Bob Sacamano

All-Pro
Messages
26,436
Reaction score
3
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/wal-mart-workers-black-friday-110048819.html

Now people have to choose whether to forgo their employee based healthcare or not

America’s biggest retailer may be in for an unexpectedly painful holiday season. Protesting low wages, spiking health care premiums, and alleged retaliation from management, Wal-Mart Stores workers have started to walk off the job this week. First, on Wednesday, about a dozen workers in Wal-Mart’s distribution warehouses in Southern California walked out, followed the next day by 30 more from six stores in the Seattle area.
The workers, who are part of a union-backed employee coalition called Making Change at Wal-Mart, say this is the beginning of a wave of protests and strikes leading up to next week’s Black Friday. A thousand store protests are planned in Chicago, Dallas, Miami, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Milwaukee, Los Angeles, Minnesota, and Washington, D.C., the group says.
In a conference call with reporters on Thursday, workers who were either planning to strike or already striking explained their situation. “We have to borrow money from each other just to make it to work,” said Colby Harris, who earns $8.90 an hour after having worked at a Wal-Mart in Lancaster, Tex., for three years. “I’m on my lunch break right now, and I have two dollars in my pocket. I’m deciding whether to use it to buy lunch or to hold on to it for next week.” He said the deduction from his bimonthly pay check for health-care costs is scheduled to triple in January. In 2013, Wal-Mart plans to scale back its contributions to workers’ health-care premiums, which are expected to rise between 8 percent and 36 percent. Many employees will forgo coverage, Reuters reports.
Sara Gilbert, a manager who was striking in Seattle, called in on her cell phone: “I work full-time for one of the richest companies in the world, and my kids get state health insurance and are on food stamps,” she said.
Along with Target and Sears, Wal-Mart has plans to open retail stores at 8 p.m. on Thanksgiving night. Employees said they weren’t given a choice as to whether they would work on Thanksgiving and were told to do so with little warning. “They don’t care about family,” said Charlene Fletcher, a Wal-Mart associate in Duarte, Calif. She said she is expected to report for work at 3 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day. The workers said that when they complain about scheduling and other problems, management cuts their hours or fires people.
With 1.4 million U.S. workers, the Bentonville (Ark.)-based company is the U.S.’s largest private employer. For years, Wal-Mart has been targeted by unions and workers complaining about low wages, scant benefits, and retaliation against those who speak out.
Until now, the company has crushed attempts by employees to organize. So it’s unusual that Making Change at Wal-Mart has been able to organize a number of strikes—the first in the company’s history, they say. The first strike occurred in Los Angeles in October. That strike spread to 28 stores in 12 states, organizers say.
In an e-mail, Wal-Mart spokesman Kory Lundberg called the strike “just another exaggerated publicity campaign aimed at generating headlines to mislead” the retailer’s customers and employees. “The fact is, these ongoing tactics being orchestrated by the UFCW are unlawful and we will act to protect our associates and customers from this ongoing illegal conduct,” he wrote, referring to the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union.
The workers intend for next week’s protests to be much bigger. They say their goal is not to shame the company, but to improve conditions. “Wal-Mart needs to know,” said Harris, “that if we didn’t want to work with them, we would have quit.”
Yet the strikes—timed to coincide with the holiday shopping rush—are clearly intended to put pressure on the company during the busiest time of the year, when Wal-Mart most needs its employees. Holiday cheer is a tough sell if your workers are picketing in the parking lot.
 

Bob Sacamano

All-Pro
Messages
26,436
Reaction score
3
Who makes them work for that terrible oppressor Walmart?

Oh that's right, nobody does.

You're right. They can hop right on down to Olive Garden or the Dollar Tree and apply there.

Well paying jobs, careers I should say, are getting scarce, bro.
 

superpunk

Pro Bowler
Messages
11,003
Reaction score
0
Who makes them work for that terrible oppressor Walmart?

Oh that's right, nobody does.

lol

god you people show the worldly wisdom of a 2 year old sometimes. If the rest of America was this clueless maybe we could get our children back to work in the awful conditions of the industrial revolution. I mean, none of those people were forced to work in those conditions after all.
 

Bob Sacamano

All-Pro
Messages
26,436
Reaction score
3
It's only a matter of time before this healthcare reform slop goes the way of the Prohibition Act.
 

superpunk

Pro Bowler
Messages
11,003
Reaction score
0
It's only a matter of time before this healthcare reform slop goes the way of the Prohibition Act.

If the idiots in the legislature weren't so resistant to it we'd be well on our way to a single payer system. But make no mistake that's where we're headed. It's not going anywhere it's simply going to become more expansive.
 

ThoughtExperiment

Quality Starter
Messages
9,906
Reaction score
3
lol

Right, SP. These people's lives are endangered, right?

Have you ever worked at a job you hated? I have. Guess what, I quit and found a different company I liked better.

Or maybe Obama can just raise the minimum wage to $25/hour. That would solve it, right?
 

Bob Sacamano

All-Pro
Messages
26,436
Reaction score
3
lol

Right, SP. These people's lives are endangered, right?

Have you ever worked at a job you hated? I have. Guess what, I quit and found a different company I liked better.

Or maybe Obama can just raise the minimum wage to $25/hour. That would solve it, right?

That was back in the '50s. When times were good.

Old people these days, sheesh.
 

Bob Sacamano

All-Pro
Messages
26,436
Reaction score
3
If the idiots in the legislature weren't so resistant to it we'd be well on our way to a single payer system. But make no mistake that's where we're headed. It's not going anywhere it's simply going to become more expansive.

Not yet at least. Maybe not even in 2 years, but it's going to go away at some point when unlicensed doctors start practicing.

Bootleg medication.
 

superpunk

Pro Bowler
Messages
11,003
Reaction score
0
Guess what, I quit and found a different company I liked better.

Right and if there are some Americans who can't do that then I guess just fuck them and their desire for a living wage, amiriteorwat?

Quitting isn't the only option. These people are doing what they can to improve worker conditions at one of the largest employers in America. Good for them.
 

superpunk

Pro Bowler
Messages
11,003
Reaction score
0
Not yet at least. Maybe not even in 2 years, but it's going to go away at some point when unlicensed doctors start practicing.

Bootleg medication.

Sometimes talking with you is like discussing politics with Gallagher.
 

Bob Sacamano

All-Pro
Messages
26,436
Reaction score
3
Sometimes talking with you is like discussing politics with Gallagher.

0_0

Right and if there are some Americans who can't do that then I guess just fuck them and their desire for a living wage, amiriteorwat?

Quitting isn't the only option. These people are doing what they can to improve worker conditions at one of the largest employers in America. Good for them.

:thumbsup
 

JBond

UDFA
Messages
2,667
Reaction score
2
Guess the dumb fucks need to work a little harder. Maybe if they actually paid attention at the fucking school I paid for them to attend, they would not be stuck at a job for pathetic losers.

Make enough bad decisions are guess what, you end up a loser. It is how it works. The stupid and terminally lazy tards get nothing and those that succeed at life get what they want. It is as it should be. Don't like your station in life...tough shit. Do something other than begging and trying to hold your employer hostage. Walmart could fire all their pathetic employees and replace them with new stupid people. There are plenty out there. Just keep feeding the stupid sheep into the machine.
 

FuzzyLumpkins

In the Rotation
Messages
663
Reaction score
0
You're right. They can hop right on down to Olive Garden or the Dollar Tree and apply there.

Well paying jobs, careers I should say, are getting scarce, bro.

I am using my amazing necro powers but damn bob that is downright populist.
 
Top Bottom