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A small nugget of what is sure to be many changes in the coming weeks
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<blockquote data-quote="snackdad" data-source="post: 978542" data-attributes="member: 30266"><p>I can condone trying to find cheaper comparable alternatives when it comes to material purchases and products. What you are possibly suggesting is that it is OK for an employer to keep seeking lower and lower costs of labor at the expense of those offering the labor when there are few choices. Do you think it is OK for companies to continuously beat down the wage and benefits of the working class just to boost payouts to executives and shareholders (many of whom are the same executives)?</p><p> When you go to a restaurant how much do you tip, 10, 15, 20 percent? Does it make you feel good to spread it around a little or do you feel like you won because you got yours for the cheapest price possible.</p><p> The executives, many millionaires and some billionaires in Memphis are not "typical American consumers". They have no idea what the typical courier endures every day. </p><p> YES, it does only count when it comes to purchasing hours of labor.</p><p> The public sentiment against big companies is growing and the real movement has not even begun yet. Occupy Wall Street was just the beginning. 59 Dano you seem happy to pipe in when ever you feel FedEx's little toes are getting stepped on. Really what side of the human race are you on?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="snackdad, post: 978542, member: 30266"] I can condone trying to find cheaper comparable alternatives when it comes to material purchases and products. What you are possibly suggesting is that it is OK for an employer to keep seeking lower and lower costs of labor at the expense of those offering the labor when there are few choices. Do you think it is OK for companies to continuously beat down the wage and benefits of the working class just to boost payouts to executives and shareholders (many of whom are the same executives)? When you go to a restaurant how much do you tip, 10, 15, 20 percent? Does it make you feel good to spread it around a little or do you feel like you won because you got yours for the cheapest price possible. The executives, many millionaires and some billionaires in Memphis are not "typical American consumers". They have no idea what the typical courier endures every day. YES, it does only count when it comes to purchasing hours of labor. The public sentiment against big companies is growing and the real movement has not even begun yet. Occupy Wall Street was just the beginning. 59 Dano you seem happy to pipe in when ever you feel FedEx's little toes are getting stepped on. Really what side of the human race are you on? [/QUOTE]
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A small nugget of what is sure to be many changes in the coming weeks
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