Amazon delivery driver trifling AF

MR. SNIFLES

**** YOU THUNDAAAAAAAAAAH
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THUNDER BUDDIES
I THOUGHT IT WAS JUST HER THROWING THE PACKAGE UP THERE. I WAS WONDERING WHY THERE WAS SO MUCH TIME LEFT ON THE VIDEO. I LOOKED AWAY AND SHE WAS IN THE PRISON POSE. I WAS WONDERING WHY I WAS STILL WATCHING UNTIL SHE GOT UP AND I REALIZED HER PANTS WERE DOWN.

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Sonic Boom of the South

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'It was very alarming': League City family says delivery man unlocked their door without permission​

LEAGUE CITY, Texas (KTRK) -- A family in League City is feeling uneasy after they say a driver who delivers for Amazon walked right into their home without their permission.

They say their doors were locked and the driver somehow knew a code to get in through their keyless pad. They say they never put the front door code on their Amazon account or any delivery account.

Now, they're concerned there may be a master code to the security system on their keyless lock. Darcus Sparks' husband was home during the time of the delivery and says he was stunned to see the door open and the driver in the doorway.

"I don't think he had intentions of just setting that (package) down. He was just going to see if somebody was here. So he probably would've came in, I'm sure. I can't say that's for sure what was going to happen, but that's what I felt," he told ABC13.

Their family is left with a lot of questions on how someone could enter their home without the access code.

"It was very alarming, because first of all, it just made me feel like he's been in several people's homes, or he's been in my home and I wasn't aware of it," Sparks said.
She adds that she's concerned about her family's safety and has filed a police report.
"I said no more keyless. That's out the door. We're getting a real key back on the door," Sparks said.

A spokesperson for Amazon apologized to the Sparks family and called the situation highly unusual.
The company says it's conducting an internal review to assure this doesn't happen again.
For updates on this story, follow Daniela Hurtado on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
 

Sonic Boom of the South

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Amazon Workers Occupy HR Office in Spontaneous Strike After Warehouse Fire
After a fire broke out in the warehouse, management refused to send night shift workers home. So they went on strike.

Jules Roscoe
Image Credit: @IssaSmallsWorld on Twitter

Amazon workers at JFK8, the company’s Staten Island fulfillment center that voted to unionize earlier this year, held a sit-in, wildcat strike last night after a fire broke out in the warehouse.

When the fire began, night shift workers were ushered into the break room. Around 650 night shift workers then refused to leave, citing the dangerous conditions in the warehouse, and almost 100 of those workers marched on and occupied management offices in protest. A wildcat strike is a strike that is done by workers without the official support of union leaders.

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The fire broke out Monday evening, and workers went on strike at around 9 p.m. By 10:25 p.m., workers were in the human resources office demanding paid time off for the night.

Both the New York Fire Department and Amazon confirmed the fire to Motherboard. The fire department reported no damage to the building and no injuries.

"Yesterday afternoon there was a small fire in a cardboard compactor outside of JFK8, one of our facilities in Staten Island, New York,” an Amazon spokesperson wrote. “All employees were safely evacuated, and day shift employees were sent home with pay. The FDNY certified the building is safe and at that point we asked all night shift employees to report to their regularly scheduled shift. While the vast majority of employees reported to their workstations, a small group refused to return to work and remained in the building without permission."

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Seth Goldstein, a lawyer for the Amazon Labor Union, said that the compactor in question had been causing problems and smoking for weeks before Monday, according to employees in the warehouse. Goldstein was told Amazon had poured water on the compactor to stop the smoke. Amazon did not respond to comment on this point.

“God forbid they have to replace [the compactor] and lose their profits,” Goldstein said. “One of the reasons people are unionizing at Amazon is because the employer cares about profits, and doesn’t care about their lives. Where’s the transparency here?”

The JFK8 fulfillment center made headlines earlier this year for becoming the first Amazon location to organize. Goldstein said the warehouse needs to be investigated for safety concerns by the city of New York and by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. “Nobody else in New York would tolerate this,” he said. “I’m calling out to New York, to the Department of Labor, to the Fire Department, to make sure workers have safety when they go into work.”

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Sterling Archer

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The comedy is people thinking these folks deserve better. Their behavior has always shown otherwise. I hate Amazon drivers, bus drivers, Uber drivers and customer service folks in retail/fast food. Servers have hopped up into the list with their tip entitlements. And is coming from a 20% tipper.
 
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