The outsized response of the state to, on one hand, vilify the man suspected of killing a health insurance CEO, and on the other, repress a workers’ strike against Amazon, has shed light on solidarity among the ruling class

  • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Yay, class warfare, it’s awesome. We’ve basically conquered scarcity, and yet, we still expect people to work 60-70 hours a week minimum wage jobs or starve to death.

    • ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca
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      4 days ago

      My workplace sometimes has a slow day and the bosses will give workers two options: Go home unpaid, or stay at work for your entire shift and get paid. If you stay, you don’t have to do any work, since there is no work to be done. People mostly sit in the cafeteria on their phones for 8 hours.

      I asked why we can’t choose to go home and get paid and they said it’s because then we’d be getting paid for nothing…but we’re all sitting in the cafeteria on our phones. We’re not working. We are literally being paid for nothing. Why can’t we go home with pay? What’s the difference?

      The difference is that labourers must trade their time for pay. You are selling an hour of your time to the company. That hour doesn’t need to be productive, but you can’t use it freely. It’s the company that makes money by selling a product or service, not its workers. A worker who produces $10,000 of product in an hour is paid for the hour, not for the product. The owner is paid for the product.

      • ZombiFrancis@sh.itjust.works
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        4 days ago

        On-call pay needs to be more of a thing. At a certain point workers are selling their availability instead of their time and labor.

      • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        A worker who produces $10,000 of product in an hour is paid for the hour, not for the product. The owner is paid for the product.

        I think that’s a problem in itself.

      • peoplebeproblems@midwest.social
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        4 days ago

        Correct!

        And some people’s time is inherently more valuable than others - this makes sense in a deeply twisted way. A emergency brain surgeon for example, would be exceedingly difficult to find, and even more valuable to have, let alone utilize. I think a lot of us can agree that the surgeon being able to save a life in ways almost all of us cannot is valuable.

        But some people’s time isn’t valuable at all. Any middleman - salesman of every type, healthcare insurance, stock brokers. They have been made artificially valuable because they are significantly better at producing income for the already wealthy.

        No broker, salesman, or healthcare insurance provider (or hell manager even) is going to help 95% of the country make more money.

        Now, if we got compensated based on the finished product we deliver - that would make the hardest workers a lot more fucking money. But corporate America would never allow that - the employee didn’t purchase the parts before assembling it, or the ingredients, or the network infrastructure, etc.

        The problem, at its core, is that it all ends up tying a price to a human life. Until we can separate cash value from life, we will be stuck with this system.

        It’s possible to do on a small scale, but inevitably it ends up recreating itself as the community doing it grows.

      • tibi@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        What about the accountant who keeps track of the finances and ensures compliance with the laws? He doesn’t produce anything but still needs to be paid. There are a lot of jobs which are essential for the operation of a company, but aren’t producing anything.

        Being paid by the hour is fine. What’s not fine is upper management and shareholders hoarding all the profits for themselves while the people below are struggling to pay their bills.

  • Modern_medicine_isnt@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Let’s be straight. The civil court system was created to manage interactions between people. At the lowest level you had the town judge who referees disputes between people in the town. That expended to be things between towns, then states, then countries. Most interactions between people that need an official third party is commerce. Which means corporations these days as they are the majority of commerce.
    And the reason for having someone referee disputes was because commerce was so important to the sucsess of any town, state, or country that without commerce everyone in that entity would suffer significantly and the entity would eventually cease to exist. So that system isn’t designed to be fair, or even look out for people. It is designed to protect commerce, and since corporations are the majority of that, they are what it protects. The root of the problem is that commerce is so critical. That won’t change for a long time. But people often wish it would.

    • krashmo@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Commerce is not what people are critical of. It’s the fruits of commerce and how they are distributed. Those who have almost nothing to do with commerce reap all the rewards from it. It’s those profit-takers who are protected by the courts. The business entity itself is just a convenient way for them to obfuscate the process. They’re run by people who get better treatment because they have money and they only have money because for some reason we’ve collectively agreed that the people doing the actual work don’t deserve the fruits of their labor.

      • Modern_medicine_isnt@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        Well, they would argue that they fronted the money and thus took all the risk. And maybe at one point that was actually true. But since the gov worked for them… over time it worked to reduce the risk. I agree the result is disliked, but I was talking about how it got to where it was, why it came into being, and that we shouldn’t expect it to be anything but what it is. We just need a balancing force to counter it.

  • verdigris@lemmy.ml
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    4 days ago

    That’s generally the function of any state. I mean, it might be written down as something else, but that’s what all states become once they gain their monopoly on violence.

  • Rookwood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 days ago

    Duh? A corporation is purely a legal construct. We’ve had 150 years of expansion of their legal status and they run the country as a result. A corporation is essentially the functional unit of our society. Individuals really don’t matter and have limited rights. If you don’t have money, your rights, while still codified, cannot be substantiated in court and therefore effectively don’t exist.

  • RedditRefugee69@lemmynsfw.com
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    4 days ago

    Title is so hyperbolic my eyes have rolled out the back of my head. Send help. Insurance won’t cover it because my eyes are a pre-existing condition.

  • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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    5 days ago

    I don’t agree with their conclusion. It’s true that the murder of a CEO would get more police attention than the murder of an ordinary person even in less unusual circumstances, but this particular case is extraordinary not because the victim was a CEO but because so many people support the murder.

    Murders of abortion doctors were similar ideologically-motivated attacks against someone hated by a large part of the public, except that abortion doctors aren’t members of the elite. These murders were still quite a big deal and received a lot of attention on the national level.

    • JcbAzPx@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      You’re conflating press with police action. There wasn’t a nationwide manhunt for any of the doctor killers.

      • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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        4 days ago

        Some of the doctor killers surrendered immediately, but there were manhunts for ones who fled. The killers were usually caught quickly so most manhunts didn’t need to be nationwide, but law enforcement considered the attacks a big deal. This guy managed to flee the country and the international hunt for him lasted over two years until he was caught in France and extradited.

    • uis@lemm.ee
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      4 days ago

      There was murder on same day in same city. Yet, it did not receive manhunt and as much police attention.

      • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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        4 days ago

        Yes, which is why I brought up the murders of abortion doctors. Those got a lot of nationwide attention when they happened. For example, look up George Tiller. The common theme is the connection between the murder and the controversial nature of the victim’s career. Meanwhile, the violent deaths of wealthy people not associated with anything controversial might make it into the local news briefly but they won’t get nearly as much attention.

        • uis@lemm.ee
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          3 days ago

          I’m not talking about news. I talk specifically about police resources allocation. Police will spend more money on hunting down killer of wealthy people than average people. Why are you so fixated on “attention”?

    • RedditRefugee69@lemmynsfw.com
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      Yep. Anyone pretending the cops aren’t going to have more leads for a shooting like Luigi’s compared to a random drive-by and acting like it’s proof the cops are negligent/malicious is either a child or childish.

      Plenty of reason to sling shit at cops, but this ain’t one.