Anonymous wrote:If you aren't allowed to socialize when you're working, how social is the lunch room? Do people eat together or by themselves?
Once you quit (assuming you aren't fired), can you work there again?
Do the older workers have to pick heavy things like cat litter?
Anonymous wrote:If you aren't allowed to socialize when you're working, how social is the lunch room? Do people eat together or by themselves?
Once you quit (assuming you aren't fired), can you work there again?
Do the older workers have to pick heavy things like cat litter?
Anonymous wrote:Do you have to work full time or are there part time jobs?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I’ve found this interesting, thanks! Not sure if you’d know this, but is there any benefit to the warehouse workers if customers opt for slower shipping?
After I read some of the articles on warehouse conditions, I started choosing slower shipping options for anything non-urgent, on the theory that it at least can’t *hurt* for warehouse conditions. But then I wonder if any of the less-time-pressure benefits actually reach workers on the warehouse end. Do my choices just turn into more profits for Bezos because the actual shipping is cheaper?
well, you win for providing the most useful and insightful response to this thread.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lot's of people use "ain't" and incorrectly use "don't" and "literally". Those words are also in the dictionary, but that doesn't mean their useage is correct. Being in the dictionary is a pretty low bar, and Merriam Webster clearly states it's a nonstandard word.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your educational level, OP? I am asking because I noticed you used "irregardless" in an earlier post.
Not, OP, but I AM a linguist, and your poor attempt at shade isn't even rooted in knowledge. Some snoots have taking umbrage mean a word that has been in use for over 200 years isn't a word.
https://www.npr.org/2020/07/07/887649010/regardless-of-what-you-think-irregardless-is-a-word#:~:text=Merriam%2DWebster%20defines%20irregardless%20as,intensifier%2C%22%20the%20dictionary%20writes.
""Irregardless is included in our dictionary because it has been in widespread and near-constant use since 1795," the dictionary's staff wrote in a "Words of the Week" roundup on Friday. "We do not make the English language, we merely record it."""
Is this satire?
"Lot's of people"
"literally".
"useage"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I took a job at an Amazon warehouse for 2 weeks instead of going on vacation because I was curious. I was partially inspired by an article written by Philip Su a former tech executive who took the position to cure depression. I’m college educated and a small business owner. AMA. I quit this weekend. It’s been interesting.
Also known as something that didn't happen. What can someone know from 2 weeks? Orientation? This is a troll people.
Everything in this AMA lines up with investigative journalism articles about Amazon warehouse work, although the specific details are different enough I fully believe it to be true. Why are you so resistant to the realities of low wage jobs in the US?
No one is disputing the realities of low wage jobs. OP googled the job posting and likely knows someone who worked somewhere at Amazon. There are 1000's of people working in those warehouses. My son for one. Not everything they post is true. It's a troll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I took a job at an Amazon warehouse for 2 weeks instead of going on vacation because I was curious. I was partially inspired by an article written by Philip Su a former tech executive who took the position to cure depression. I’m college educated and a small business owner. AMA. I quit this weekend. It’s been interesting.
Also known as something that didn't happen. What can someone know from 2 weeks? Orientation? This is a troll people.
Everything in this AMA lines up with investigative journalism articles about Amazon warehouse work, although the specific details are different enough I fully believe it to be true. Why are you so resistant to the realities of low wage jobs in the US?
Anonymous wrote:Lot's of people use "ain't" and incorrectly use "don't" and "literally". Those words are also in the dictionary, but that doesn't mean their useage is correct. Being in the dictionary is a pretty low bar, and Merriam Webster clearly states it's a nonstandard word.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your educational level, OP? I am asking because I noticed you used "irregardless" in an earlier post.
Not, OP, but I AM a linguist, and your poor attempt at shade isn't even rooted in knowledge. Some snoots have taking umbrage mean a word that has been in use for over 200 years isn't a word.
https://www.npr.org/2020/07/07/887649010/regardless-of-what-you-think-irregardless-is-a-word#:~:text=Merriam%2DWebster%20defines%20irregardless%20as,intensifier%2C%22%20the%20dictionary%20writes.
""Irregardless is included in our dictionary because it has been in widespread and near-constant use since 1795," the dictionary's staff wrote in a "Words of the Week" roundup on Friday. "We do not make the English language, we merely record it."""
Anonymous wrote:Lot's of people use "ain't" and incorrectly use "don't" and "literally". Those words are also in the dictionary, but that doesn't mean their useage is correct. Being in the dictionary is a pretty low bar, and Merriam Webster clearly states it's a nonstandard word.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your educational level, OP? I am asking because I noticed you used "irregardless" in an earlier post.
Not, OP, but I AM a linguist, and your poor attempt at shade isn't even rooted in knowledge. Some snoots have taking umbrage mean a word that has been in use for over 200 years isn't a word.
https://www.npr.org/2020/07/07/887649010/regardless-of-what-you-think-irregardless-is-a-word#:~:text=Merriam%2DWebster%20defines%20irregardless%20as,intensifier%2C%22%20the%20dictionary%20writes.
""Irregardless is included in our dictionary because it has been in widespread and near-constant use since 1795," the dictionary's staff wrote in a "Words of the Week" roundup on Friday. "We do not make the English language, we merely record it."""