January 20, 2019

Word: Corporate dictatorships

Chris Hedges, Truthdig -Corporate dictatorships—which strip employees of fundamental constitutional rights, including free speech, and which increasingly rely on temp or contract employees who receive no benefits and have no job security—rule the lives of perhaps 80 percent of working Americans. These corporations, with little or no oversight, surveil and monitor their workforces. They conduct random drug testing, impose punishing quotas and targets, routinely engage in wage theft, injure workers and then refuse to make compensation, and ignore reports of sexual harassment, assault and rape. They use managerial harassment, psychological manipulation—including the pseudo-science of positive psychology—and intimidation to ensure obedience. They fire workers for expressing leftist political opinions on social media or at public events during their off-hours. They terminate those who file complaints or publicly voice criticism about working conditions. They thwart attempts to organize unions, callously dismiss older workers and impose “non-compete” contract clauses, meaning that if workers leave they are unable to use their skills and human capital to work for other employers in the same industry. Nearly half of all technical professions now require workers to sign non-compete clauses, and this practice has spread to low-wage jobs including those in hair salons and restaurants.

2 comments:

Boffin said...

This is what labor surplus looks like. Desperate employees ceding power to the employers as wages fall and working conditions deteriorate. Why play nice with your employees when there is a line of hungry applicants waiting at the door?

For decades the political class has engineered a labor surplus by supporting large scale immigration as well as overlooking illegals. Not to mention tax and tariff policies that promote outsourcing. And it will only get worse as automaton makes large swathes of unskilled labor unnecessary particularly in agriculture.

Restricting immigration to improve conditions for low-wage workers has long been a fundamental part of the Democratic Party platform. In fact it was a major part of the program pushed by Cesar Chavez and other activists.

Now we have a president working to reverse decades of Cheap Labor policies. And we are starting to see the benefits.

Greg Gerritt said...

The loss of worker power is not the result of immigration. it is the direct result of automation AND, maybe even more importantly, it is the result of an ever shrinking economy. They tell us there is growth, but it is only for the 1% the rest of us are falling further behind. But the politics never says that , from either party. until we tell the truth about our resource depleted planet and its shrinking economy workers will continue to suffer. And the 1% will continue to steal.