• MnemonicBump@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 days ago

    New hires were, yes. Because of automation (and position hybridization, the rise of the gig economy, despecialization, and the rise of Walmart, of course). This is exactly the point that I’m making.

    • nanoswarm9k@lemmus.org
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      3 days ago

      Old contract new contract. When boomers sold the union so no one else wpuld get living wage, and they could keep their lifestyle.

      I was lucky to have a supervisor when I started in 2006 who was open and honest, explaining why our holiday pay and schedules were so different (old contract new contract)… Still complicated, but no more raises or benefits.

      He was making over 20/hr. I started at about 8 usd… 10 years later i worked another brief stint at the chain. Same starting wage. Probably didn’t go up until covid pressure.

      Gen X got screwed out at the end of long union busting campeigns, and the rest of the shit rolled downhill.

      • vateso5074@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        This was my experience as well.

        Fresh out of high school, I started working at a store that was union, but everyone in my generation was on a different contract from the people who had been there for 20+ years. A lot of the benefits paperwork that went out to everyone had to clarify different terms depending on whether you were hired before or after a certain date, with the terms for the “after” group usually being worse.

        Unions in general are great and necessary, but bad unions are still out there.

        • nanoswarm9k@lemmus.org
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          2 days ago

          Thanks for comparing notes.

          It kind of blows my mind. I mean, take the rights people died for and then pull up the ladder behind and ask why no one wants to visit in retirement. Like, we don’t even get time off to vote in general election, we’re so busy hustling for half of a living wage and free sneers from management. Very yikes.

          A strike in time saves nine, fancy. Lives, probably too.