fukk Amazon. Workers pee in bottles to save time

Anerdyblackguy

Gotta learn how to kill a nikka from the inside
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What are the chances of the workers there accomplishing this? I know amazon warehouse probably a high turnover job and they will toss a fukker quickly for acting up but if a whole warehouse met up with a union rep and got put on they couldnt fire a whole crew without fukking up their business for awhile trying to train a whole new group.

Zero chance. Amazon would crush and replace with the quickness.
 

Blankthawtz

90-9-1 Principle
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The Land of fukkery
Lol amazon shipping out the packs fast.
full




yo i swear i luv the coli from time to time...:laff:
 
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That's how all those warehouse companies are....Amazon, UPS, FedEx...etc..etc..


They'd rather work the shyt out of u.That's the coldest part about it.What a lot of them do is

Identify the hardest workers.Once they spot the employees with the strongest work ethic,

they'll keep them around, and cut the slower paced workers out for the day.I have a cousin who works

as a supervisor at UPS.That's his strategy.I think he's over like 28 employees, but he'll cut 10 of them muthafukkaz out

and only roll with like 18.That way, he won't have a bunch of hours on his payroll, but his production stays the same

because he cut out all the weak links.The corporate side loves that shyt.Production flourishing, payroll decreasing.

Promotion around the corner:blessed:..........You'd think "Why don't they just fire the lazy workers?:dahell:"

The Union would be on that azz:francis:.....But yeah, gotta be on the lookout for that strategy.They just wanna hire a few muthafkkaz

they can work the dog shyt out of.
 

Chrishaune

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They could just hire more people. Jeff you've got 120 Billion dude. Chill out. :gucci:


That would not adjust their expectations. They would expect the same production from everybody, which means even more packages pushed through the warehouse per day. These dudes are greedy out here brehs. They don't care about you. Get a trade, go to school, and find a way to eventually sustain yourself through your own business....There's a lot of easy money out there these days.
 

Luck

The one true gym gawd...
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My lil brother works for Amazon over a year or two and he has no problem with :manny:

He a lazy nikka too god bless his soul but I do remember him sayin they be on some bullshyt timing you for bathroom breaks, you only got like 10 mins to go across the warehouse, use it and get back to your station iirc

Thatbeing said warehouse nikkas do be taking some long “shyts” and I know this because when I was younger and worked that bullshyt I used to go take a “shyt” in the truck drivers bathroom which was private and clean because they barely used it then sit in the corner and go to sleep for about 20-30 minutes :francis:
 
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This is what happens when you have no unions. The Germans and Italians bossed up and Amazon backed down quick.

Amazon workers on strike in Europe
Hundreds of Amazon workers in Italy and Germany are on strike during one of the busiest shopping days of the year.

Over 500 employees are carrying out their first ever strike at Amazon's warehouse in Piacenza near Milan over pay.

Piazcenza is Amazon's main Italian hub, employing 4,000 people.

Amazon said: "The vast majority of our employees in Italy and Germany came to work and remained focused on delivering the best customer experience."

It added: "We are proud of our record of job creation and are confident we will deliver for our customers this holiday season."

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E-commerce is growing fast in Italy, but online sales account for only 10% of overall retail sales, according to consultancy EY, half the European average.

The Verdi trade union said people are also striking at six warehouses in Germany over pay and working conditions.

In a statement, Verdi board member Stefanie Nutzberger, said workers faced "high pressure to create more and more in less time, permanent performance controls and monitoring, [and] a poor leadership culture".

Luigi Giove, Secretary General of Italy's CGIL union, said those on strike are calling for shifts which are "not exhausting" and for Amazon to redistribute its profits.
 
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