If you've been in the workforce for the past decade or so
you may have noticed subtle changes.
Sure it takes hard work and sacrifice to get to the top but does it feel
like all that effort has left you just spinning your wheels?
It's no secret that we're all working harder and getting
less for it. Less pay, less benefits and
less free time. The old adage was that
work was its own reward but the guy who came up with that didn't have a
mortgage or a dwindling 401K to worry about.
He also had his weekends...
Consequently, it's no surprise that we find today's workplace
increasingly demands more than just a job well done, it demands a lifestyle
commitment.
As in your job is your life.
So what? That's work and that's how it's always been.
Except it hasn't...
Where the baby boomers may have had a reasonable expectation
of a shiny pot of gold at the end of their career rainbow those that came after
found themselves without a pot to...well you know...
Without falling into the trap of every succeeding generation
blaming its predecessor, the point is that the endgame has changed.
While we hear a lot of lip service about work/life balance
and the importance of family it seems such things are at odds with expectations
of the average worker in today's corporate culture.
So is it any surprise that when the NewYork Times peeled back the curtain of Amazon's corporate culture they found
more in common with the Kremlin
than KMart.
Horrific stories like...
"A woman who had
breast cancer was told that she was put on a “performance improvement plan” —
Amazon code for “you’re in danger of being fired” — because “difficulties” in
her “personal life” had interfered with fulfilling her work goals."
NYTimes
Or...
"Amazon came under fire in 2011 when
workers in an eastern Pennsylvania warehouse toiled in more than 100-degree
heat with ambulances waiting outside, taking away laborers as they fell." NYTimes
If these were but a
few isolated incidents they could be excused but it appears that rather than
the exception, they're the rule...
"At Amazon, workers are encouraged to
tear apart one another’s ideas in meetings, toil long and late (emails arrive
past midnight, followed by text messages asking why they were not answered),
and held to standards that the company boasts are “unreasonably high.” The
internal phone directory instructs colleagues on how to send secret feedback to
one another’s bosses. Employees say it is frequently used to sabotage others.
(The tool offers sample texts, including this: “I felt concerned about his
inflexibility and openly complaining about minor tasks.)" NYTimes
None of this
shakes the Wall Street Glitterati though...
"I envision all investors saying
'Great,'" (Jim) Cramer said Monday. "Do I want to work at amazon? No.
If you want to play your money with companies that only treat their employees
well and do everything right, it's harder than you think to find." CNBC
Which has to
be the most stunning display of cognitive dissonance (one of my favorite phrases) since Bernie Madoff uttered this 2007 quote,
"It's virtually
impossible to violate rules in today's regulatory environment"
Of
course Wall street loves this stuff. We
all know that nothing will raise a share price faster than pulling the rug out from
under workaday America. So it was with Amazon the following Monday after the New York Times expose'. Amazon's share price was effectively
unchanged.
Which
is strange because for all the conservative admonitions about self reliance and
the glories of capitalism Wall Street heaps praise upon companies that have
effectively adopted management based on communism.
Hypocritical.
That
any company can be celebrated for a institutionalized policy of devaluing
people should be cause for outrage. But
there's that cognitive dissonance again.
So long as Wall street gets its money nobody really cares how it got there or who gets hurt.
Think
it's OK to throw a little Chairman Mao in with your capitalism? Consider how relatively backward communist
nations were before they embraced some form of capitalistic markets. China wasn't known for anything but making cheap
knockoffs of American goods. The Soviet
Union couldn't make a decent car and Cuba might as well have thrown out the
calendars after 1962.
Creativity,
innovation and progress are not born out of repression and abuse. These days, however, no matter where you work
you will suffer it in some measure.
Your
choices are to literally be a "Wage Slave" or strike out on your
own. Of course if whatever shingle you
hang happens to threaten one of those places you choose NOT to work for, expect
to be crushed.
Ask Barnes and Noble how that feels...
Ask Barnes and Noble how that feels...
Let's
bring back the America we were sold. The
one where hard work was rewarded and CEO's didn't look to Chairman Mao for
guidance. Let's get the Labor Department
to actually do something other than print lunchroom posters and spit out manufactured
statistics for the crystal ball prognosticators on CNBC.
How
far have we really progressed over the past two generations when wages remain
stagnant, women are still underpaid and companies blatantly abuse their
workforce without consequence?
We need real progress, not just some dumb commercial of waving wheat fields complete with proclamations of America's greatness on Bloomberg.
We need real progress, not just some dumb commercial of waving wheat fields complete with proclamations of America's greatness on Bloomberg.
There's
only one way to do it, make them fail and to hell with what Wall Street thinks. There are other places to buy crap that
aren't Amazon.com, other retailers that don't have "Walmart" over their
doors and other phones that don't have an Apple Logo on them.
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