We are just finding out about a child sex trafficking ring involving politicians and billionaires, the world’s richest man does a Nazi salute at a political rally, and the President being an adjudicated sex criminal is probably not the worst thing he has done…

Meanwhile I’m standing here in the checkout line feeling guilty about whether or not I should tip a barista

Something is wrong with our collective notion of morality, and my individual understanding (Oh well, here we are)

  • Auth@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    What the fuck is your point? “What happens if they find out im suing them” If your employer doesn’t pay you correctly and then fires you when you seek legal action they are fucked under the Fair Labor Standards Act. They’ve just increased their fine from up to 10k to add another 25k.

    I actually perplexed why people are pushing back against my claim that people should seek to protect their federally protected work rights. The examples that have been brought up are open and shut cases that will be picked up by any law firm and they will sue for recomp + damages + lawyer fees. Yes its “harder” than doing nothing, but by doing nothing you do not fix the problem and continue to be exploited. There is no magic eye that can perfectly detect illegal activity its up to the victim to come forward and make their case thats how law works in our society.

    • Whostosay@sh.itjust.works
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      3 days ago

      Lol if it was that simple, wage theft wouldn’t exist. These corporations can afford to steal your money, have calculated the risk, and continue to steal money.

      They’re not going to write down “brought lawsuit” they’re going to find an arbitrary reason, or better yet write down “I didn’t like that person” because it’s a right to work state and even in non right to work states, labor protection is dogshit.

      • Auth@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        No, lets be clear wage theft covers a lot of things. Here we are talking about a very specific situation where an employer is clearly violating the FLSA. You can even see it in this thread, so many people dont even believe that its illegal. So they dont even know they can sue for it.

        “they’re going to find an arbitrary reason, or better yet write down “I didn’t like that person” because it’s a right to work state and even in non right to work states” nah that does not hold up in court. A judge isnt going to look at an employer getting sued for wage theft and then said oh i guess you just happened to fire this person. Nah thats never goign to hold up. Also yes US labor laws are fucking dogshit but they exist.

        • Whostosay@sh.itjust.works
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          3 days ago

          They may succeed with the lawsuit, but that job is gone, and it’s gone the moment it’s filed.

          The path of least resistance is unionization, and it would accomplish more faster.

          • Auth@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            Unionization is great but thats a much bigger ask and far less likely to suceed. And risker as the employee can be fired with no protection as soon as they’re found trying to unionize.

            I think employees should be trying to unionize as a default and then if they’re the victim of wage theft seek legal recourse.

            • Whostosay@sh.itjust.works
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              2 days ago

              I can agree with the second part 100%

              The first though, the same lack of employee protections against forming a union are the same that will get you canned for bringing a lawsuit.

              • Auth@lemmy.world
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                2 days ago

                Being fired for forming a union is a completely different case than committing wage theft then firing your employee for bringing it up.

                • Whostosay@sh.itjust.works
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                  2 days ago

                  The end result for the employee is the same. Very likely you and I, and statistically, 99% of the people potentially reading this.

                  • Auth@lemmy.world
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                    2 days ago

                    Its not though. The employee is far more likely to win the wage theft case than the union firing case and I just think its wrong to try and dissuade people from fighting this issue. Its actively harmful to people to push that kind of a narrative.