KeithKats: The Fourth Life
longreads:

A writer goes undercover at a shipping warehouse in Mississippi—and wonders whether Americans will ever demand higher standards for how their Internet purchases are being fulfilled:

We will be fired if we say we just can’t or won’t get better, the workamper tells me. But so long as I resign myself to hearing how inadequate I am on a regular basis, I can keep this job. “Do you think this job has to be this terrible?” I ask the workamper.
“Oh, no,” she says, and makes a face at me like I’ve asked a stupid question, which I have. As if Amalgamated couldn’t bear to lose a fraction of a percent of profits by employing a few more than the absolute minimum of bodies they have to, or by storing the merchandise at halfway ergonomic heights and angles. But that would cost space, and space costs money, and money is not a thing customers could possibly be expected to hand over for this service without huffily taking their business elsewhere.

“I Was a Warehouse Wage Slave.” — Mac McClelland, Mother Jones
More McClelland: “I Can Find an Indicted Warlord. So Why Isn’t He in The Hague?” — Mother Jones, Sept. 28, 2011

longreads:

A writer goes undercover at a shipping warehouse in Mississippi—and wonders whether Americans will ever demand higher standards for how their Internet purchases are being fulfilled:

We will be fired if we say we just can’t or won’t get better, the workamper tells me. But so long as I resign myself to hearing how inadequate I am on a regular basis, I can keep this job. “Do you think this job has to be this terrible?” I ask the workamper.

“Oh, no,” she says, and makes a face at me like I’ve asked a stupid question, which I have. As if Amalgamated couldn’t bear to lose a fraction of a percent of profits by employing a few more than the absolute minimum of bodies they have to, or by storing the merchandise at halfway ergonomic heights and angles. But that would cost space, and space costs money, and money is not a thing customers could possibly be expected to hand over for this service without huffily taking their business elsewhere.

“I Was a Warehouse Wage Slave.” — Mac McClelland, Mother Jones

More McClelland: “I Can Find an Indicted Warlord. So Why Isn’t He in The Hague?” — Mother Jones, Sept. 28, 2011

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  4. thekeylime reblogged this from motherjones and added:
    I just finished reading this article and it’s startling. Yes you can get things for cheaper from Amazon. But at what...
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  13. thatbonegirl reblogged this from motherjones and added:
    A long read, but an important one
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  16. gesinaface reblogged this from longreads and added:
    “At lunch, the most common question, aside from ‘Which offensive dick-shaped product did you handle the most of today?’...
  17. belacqui reblogged this from motherjones and added:
    Somewhere between these warehouse workers and the corporate management there is the logistics firm and its so-called...
  18. fyrehardt reblogged this from motherjones
  19. rocketshipjesus reblogged this from motherjones
  20. giddygirlie reblogged this from missbhavens and added:
    I used to work for the world’s largest logistics and distribution companies and I’ve seen the warehouses. They’re...
  21. ernestfartingway reblogged this from motherjones
  22. zeitreisender reblogged this from motherjones and added:
    “At today’s pickers’ meeting, we are reminded that customers are waiting. We cannot move at a “comfortable pace,”...
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  24. rummeltje reblogged this from longreads and added:
    “I feel genuinely sorry for any child I might have who ever asks me for anything for Christmas, only to be informed that...
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  26. principia-coh reblogged this from motherjones and added:
    Ironically, a lot of this just-in-time crapitola didn’t start becoming fashionable among US businesses until Congress...
  27. gallen reblogged this from motherjones and added:
    I was born in the 1960s, I’ve worked since I was 16… I HAVE NEVER WORKED LIKE THIS. This is not the United States I...
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