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Reznor posted:Is it a useful distinction? I think the store manager of a McDonald's is more like a worker than the owner. Yes they can hire or fire, but they also have to worry about being hired and fired. I think in most cases though their bugging and firing power comes from upstairs more than their discression. Further to my knowledge most lower management types are paid salary and not in a profit shared manner. So in a real way they have similar lived experiences being constrained by forces out of their control. Chain dollar store managers get hosed harder than anyone else in the company because they're put on the exact minimum salary to be labeled overtime-exempt (455/wk IIRC) and then expected to stock and unload trucks alone 60+hrs/wk. Not to mention that when my mom was doing thia back in 2000 the company was too cheap to pop for armed car service or a safe at a $3mm/yr gross store so they just had her making cash bank deposits by herself at 11:00 every loving night shame on an IGA fucked around with this message at 00:48 on Apr 5, 2020 |
# ¿ Apr 5, 2020 00:45 |
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# ¿ May 16, 2024 16:29 |
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y'all are overcomplicating this nobody needs to navigate dozens of marvel flicks searching for analogy, everybody knows The Lion King. Worker, you've been trained to hide yourself in carefree escapism and holding yourself down with a lie that's been sold to you, meanwhile the forces of greed lead your kingdom to ruin. Seize the means of production, Simba.
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# ¿ Apr 10, 2020 05:54 |