Who’s reading this post in 1895? Because I accidentally dropped my phone while time traveling.
Who’s reading this post in 1895? Because I accidentally dropped my phone while time traveling.
We really need Luke Cage for this.
Person ordering pizza: “My house is definitely on Fallingbrook Dr.”
Narrator: it was not.
If you know the workers are being exploited, and you use the service anyway, how are you not partially responsible for exploiting them? It seems like you feel entitled to exploit them for your own gain as a customer. I agree that the employer is also responsible. A way to hold them accountable would be to eschew the service altogether. Otherwise, what incentive do they have to change?
If the business doesn’t deserve to exist, why do customers keep supporting them? Why is the onus only on the workers to suffer?
I worked as a server at olive garden many years ago. They famously had their soup, salad, and breadsticks deal for like $6 something. People would run us ragged getting more of each thing. And we’d be lucky to get a $1 or 2 because the price was so low, but it was vastly more work than regular food.
Worked at walmart many, many years ago on a cash register. One day, someone was out, so I got moved to the floor to make the shelves look pretty. It involved putting stuff like this where it belongs, and it was, by far, the best day I had working at walmart. I’ve never understood the complaints from employees who have to do this.
Same here. It’s always the same Medicare scam. And I just watched that special John Oliver did about human traffickers forcing people to work in their scam factories, so I wonder if it’s part of that.