elfwreck:

svlvan:

just bc i’ve seen this sentiment expressed by a lot of ppl who want to support the amazon worker’s strike but don’t know how:

buying from amazon during the period of the strike does nothing to benefit the striking workers. the purpose of the strike is not to “show amazon how crucial its workers are,” and placing more orders is not going to somehow “overwhelm” amazon’s warehouses. the purpose of the strike is to inhibit amazon’s ability to draw in profit. the workers are striking so that the facilities in which they work will no longer be able to function. this is part of a strategy of disrupting amazon’s logistics so that ultimately their profit margins fall and amazon execs will be forced to acknowledge the workers’ complaints and negotiate with them.

if you purchase from amazon during the strike, your money is still going into the same pockets as it would any other time. if you purchase during the strike, the labor necessary to handle your order is going to be passed onto someone else regardless—whether it’s a facility in another region, workers who aren’t striking, or workers who were brought in to replace the strikers. if you purchase during the strike, you are actively funding amazon’s strikebreaking ability. yes, maybe they won’t be able to ship your package on time, or it will never be shipped, and you’ll be refunded (or not!), but that in no way constitutes as a win for the strikers. purchasing something from amazon, regardless of the circumstances, serves only to benefit the corporation, not the workers who fulfill the orders from start to finish—that’s the point of why they’re striking in the first place.

on the other hand, by boycotting amazon in solidarity with the striking workers, you will be limiting amazon’s ability to draw a profit during a large sale event—companies like amazon rely on business tactics such as sales to extract as much profit as they can from their workers. boycotting prevents them from being able to do so. 

if you’re interested in following the events of this strike, as well as other resistance efforts against amazon: https://amazonenlucha.wordpress.com/ is the website run by the organizers of the strike.

Always: Boycotting supports a strike; continuing to do business with the company undermines it.

You may not be able to boycott, or not able to do so easily (if you’re getting diapers from Amazon because those are the cheapest that can be delivered, boycotting is not a good idea), but definitely be aware: the purpose of a strike is to shut down a business. Is to say, “this company can’t operate, and therefore can’t profit, as long as it’s mistreating its workers.” 

Support that by taking your business elsewhere if you can. If you can’t – buy less if you can; hold off on the big purchases until the strike is resolved; don’t advertise for them by announcing your purchase on facebook or twitter.  

Extra orders don’t make the company more likely to give in; they make the company more likely to hire scabs, even lower-paid temp workers with no benefits, people who are desperate. Your order is more likely to be delayed or damaged – so maybe you get a refund, but Amazon just gets to write off those losses.

The way to make them lose money during a strike is not to buy.

10 July 2018

leningrad100:

honestlyvan:

knitmeapony:

oliviavoldaren:

thatdiabolicalfeminist:

Reminder: Do not buy from Amazon or even open the website on 10 July 2018, in solidarity with the transnational strike.

Amazon workers in Spain have called for a transnational strike because Amazon has been avoiding accountability for its labour rights violations by merely shifting the work (and the human rights abuses Amazon inflicts on their workers) to non-striking countries, each time a strike occurs. If there is widespread striking transnationally, Amazon will have no choice but to recognize the strikers’ demands in order to keep their facilities functioning.

Our job as allies is to support the strike by avoiding using the Amazon website or purchasing anything from Amazon for as long as the strike continues. A mass boycott of the site, coinciding with the strike, will strengthen the workers’ bargaining position and could be crucial to Amazon workers gaining back basic rights in a variety of countries.

Please remember this includes subsidiaries like Twitch and Audible.

This is tomorrow!

Please do not shop on Amazon tomorrow.

Please do not stream Amazon music or video tomorrow

Please do not order from sites using Amazon Payments tomorrow.

For one day, please, avoid it.

As a worker-for-rent who’s worked during strikes or demonstrations – PLEASE, if there’s a strike DO NOT DO BUSINESS WITH THAT COMPANY ON THAT DAY IF THERE’S ANY WAY TO AVOID IT. Not only do folks like me get an easy day, it’s also a powerful act of class solidarity.

Also, if you’re a social media type of person, please tweet and comment at the company that you’re choosing not to use their services, in solidarity of the strike. Make sure they know.

HAVE YOU TRIED NOT BEING A SCAB? Don’t preach class consciousness to me if you don’t practice it. Fucking worm.

Seriously though.

There are actual reasons that scabbing has historically been very very bad for people’s health. Doesn’t matter how hard up you are for money, you just don’t do that. If these workers weren’t facing a lousy situation themselves, they wouldn’t need to go on strike.

Another case of if you’re not going to help, at least don’t directly hinder strike action–much less talk about any “act of class solidarity” while you’re doing it 🤔

10 July 2018

thatdiabolicalfeminist:

thatdiabolicalfeminist:

Reminder: Do not buy from Amazon or even open the website between 10-17 July 2018, in solidarity with the transnational strike.

Amazon workers in Spain have called for a transnational strike because Amazon has been avoiding accountability for its labour rights violations by merely shifting the work (and the human rights abuses Amazon inflicts on their workers) to non-striking countries, each time a strike occurs. If there is widespread striking transnationally, Amazon will have no choice but to recognize the strikers’ demands in order to keep their facilities functioning.

Our job as allies is to support the strike by avoiding using the Amazon website or purchasing anything from Amazon for as long as the strike continues. A mass boycott of the site, coinciding with the strike, will strengthen the workers’ bargaining position and could be crucial to Amazon workers gaining back basic rights in a variety of countries.

Explain this to your friends and family who might not have heard about the boycott or the strike or why it’s necessary.

Amazon
workers are literally collapsing and sometimes dying in warehouses that
do not all have climate control. A few years ago Amazon stationed
ambulances outside their warehouses rather than just install AC to
prevent mass heatstroke for their workers, but after media picked up the
story they added AC to some – only some – of their warehouses.

These
workers are forced into 10+ hour shifts during which they walk 10+
miles. They’re subject to a grueling pace and fired for minor mistakes.
They are not allowed to sit down and are discouraged from using the
bathroom, which is often so far away in the massive warehouse that there
isn’t time to use it even during their breaks. They can be fired for
being ill, even with proof they were in hospital.

They are
being paid so little and working such long hours – and sometimes, being
charged so much by Amazon-arranged transport shuttles to take them to
warehouses far from any housing – that some are forced to sleep under
bridges or in the woods near their workplace. Longtime warehouse workers
are saying they’ve never seen the kinds of exploitation and abuse that
occurs in an Amazon warehouse.

This strike and the
accompanying boycott are to pressure Amazon into giving their workers
basic rights that every worker should have.

Do not visit Amazon.com between the 10th and 17th of July 2018.

clatterbane:

Hahaha, I think not 😦

The cheese powder I actually parked in my basket along with that big tub o’ popcorn (and from the same company) is apparently out of stock right now. I think I will pass on this substitute option, and hope the other £7/300g (? close enough) stuff is back soon.

Besides on popcorn, I wanted to try mocking up the box style mac and cheese with GF pasta. Haven’t had any since I bought some of the expensive Annie’s GF stuff back home, like 10 years ago. Probably not missing that much, but hey.

Anyway, this stuff would be a great match with that Korean chili powder I also passed up a while back 😅

(More international shipping weirdness, I can only guess. All the cheese powder I was seeing was US-made.)

And, speaking of that Annie’s box stuff…

That is for a case of 12–so only £7.10 per box! And I thought it was a little pricey at Kroger.

Hahaha, I think not 😦

The cheese powder I actually parked in my basket along with that big tub o’ popcorn (and from the same company) is apparently out of stock right now. I think I will pass on this substitute option, and hope the other £7/300g (? close enough) stuff is back soon.

Besides on popcorn, I wanted to try mocking up the box style mac and cheese with GF pasta. Haven’t had any since I bought some of the expensive Annie’s GF stuff back home, like 10 years ago. Probably not missing that much, but hey.

Anyway, this stuff would be a great match with that Korean chili powder I also passed up a while back 😅

(More international shipping weirdness, I can only guess. All the cheese powder I was seeing was US-made.)

Amazon warehouse workers pee into bottles because they are scared of being punished for taking a comfort break

lord-kitschener:

bruddabois:

theegrtpretense:

femoids:

Amazon warehouse workers reportedly have to pee into bottles because they are too scared of missing their targets if they walk to the bathroom.
Author James Bloodworth went undercover at an Amazon fulfilment centre in Staffordshire and said staff feared being disciplined for “idle time.”

A survey of Amazon workers released on Monday found those who reported feeling sick — even through pregnancy — were penalised for not turning up or taking breaks.

I work at an Amazon (in America) and I can attest to this being true for most employees .

Do people talk about unionising at all?

It’s a guaranteed way to get your ass fired, and people are desperate to eat and make rent

Amazon warehouse workers pee into bottles because they are scared of being punished for taking a comfort break

theonion:

“On the surface, it seemed plausible—owning our employees’ bodies, implementing a mandatory 18-hour workday, restricting their movements, and not compensating them with anything besides minimal food and shelter—but then it started to sound really familiar in a bad way,” said Bezos, who acknowledged his fears were confirmed when Amazon’s general counsel kept reporting back that such labor arrangements had been illegal throughout the United States since 1865. “It’s too bad; the increased efficiency and cost savings would have been tremendous. And now I have to go explain to our shareholders why I spent $1.8 million outfitting all of our managers with bullwhips, shackles, and branding irons.”

I had already concluded that they just weren’t coming, but I finally got those thermal socks! (6 pairs.) Ordered on the 9th, looking now.

Probably just as well that there was no sheep included, with the shipping time. Might be the difference between Prime shipping and not, in the run-up to Christmas, since they were listed as plenty in stock 🙄

(And it was Amazon delivering. While I was in the bathroom earlier, of course, but I was extra glad I made it to the door before the guy left.)

It had warmed up some in the meantime, but these are about to go straight into the washing machine because I want them wearable ASAP. It’s back to hovering around freezing–actually really cold for here–and the heating in here leaves a lot to be desired.

Now I’m just hoping the wool content won’t itch my feet off. I hate buying clothes and maybe especially socks without being able to feel the material first, but these do seem pretty soft and non-prickly. How my feet may feel about it is a different matter, but we’ll see.

Also still not thrilled about needing to get the special non-binding socks, preferably with cushioned soles, but at least you can find a somewhat decent selection online. Could have done without the wait on these, however.

Amazon drivers forced to deliver 200 parcels a day on less than minimum wage

realcleverscience:

Another report of how Amazon screws its workers. This is really bad. And especially as Amazon is gaining more control and in more industries. =[

but don’t worry, amazon is hoping to automate as many of its jobs as possible, and the robots won’t complain. (x)

Amazon drivers forced to deliver 200 parcels a day on less than minimum wage