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[return to "Amazon employees plan ‘online walkout’ to protest treatment of warehouse workers"]
1. Negati+Q7[view] [source] 2020-04-17 16:49:04
>>claude+(OP)
The treatment of warehouse workers and of people with different non office jobs is a strong reason why I will never work at a place like Amazon or Walmart.

Glad to see some people sticking up for each other in these times especially.

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2. txcwpa+Gc[view] [source] 2020-04-17 17:15:00
>>Negati+Q7
Amazon warehouse workers get $17/hr starting wage (and a full 2x ($34/hr!!) overtime), with no experience/education needed and almost no barrier to getting the job (except physical capability to lift a box), as well as the best health insurance I've ever heard of entry-level manual laborers getting, as well as education budgets to be used on any higher level education they want.

Obviously warehouse work isn't glamorous and they are under a lot of pressure and there's nothing wrong with increased scrutiny on how they are treated, but it's also getting exhausting when people act like Amazon FC workers are treated like slaves.

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3. deeble+Nj[view] [source] 2020-04-17 18:03:18
>>txcwpa+Gc
Their workers are treated like robots, not slaves.

And the "good wages for low qualifications" argument is equally exhausting. Money shouldn't be some universal justification for overlooking poor workplace conditions and unethical treatment of human beings.

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4. colech+Gm[view] [source] 2020-04-17 18:24:54
>>deeble+Nj
An old Slavic word robota (slavery is a good translation) was the inspiration for early science fiction writer Chapek to coin the word robot in the book Rossum's Universal Robots.

The plot centers around artificial flesh and bone life (the robots) which "lack nothing but a soul" used as a forced labor class with outcomes you might imagine.

Given the origin, really "robots, not slaves!" doesn't hold up as a particularly strong argument.

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5. Hideou+no[view] [source] 2020-04-17 18:39:16
>>colech+Gm
In Czech robota means more along the lines of "manual labor" not slavery. It has a connotation of drudgery and tedium though.

Edit: The related word Robotnik (like the villain in Sonic) means something like "serf" though

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6. xyzzyz+yG3[view] [source] 2020-04-19 07:53:27
>>Hideou+no
In Polish, robotnik means just a physical laborer, there's no negative connotation at all.
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