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Modern Day Slave - An Essay

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  • Modern Day Slave - An Essay

    Note: I originally posted this over at SC. At the time of writing it I guess I didn't realize how controversial and politically charged my comments were. I should have put it here in the first place.

    I got very upset at work tonight. The last three hours were a constant stream of customers, missing product, wrongly priced items and more of the usual mess retail employees have to deal with in the period immediately following Christmas.

    I’ve worked many days like this before, but tonight I suddenly just started seeing red. Then I realized why: I am a modern day slave and so is everyone in a similar position.

    There I was, dealing with a line of customers, destroyed shelves, a messy back counter and a phone that would NOT stop ringing during a holiday while all the people above me, including the store manager, had the day off.

    Now I’m certain some of you reading this may feel I am exaggerating a little bit when I say I feel like a slave, but before passing judgment I ask you to read the following definition of slavery:

    “Slavery is a system under which people are treated as property and are forced to work. Slaves can be held against their will from the time of their capture, purchase or birth, and deprived of the right to leave, to refuse to work, or to demand compensation. In some historical situations it has been legal for owners to kill slaves.”

    Now then, consider the general state of business in America and the attitudes of the workers and tell me you don’t see some striking similarities.

    Employees by and large, ARE treated as property by their employers. Property, not people. Numbers on a spreadsheet, not real human beings. Expendable assets, not comrades in arms.

    There’s a memorable segment of the Michael Moore film “Capitalism: A love story” in which the director discusses a particular dirty little secret of the corporate world: Corporations who take out life insurance policies on their employees. These policies pay nothing to the family of the employee. They are for the benefit of the company. They are also not reserved for higher up personnel either. The film chronicles the story of a wife of a deceased Wal-mart employee who found out the company had an insurance policy on her and is fighting to get a share of it.

    Maybe I’m more jaded now because I’ve been doing this for so long, or I’m just so used to constant stream of bullshit that comes from corporate is doesn’t affect me much, but part of me is surprised it took me so long to finally get so angry about some of this stuff.

    Think about it. Anyone who works on the lower levels of a company, you know exactly where I’m going. You come to work and put in eight hours a day at a no doubt low wage and have no choice but to follow the commands and directives of the elite regardless of whether or not they make sense or seem logical.

    Speak up and you aren’t heard, complain too much and you are fired and replaced. As if companies didn’t already have their employees by the balls, the recession has made it that much easier for them and harder for employees. It’s amazing the number of times I have been directed to do something by corporate and have asked a supervisor for a logical reason why we should have to do this thing and watch and their brain shuts down right in front of me. They don’t have an answer. They never have an answer.

    Now frontline workers have to do the work of three people, without longer hours and without any wage increase. Still think this doesn’t sound like slavery? Oh and let’s not forget the cutbacks in benefits and health insurance and that’s if you were lucky to have either of those in the first place.

    That’s the fun of wage labor. You don’t go in, you don’t get paid. There’s no comprise, no middle ground, no exceptions, just black or white, our way or the highway. There have been so many days I have dragged myself to work when I’ve been sick or deeply affected by a personal issue (I was only able to take three days off when a close relative died a couple of years ago) or dealing with an injury just because I can’t afford to NOT go. It’s misery.

    It’s funny to me that this is the system we’ve set up. This is how some people are meant to make a living, working 8 hours a day in some crappy job they don’t really like and working with people they don’t really care for just to keep a roof over their heads and food on the table and clothes on their backs.

    We work so hard and see hardly any spoils from said work. The spoils all go to the big guys at the top who sit in glass towers and corner offices all day and cook up new and exciting (and often times immoral and unethical) ways to either bilk more money from their customers or squeeze the soul of out of their employees.

    Isn’t it amazing that such a large group of people can be treated so poorly and yet this system is defended as “the American way”? Now I understand I’m coming off as decidedly Liberal in this rant but this is not my intent. Quite frankly I think the government has just as many problems, if not more, than private corporations do these days.

    But I believe people should be treated as humans and I don’t understand why bosses can’t be fair with their employees.

    Should this really be a foreign concept?

    Is it really unrealistic to say, give an employee a few paid days off every year, regardless of where he or she is on the company ladder?

    Is it really necessary to squeeze a few extra hours out of some peon on a holiday when he or she would probably rather be at home or doing anything besides working?

    Would it really be such a pain in the ass to respect people a little more for the hard work they do instead of trampling them every chance you get?
    I am starting to think you really do have to sell your soul to get the top of the ladder. I don’t see how anyone but a heartless individual could do the kinds of things these folks do. Money is their God. There exists nothing in this world to them except the almighty dollar sign.

    They are destroying countless lives and they don’t give a shit. Will it ever change?

  • #2
    The monkey sphere gone tragically wrong. Companies have grown so large over the last 50 years or so that you quite literately aren't human to the people at the top any longer. You're too far outside of their monkey sphere. Which affords them the ability to not know or not care about how any decision they make affects you. You're a number. Shit then, as they say, trickles down through each level of management till it reaches you. Everybody has someone above them on their ass and they compensate by finding some ass of their own to ride. Bareback.

    The level of bareback assriding that occurs is directly proportional to the local laws and regulations surrounding the company in any given country. America's top level business is extremely capitalistic and doesn't have much in the way of regulation to prevent abuse. The last few years have demonstrated that painfully well. >.>

    So yes, you're a faceless number. You're outside of the monkey sphere. If you leave, so what? There are plenty of other numbers to take your place. Misery doesn't affect the bottom line and the bottom line is the main concern.

    Comment


    • #3
      And this is why I prefer to pay a little extra to shop at smaller places, when feasible.

      ^-.-^
      Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden

      Comment


      • #4
        It happens over here, too; it's not just America.

        Where I work is a very reasonable place to work, however I still have to book the days the place is closed as holiday or else I don't get paid. I lost about four hours work due to the snow, cuz I physically could not get in for four days and was unable to make up all the hours that I lost. If I'm sick, I need a doctor's note or else I don't get sick pay. If I have a cold or minor injury, I literally can't afford to take the time off so I go in cuz I don't have the time to spare to make a doctor's trip just for something so minor as a cold.

        I've also heard far worse things of other places, and even worked in some of them. Like the garden centre, for example, where the boss didn't believe in the existance of migraines so whenever I had one, I had to say I had a stomach bug or the flu cuz if I said I had a migraine, he'd just dismissively tell me to take a painkiller and come in or else I'd lose a day's pay. The same place forced my collegue to come in when she was pregnant and suffering really badly with morning sickness; so much in fact that she was running off to be sick all the time and could not physically do the work she was meant to do. I ended up doing it all, like I would have done had she been allowed to stay at home til her sickness passed off, which luckily for her, it did after about a week.

        At the garden centre, they wouldn't allow me to keep a water bottle under the till. At least, not til the day I fainted in front of customers and this was entirely due to the fact that I'd been on the go all day in the boiling heat and had not had time to go and get a drink. When I finally had had enough of this place and walked out, I was both shocked and horrified to discover that I could get more working at the pizza place part time than I had been paid working full time as pet centre manager. Little things like that really hit home.
        "Oh wow, I can't believe how stupid I used to be and you still are."

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Lace Neil Singer View Post
          It happens over here, too; it's not just America.
          Alright, well I'm not a slave in the monkey sphere in Canada at least. >.>

          Comment


          • #6
            The difference is that the laws protecting employees in the UK are somewhat more biased towards the employee than those in the US.

            As to slavery, there are pretty huge differences between slavery and employment. You can leave employment. You can't be traded and sold. You have to do what you're told, but that's pretty central to every paid position I've worked in.

            The main factor in the job field right now is the results of the recession. There are now far more workers available and looking for work than there were a half-dozen years back. Employers know this from the times the advertise a position. Most managers don't want to come down on people for no real reason. It happens, sure, but it's not their main motivation. They've got targets to meet or they're out - plenty of managers on the job market as well as frontline CSRs.

            Increasing size of companies over the years has lead to part of this. One murdered person is a tragedy, a million murdered is a statistic and all that. The monkeyspehere is true - you can only care for so many people. When you have fifteen people in a company, you know them well. When there's 150, you know some well and are nodding acquaintances with many. When there's 1500, you're lucky if you know all the workers in your department.

            From a management point of view, at the very top, you don't look at names - you look at numbers. You need X number of days to do a certain task. Tell the managers what you want done, and give them what resources you think they need, or what you think you can get away with. It's not necessarily a desire to be a slavedriver.

            Rapscallion
            Proud to be a W.A.N.K.E.R. - Womanless And No Kids - Exciting Rubbing!
            Reclaiming words is fun!

            Comment


            • #7
              After seeing the Michael Moores film, I was tempted to start a thread on this very topic, but I never got around to it and seeing how I've never worked yet, I feel I wouldn't have much to defend my arguement with.

              It's something that has always bugged me, not just since seeing the film, but for several years. It's like you live to work and never have any time to just enjoy life. Employers have the advantage, especially in this day and age. I mean, they can fire you for just about anything, even things that happen off the clock! Just reading stories here and my own experience with job hunting, it's like you have to give up a part of yourself just to get the honor of working for a minimum wage. It's not just simply working for them, you have to jump through all these hoops and kiss ass, begging to work for them. Then when you do, you are treated as an expendable asset.

              What's even worse is that our public schools encourage this mentally so our kids are brainwashed into thinking this is how it is at a young age. Don't believe me, what's the common defense used for any authoritarian policy at school? It's to prepare them for the "real world" as if they don't have a choice. Strict and unreasonable attendance policy? Well bosses are not going to take too kindly to being late so you might as well get used to it now! Too much homework and not enough time for fun? Better get used to it!

              And we wonder why so many people are depressed. Quite frankly, I don't want to live that kind of life. I want to be able to enjoy my own life without feeling bogged down with all this work. Does that mean I should never work a day in my life? Of course not, but I feel there is a major unfairness in the way the system works. You should be able to work and enjoy the fruits of it, but all I see is people being overstressed. While those few at the top get all the credit for the work of their underlings.

              This is why I feel strongly against tax cuts for the CEOs. They already make billions of dollars, so it's not like they will be hurt much by increasing taxes. They could still live like kings as it has been proven to work in the past. But now, the rich get richer, and the poor get poorer (or more people get poor while less people are rich). If we increase taxes for the CEOs, then maybe we can start cutting the working class a break.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Rageaholic View Post
                What's even worse is that our public schools encourage this mentally so our kids are brainwashed into thinking this is how it is at a young age.
                Actually, the "don't question authority" mindset that is taught in school is based on the needs of an industrial society. When the majority of your children are going to work in an environment where not following the rules can get them and their peers killed, it's a good idea to teach them that following the rules is very important.

                However, while industry is still a large part of the world, we've entered into the information age, which requires a different teaching style. Unfortunately, in the US at least, little has been done to move in that direction. Perhaps a legacy of the strength of the previous necessary teaching style.

                Originally posted by Rageaholic View Post
                But now, the rich get richer, and the poor get poorer (or more people get poor while less people are rich).
                This is something we need to stop.

                The prime motivation for violence has been shown to be inequality of status. The rich are so far above the poor that they're literally in different worlds. And the wider that gap grows, the more violence we will see.

                ^-.-^
                Last edited by Andara Bledin; 01-02-2011, 07:36 PM.
                Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden

                Comment


                • #9
                  You've been reading my mind! There's so much to say so I'll just start here:

                  Originally posted by Crazedclerkthe2nd View Post
                  I’ve worked many days like this before, but tonight I suddenly just started seeing red. Then I realized why: I am a modern day slave and so is everyone in a similar position.
                  Ah, the epiphany. For years I've been questioning the shit that happens in the average workplace, and I've come to this same conclusion!

                  There I was, dealing with a line of customers, destroyed shelves, a messy back counter and a phone that would NOT stop ringing during a holiday while all the people above me, including the store manager, had the day off.
                  This! As far as I'm concerned, if they insist on being open on a holiday, then their happy asses should be working too! But noooo, let the peons rake in all the dough for the bigshots who get to enjoy the day off with their families!

                  “Slavery is a system under which people are treated as property and are forced to work. Slaves can be held against their will from the time of their capture, purchase or birth, and deprived of the right to leave, to refuse to work, or to demand compensation. In some historical situations it has been legal for owners to kill slaves.”

                  Now then, consider the general state of business in America and the attitudes of the workers and tell me you don’t see some striking similarities.

                  Employees by and large, ARE treated as property by their employers. Property, not people. Numbers on a spreadsheet, not real human beings. Expendable assets, not comrades in arms.
                  They do treat us like property! Just because we aren't chained up, doesn't mean we aren't slaves in a different sense. Sure, we can leave, but go where? To another company that does the same shit? And now with the recession, it's not like there's anyplace else to go anyway! They know this too, that's why it's getting worse.

                  I hate when people say, ever so casually, "Don't like it? Don't work there." Or when they tell you to go back to school to train for another career. That's all fine and dandy, but it's like these people are condoning this treatment. Somebody still has to do those jobs! So just because they didn't go to college, they deserve to be treated that way?!

                  "Hey, that's capitalism!" Bullshit! I don't believe that capitalism was intended to be what it has become. Just because they are free to run their businesses the way they want, doesn't mean they should be able to abuse basic human rights!

                  And consider this: You would never have to tolerate abuse at any other time or place, but when you go to work, you lose the right to defend yourself! If you want to make a living, you have to shut up and take it! How and when the hell did this become okay?

                  And now they're trying to control us on our own time. Facebook spying? Are you shitting me? That should be against anti-stalking laws!

                  There is a kind of worship of corporations in this country. Far too many people think that anything they do is acceptable. These same people, however, are not affected by it. It's so easy for a housewife or a small business owner to not see a problem here.

                  Maybe I’m more jaded now because I’ve been doing this for so long, or I’m just so used to constant stream of bullshit that comes from corporate is doesn’t affect me much, but part of me is surprised it took me so long to finally get so angry about some of this stuff.
                  I totally understand. I've been picking up on bits and pieces of the puzzle for years, but now that I've been umemployed for two years, I've had time to reflect on all of this. I've learned a lot. I'm just pissed that they so totally took hostage of my mind, that I put up with shit that should never have happened!

                  to be continued...
                  Last edited by Rantsylvania 6-5000; 01-02-2011, 09:02 PM.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Crazedclerkthe2nd View Post
                    Now frontline workers have to do the work of three people, without longer hours and without any wage increase. Still think this doesn’t sound like slavery? Oh and let’s not forget the cutbacks in benefits and health insurance and that’s if you were lucky to have either of those in the first place.
                    I think the executives are taking lessons from third-world sweatshops. Given the chance, they'd run their businesses the same way. They already cry out for fewer regulations, and find ways around labor laws, if not outright break those laws.

                    That’s the fun of wage labor. You don’t go in, you don’t get paid. There’s no comprise, no middle ground, no exceptions, just black or white, our way or the highway. There have been so many days I have dragged myself to work when I’ve been sick or deeply affected by a personal issue (I was only able to take three days off when a close relative died a couple of years ago) or dealing with an injury just because I can’t afford to NOT go. It’s misery.
                    And there's no reason for this! The executives are making more money than ever. There's no excuse to drive down the wages of the very people who keep their businesses running!

                    Isn’t it amazing that such a large group of people can be treated so poorly and yet this system is defended as “the American way”?
                    Yes.

                    They are destroying countless lives and they don’t give a shit. Will it ever change?
                    I'd like to believe it can change, but a large enough number of people have to care enough to fight the status quo.

                    By the way, RIGHT ON to everything else you said here too. There's just so much to be said about this.

                    And thank you for posting this. I've wanted to do so in the past, but it's...some heavy shit.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I understand it's easier to connect with workers on a personal level when you have 10 employees as opposed to 10 000, but at the same even IF I am CEO of a large work force it would make sense to me in making sure employees get a few paid days off annually and the company closes on certain holidays. This really is something that should be common sense. I doubt the financial impacts of such moves would be very significant anyway.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Everything counts towards the bottom line. Trust me, when the financial pendulum swings back the other way, there's going to be some pretty significant shifts in the offers they have to make to attract and retain the best staff from a diminished pool of applicants. Until then, they're up against shareholders who are looking at diminishing return on their investments.

                        It's not that they're doing it to be nasty. It's financial necessity.

                        Rapscallion
                        Proud to be a W.A.N.K.E.R. - Womanless And No Kids - Exciting Rubbing!
                        Reclaiming words is fun!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Andara Bledin View Post
                          Actually, the "don't question authority" mindset that is taught in school is based on the needs of an industrial society. When the majority of your children are going to work in an environment where not following the rules can get them and their peers killed, it's a good idea to teach them that following the rules is very important.

                          However, while industry is still a large part of the world, we've entered into the information age, which requires a different teaching style. Unfortunately, in the US at least, little has been done to move in that direction. Perhaps a legacy of the strength of the previous necessary teaching style.
                          Yup, even more of a reason to stop this authoritarian teaching. If a student will eventually work in an industrial environment, they will learn to obey and follow rules there. There's no need for all these pointless rules that have nothing to do with anything at school. All it's doing is brainwashing kids at a young age, teaching them to obey orders without question. It's only encouraging this injustice.

                          Originally posted by Rantsylvania 6-5000 View Post
                          You've been reading my mind! There's so much to say so I'll just start here:



                          Ah, the epiphany. For years I've been questioning the shit that happens in the average workplace, and I've come to this same conclusion!
                          I've came to a similar conclusion and I haven't even worked yet. I'm still seeking employment, but because I at least want to see for myself (and I don't really have much of a choice as of now). I've found some really interesting stuff on the web supporting my views.

                          http://www.whywork.org/




                          They do treat us like property! Just because we aren't chained up, doesn't mean we aren't slaves in a different sense. Sure, we can leave, but go where? To another company that does the same shit? And now with the recession, it's not like there's anyplace else to go anyway! They know this too, that's why it's getting worse.
                          Yup, things are getting a little better, but employers still hold all the cards.

                          I hate when people say, ever so casually, "Don't like it? Don't work there." Or when they tell you to go back to school to train for another career. That's all fine and dandy, but it's like these people are condoning this treatment. Somebody still has to do those jobs! So just because they didn't go to college, they deserve to be treated that way?!
                          I hate that shit too. HELLO PEOPLE we're in a recession!

                          And don't get me started on college. It costs money and not everyone has that money or is willing to put themselves in debt. I was lucky to be born into a middle class family who could afford to send me, but not everyone has that money, or is willing to pay their kids through college.

                          I just hate the whole idea of college, pay a shitload of money to do a shitload of work so you can do have the honor of doing even more work but this time get money! And what sucks is apparently there's no alternatives, GRR!!!!


                          "Hey, that's capitalism!" Bullshit! I don't believe that capitalism was intended to be what it has become. Just because they are free to run their businesses the way they want, doesn't mean they should be able to abuse basic human rights!
                          And if that's Capitalism, then maybe it's time to consider something different.

                          And now they're trying to control us on our own time. Facebook spying? Are you shitting me? That should be against anti-stalking laws!
                          What's a shame is many people I know defend the facebook spying. In fact, I know someone who actually checks employees facebook page for hiring. Yet many people I know think this is okay for reasons I disputed here.

                          http://www.fratching.com/showthread.php?t=3932

                          There is a kind of worship of corporations in this country. Far too many people think that anything they do is acceptable. These same people, however, are not affected by it. It's so easy for a housewife or a small business owner to not see a problem here.
                          I don't even think they know about it or stop to think about it. And if they do, they just say "Well that's the way it works". I guess I can't blame them since we're all trapped in this system, but at the same time, I wish we could do something about it.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Rageaholic View Post
                            And don't get me started on college. It costs money and not everyone has that money or is willing to put themselves in debt.
                            Not only that, but college is no guarantee of employment. My one friend's husband lost his 6-figure a year job, and then she got laid off shortly after that. She went to college and ran them another $15 in the hole to get a nursing degree, only to find out like I did roughly 22 years ago that people don't want to hire you if you don't have experience. And you can't get experience without a job, which you can't get without experience, which you can't get without a job, and so on.
                            --- I want the republicans out of my bedroom, the democrats out of my wallet, and both out of my first and second amendment rights. Whether you are part of the anal-retentive overly politically-correct left, or the bible-thumping bellowing right, get out of the thought control business --- Alan Nathan

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by MadMike View Post
                              And you can't get experience without a job, which you can't get without experience, which you can't get without a job, and so on.
                              That's the hell of it. Another major flaw of capitalism.

                              Comment

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