

It doesn't mean that there's a threat of someone going to jail, or that an exec will lose their job. It doesn't even mean that their profits are going to suffer. They've calculated this legal threat in terms of the money that it costs. And that's all it is - just another line on the budget.

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Deranged40 t1_iydjbsz wrote

It may be illegal, but there's no mechanism to prevent them from doing it. Because the consequences for doing the illegal thing is less impactful than not doing the illegal thing.

It's a financially responsible move to break the law when the consequences are so minor.

It's illegal like speeding is illegal. Yeah, there's consequences, but most people still do it every day regardless, because the consequences (and likelihood of even having to face said consequences) is so small.

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FriendlyDespot t1_iydjx5u wrote

Please stop. I said "they can't", as in it's illegal. Obviously anyone can physically do whatever they want. That's pointless pedantry.

You said that employers can just pretend that they're firing for other reasons, but they can't. You're talking about settling a lawsuit where the employer is accused of terminating employees as retaliation under false pretense, so you're implicitly acknowledging that employers cannot simply offer an at-will argument to get around anti-retaliation laws.

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Deranged40 t1_iydka5q wrote

> Please stop. I said "they can't", as in it's illegal

I'm just pointing out that they "can"--in all forms and interpretations of the word. In spite of the fact that there's a fee associated with it. Both technically, as well as financially, they "can" do this. It's indistinguishable from legal approval process up front such as getting FAA clearance to take off at an airport. When we talk about doing something illegal, often times that comes with the weight of "well, we probably can't afford the fines or the jail time to do that". But that's not what "illegal" means here.

It being illegal doesn't even mildly discourage them from doing it.

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ArcticSphinx t1_iydksnb wrote

I was thinking a government (or third-party) audit at the company's expense. Ideally, it would also open up opportunities to catch any tax/reporting irregularities that the IRS might be interested in.

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FriendlyDespot t1_iydmteu wrote

The guy that I replied to above did say that when he said that employers can just pretend to fire for at-will reasons to get around anti-retaliation laws. That's the whole point of this conversation.

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ryeguymft t1_iydssir wrote

Superstore really predicted this

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LeicaM6guy t1_iydv4zj wrote

I’m sure they’ll get right on that.

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geekynerdynerd t1_iydvnzu wrote

Pretty sure California already has laws covering this issue anyway, it's primarily the "states rights" red states that depend upon the federal government for enforcing regulations that prevent a descent into an ancap dystopia.

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jnemesh t1_iydvqmy wrote

Doesn't matter. Amazon will weigh whether it's more costly to accept unionization or to pay court fines...I guarantee you they will ignore the courts as long as possible.

1

FriendlyDespot t1_iydw0pk wrote

> I'm just pointing out that they "can"--in all forms and interpretations of the word.

And I'm pointing out you're wrong about that. They can't in a legal context, as in it's unlawful, and that's the only context that we're talking about here. Christ, this is like talking to an edgy teenager who thinks that their nihilism about the consequences of legal action somehow makes illegal things legal.

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I_proudly_Disagree t1_iydzfpt wrote

....I feel like I read this every other week. Anyone want to take bets on whether or not they comply?

1

CrazyTillItHurts t1_iye0rjs wrote

> but the terms Biden wants them to accept include insane restrictions like scheduling sick time off 30 days in advance and only on Tuesdays or Thursdays. Also, that's only like one day a year

Your link doesn't back that up. That sounds absolutely made up, or at least incredibly spun together with crazy speculation.

It also seems like this move has bipartisan support so far, at least from the House/Senate leaders, according to that article

0

tomtom5858 t1_iye11m5 wrote

Based on revenue is fine. That's the measure of how much money they make overall, before any expenses (rather than profit, which they can easily game). If they're losing tens of billions to fines, shareholders will quickly look for someone that doesn't incur those fines.

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the_grungydan t1_iye6pg1 wrote

Not that the Dems are fighting that hard for us, either.

And this isn't whataboutism, before some dingus that saw that word somewhere once comes along, nor am I trying to be the enlightened centrist here. It's just a fact.

Neither party gives the slightest shit about anything other than power and making money.

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Deranged40 t1_iyem47u wrote

>The guy that I replied to above did say that

No I didn't. I refuted your suggestion that you can't just pay a fine and call it a day. Which is what happens all the time.

In that comment, I outright acknowledged that it was illegal. But it doesn't really matter what you call it, they're going to continue doing the thing you said they can't do either way.

You said there would be discovery documents if they did something that's illegal. So where are they? Where's the NLRB action? What Amazon did is illegal, so where's these lawsuits?

0

Fiftycaljake t1_iyf1kq7 wrote

Funny thing is that I work for a union shop that Amazon buys all their plastic totes from...they were just here Tuesday touring the plant....

1

Nevermind04 t1_iyf91ul wrote

Until executives start going to jail, corporations will continue breaking the law with impunity.

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Anagatam t1_iyf9mee wrote

But they won’t stop. Because the fines are cheaper than pensions.

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