As coffee shops become union battlegrounds, owners hit back

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As coffee shops become union battlegrounds, owners hit back​

Thu, February 1, 2024 at 11:01 AM PST
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The owner of a small coffee chain in Pittsburgh called employees to a mandatory meeting on Jan. 10. It was supposed to be a gathering on team-building, designed in part to improve the performance of the chain’s four stores. Before the sessions began, however, employees stood in front of owner Sukanta Nag and asked him to recognize the union that they had agreed to form.

The following day, Nag closed all locations of Adda Coffee & Tea House. The abrupt closure sent more than 30 workers to the unemployment line, leaving them without a paycheck, without severance and without access to personal belongings trapped inside the shops, including notebooks, cameras and dozens of plants. Several workers said Nag changed the locks on the day he announced the closings.


Nag didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment, but in other stories and social media, the owner blamed the closure on a business that had been operating at a loss since its debut in 2016. He told the Pittsburgh City Paper that he decided to close the chain in December but wanted to make one last push at financial stability with the Jan. 10 meetings. “Despite everyone’s best efforts, our monetary reserves are depleted and we need to close our doors,” read a statement on Adda’s Instagram page, dated Jan. 11.

The workers didn’t buy the owner’s reasoning. Why, they wondered, had Nag hired a chief operating officer for the chain at a sizable salary? Why was he looking to hire a second general manager? Why was he even holding team-building meetings on the day before closure?

“For it to all of a sudden accumulate to an instant closure, mere hours after the employees announced their intent to unionize, is just such uncanny timing. So I think he’s using this to capitalize on getting out of a crappy situation,” said Chloe Troutman, former lead barista at the Adda shop in the North Side area of Pittsburgh.

In the last few years, coffee shops have been a breeding ground for organizing, as hundreds of workers in the Bay Area, Brooklyn and many locales in between have fought for their right to unionize. Yet once baristas, bakers and other staffers sign union cards at coffee shops, they often find that the path to an actual union vote or to a contract with their employer can be loaded with land mines.

When confronted with baristas looking to organize, many companies, large and small, follow a well-worn playbook developed by law firms that specialize in union busting, said Rebecca Kolins Givan, associate professor in the School of Management and Labor Relations at Rutgers University. The playbook is so well-known, Givan said, workers and labor unions have created bingo cards to check off every time a company adopts one of the standard practices or speaks one of the usual lines.

The tensions between Starbucks and its unionized stores is the most prominent example. According to the National Labor Relations Board, the federal agency has certified unions at 375 Starbucks locations across 41 states and the District of Columbia. (Ten other stores have union elections ordered or already underway.) About 9,000 out of more than 235,000 Starbucks employees across the United States- or “partners,” as the chain calls its workers - are members of unions, said Kayla Blado, press secretary for NLRB.

None of those workers have successfully negotiated a contract with the corporate giant even though the chain’s first union shop was certified in Buffalo more than two years ago, said Tori Tambellini, a staff organizer for Starbucks Workers United, which operates with the support of Workers United.

“The company has been stalling by any means they possibly can,” Tambellini told The Washington Post. “The company has not done any meaningful bargaining with us in the U.S.”

The NLRB has docketed 725 open or settled unfair-labor-practice charges against Starbucks, Siren Retail (which oversees the chain’s roasters and Starbucks Reserve stores) and Littler Mendelson, a “union avoidance” law firm that is working with Starbucks on its legal cases, Blado said. The charges cover cases in 41 states and the District of Columbia.

After investigating the charges, NLRB regional offices have issued 127 complaints that cover more than 400 unfair labor practice allegations against Starbucks and Siren Retail, said Blado. Among the complaints: that Starbucks has failed or refused to bargain with 259 certified unions across 36 states and D.C. In December, the Seattle regional office alleged Starbucks closed 23 stores to suppress union organizing, charges that the company says “lack merit.” A hearing is scheduled for August.

The federal agency and federal judges have issued 50 decisions, ordering “make-whole” remedies for unfair labor practices found at Starbucks stores, Blado said. The decisions include orders to reinstate 46 fired Starbucks workers, though some of those decisions have not yet been enforced, the spokeswoman said. Tambellini, the Starbucks union organizer and a shift supervisor at a downtown Pittsburgh shop, was one of those reinstated employees.

Starbucks has appealed decisions, but so far none have been overturned in the litigation process, Blado said, though several remain pending.

Andrew Trull, spokesman for Starbucks, noted in an email that many of the complaints before the NLRB and appeals courts “occurred early in the union’s organizing campaign, prior to implementation of a dedicated labor relations team and investments in more bespoke management training.”

Trull also underscored the findings of an independent report commissioned by Starbucks. Released publicly in December, the report “found no evidence of an ‘anti-union playbook’ or instructions or training about how to violate U.S. laws or suggesting surreptitious means of interfering with employees’ freedom to choose unionization or not.” The report was authored by Thomas M. Mackall, a labor attorney with extensive experience representing employers in various capacities, whether at Sodexo or with the governing body of the International Labor Organization.

The report suggests Starbucks was not prepared at first - with the proper management protocols in place - to handle the wildfire-like spread of organizing efforts at stores.

“All indications are that Workers United had prepared thoroughly for its organizing efforts, had careful top-down leadership, and was effective at leveraging Starbucks’ early missteps to frame a ‘Starbucks is anti-union’ narrative and engaging multiple stakeholders to drive publicity and pressure," the report noted.

Starbucks has made progress since those days, Trull noted, with strategic investments in management training and on-the-ground support. In December, the chain also sent a letter to Lynne Fox, international president of Workers United, hoping to hit the reset button on its relationship with the union. Written by Sara Kelly, executive vice president and chief partner officer, the letter asks that each party refrain from “abusive language” while looking to set bargaining sessions, free of video or audio recording, with the goal of ratifying all contracts in 2024.

The letter was sent more than a year after Howard Schultz, former chief executive of Starbucks, said he would never embrace the chain’s union. It also came just weeks after Starbucks and the union sued each other in federal courts.

Despite the difficulties union baristas have faced with Starbucks, their efforts have inspired a new generation of workers. “I think a lot of baristas look at Starbucks and they think, ‘If Starbucks did it, we can do it too,’” said Tambellini, the union organizer. “I also think that it’s had a lot of an impact on younger people. ... It’s making unions kind of cool and trendy again.”

The organizing at Starbucks is even inspiring employees outside coffee circles, said Diana Hussein, spokeswoman for Unite Here, a union devoted to the massive labor force that drives the hospitality industry. Hospitality workers are approaching Unite Here about forming unions “because they’re seeing that it’s possible through coffee shop workers,” she said. Hussein estimates her union represents about 3,000 baristas at airports around the nation, including Starbucks workers who are employed not by the coffee chain but by HMSHost, a company that provides food service to almost 80 airports in North America.

The conditions at every union coffee shop are different, and so are the workers’ demands. Many want better wages. Some in high-crime areas want better safety protocols or a bathroom reserved just for staff. Some want to make sure tips are distributed fairly, or want the owner to install an electronic system that actually takes tips. But one concern cuts across many shops: Workers want a consistent schedule so they can earn benefits (Starbucks workers must average 20 hours a week to get them) and a steady paycheck that allows them to budget.

At the Adda shops in Pittsburgh, scheduling became a major issue, said Chris Gratsch, former lead barista at the Shadyside location. A general manager, he said, would set schedules, but Nag, the owner, “would make revisions based on who he liked or who he found to be charming or personable.”

Nag did not respond to requests for comment.

The Adda staff never had the chance to make specific demands before the owner pulled the plug on the business. Their plight highlights the risks workers can face when organizing at coffee shops, where, experts say, owners will often stall or drag out negotiations long enough that hourly baristas and other employees just give up and seek another job. But owners may take more dramatic steps, too, such as firing organizing workers or closing shops. Proprietors in Detroit and Brunswick, Maine, also closed their coffee shops as workers started organizing.

It can be hard to prove a coffee shop closure is directly related to union organizing, said Givan, the associate professor at Rutgers. Owners can suggest that “the closure was for any number of other reasons, and they are likely to avoid any kind of repercussions,” she added.

That’s because when an employer violates U.S. labor laws, there are no actual penalties, Givan said. The NLRB can order a company to reopen closed stores or reinstate fired employees (and reimburse them for lost wages), but the agency can’t levy any fines that might discourage an employer’s behavior in the future, Givan said. The NLRB confirmed this information.

“Many employers think it’s worth it to go ahead and violate the law because the fines are basically nonexistent,” Givan said.

When an entire business shuts down, workers have few options for relief, said Wendell Young, president of UFCW, Local 1776, which represents the now-former employees at Adda. But both sides have been in negotiations since the closure of Adda’s stores, Young said. Nag, chief information and technology officer for OneTen, an organization that advances the career of Black workers without four-year college degrees, has tentatively agreed to severance for all employees. There will be a base severance, with extra money for employees based on their length of service, Young said.

“This is a big deal,” Young said about the tentative settlement, which he called a rare win for workers following a business closure. “I think this really raises the bar.”

Even though they lost their jobs and their attempt to form a union, the former Adda workers say they wouldn’t have done anything different. “This is not a cautionary tale to not organize,” Gratsch said. “This is more of a reason that people should.”

 

Adda's sudden closure of all locations raises eyebrows and allegations of union-busting​


Colin Williams

6–7 minutes



click to enlarge Sukanta Nag surrounded by enraged Instagram comments.
CP Image: Jeff Schreckengost

Adda owner Sukanta Nag and comments lamenting the chain's closure
Adda announced the abrupt closure of all four of its locations late Thursday evening via its Instagram account. That the sudden announcement followed, by mere hours, the announcement of a unionization bid by Adda workers struck many customers as more than coincidental, and backlash has been swift.
Commenters on social media were quick to condemn the move, with many offering full-throated support for Adda's now-former employees. Over $11,000 has already been donated to a Gofundme created this morning for Adda's former kitchen manager, Tammy Bevilacqua.
Chris Gratsch, lead barista at Adda's Shadyside location, says the community's support for their union effort has been "humbling."
"It makes the last couple of years worth it," he says.
Gratsch says organizing became necessary after Adda's owner Sukanta Nag imposed working conditions that included six-day workweeks, long hours, and inconsistent schedules. "This started about 13, 14 months ago," he says. "All of a sudden, the pay structure and raise structure that had been there since I started was not transparent anymore and was not equitably given to everybody."
Gratsch says other issues included situations where a single staff member would sometimes run Adda's Cultural District location for eight hours at a time without breaks.


Nag, who, in addition to being a tech executive, also sits on the board of the Andy Warhol Museum and operates Atithi Studios, an arts space in Sharpsburg, disputes this characterization. "We have a scheduling format that we've been using for many, many years. During January, of course, we cut down some hours because we've reduced the hours of open and close. This is all tied to cutting costs."Nag says Adda's coffers were empty after years of operating in the red. "It's been a business that's struggling financially for many, many months," he tells Pittsburgh City Paper ("years," a voice, perhaps Nag's wife, adds in the background). He says he and his wife came to the difficult decision to close the chain in December and held an all-hands meeting on Jan. 10 in a last effort to restore solvency.

Commenters on social media rejected the idea that the chain was facing financial headwinds. One commenter said they had contacted Adda a day prior to the closure and were informed the company was hiring.

Adda had expanded aggressively in recent years, with the chain opening a new location in the Cultural District in 2021 and adding handmade pizza to Adda Bazaar in Garfield last November. One former employee, who did not wish to be identified, also shared with City Paper a screenshot from Nag's Instagram account that showed the Adda proprietor vacationing in Hawai'i in late December, which this employee said contrasted with the narrative in Adda's farewell post that the company was in financial trouble.
click to enlarge Adda's sudden closure of all locations raises eyebrows and allegations of union-busting
CP Photo: Amanda Waltz

Adda location in Garfield

Nag says he and his wife plan an annual trip around his birthday and that this was not related to the chain's budget problems. He was not involved in the day-to-day operations of the company's locations, he says, with that falling to Adda's general manager and food director. "We've never been ever day-to-day. We're not around at all during the week because we both have jobs," he tells CP.

"He [Nag] specifically mentions the pandemic ruining the business, and, I mean, a cursory Google search will show PPP loans totaling, I think, somewhere around a million dollars during that time," Gratsch tells CP. "But also, I can only speak for the Shadyside location, but … we did quite well in sales throughout the pandemic," Gratsch adds.

ProPublica records show that an LLC affiliated with Nag received a total of $125,279 in PPP loans in 2020 and 2021. Adda LLC, which received close to a million dollars in loans, is not affiliated with the coffeehouse chain.

Beyond disputing the circumstances under which Adda closed, Instagram users and former employees alike say Nag's closure of the chain contravenes Sections 7 and 8 of the National Labor Relations Act, which prohibits "threaten[ing] employees with adverse consequences, such as closing the workplace, loss of benefits, or more onerous working conditions, if they support a union." The popular Instagram account @pittsburghpersonified was quick to draw a humorous parallel between Nag and Pittsburgh steel magnate and union-buster Andrew Carnegie.
Another Instagram user who self-identified as a Bengali speaker said it was "shameful" that Nag had closed a business important for the Bengali community's reputation and was "dragging the Bengali/larger South Asian community here in Pittsburgh down with you."

Nag denies closing because of the union and says the decision to close was a hard one and "heartbreaking."

"I hope that spirit that we tried to foster in Pittsburgh for the last eight years, it will live on," he says. He adds that Adithi in Sharpsburg is a separate business entity that will continue to operate.

The fate of Adda's four locations in Garfield, Shadyside, Downtown, and on the North Side seems settled. "I think it's very likely that the shops will stay closed," Gratsch says, "and I would bet that they continue to pay rent on the spaces and rebrand as a new concept in eight to 12 months."
Gratsch says he's a "serial optimist" but that the union is operating under the assumption that Adda is done.

Still, he's heartened by customers' support and says the workers remain united. "Just seeing all the support that we're getting from everyone, that's — to quote Sukanta with his community ideal and mindset — that's what community really looks like.


"Correction: This article has been amended to clarify the distinction between Adda LLC and Wandering Fork LLC, the holding company for Adda Coffee & Tea.

 
unskilled labor at a mom-and-pop business trying to unionize is absolutely ridiculous.
It sounds funny will you look at it on the surface but behind the scenes that mom and Pop may be doing some good paper and not sharing it.
 
This story isn't about unions. It's about a man who ran his business into the ground.

He opened up so many shops that he lost money. Hired an expensive executive to turn it around and lost even more. The only thing he had going for him was underpaid labor and when that ended he had to close.

If his employees hadn't unionized it would have happened later rather than sooner, but it was still going to happen no matter what.
 
If you don't want your employees to unionize you have to be honest and upfront. When someone new joins the fold you tell them:

This is when you're going to work.

This is how much you'll make.

These are the targets I expect you to hit

If you hit them by this date here's how much your raise will be

If you want more here's what else I expect you to do

Then stick to it!

Don't have your people jump through all the hoops then tell them you can't afford to hold up your end. Don't invent reasons why they don't deserve it. When an employee has time off leave them alone. When they get sick let them stay home.

Meet their demands before they have a chance to make them
 
The article clearly states they did not receive severance pay.
It was a big read but i did read the entire article..sorry bruh but heres the quote...
But both sides have been in negotiations since the closure of Adda’s stores, Young said. Nag, chief information and technology officer for OneTen, an organization that advances the career of Black workers without four-year college degrees, has tentatively agreed to severance for all employees. There will be a base severance, with extra money for employees based on their length of service, Young said.

“This is a big deal,” Young said about the tentative settlement, which he called a rare win for workers following a business closure. “I think this really raises the bar
 
unskilled labor at a mom-and-pop business trying to unionize is absolutely ridiculous.

A man finds a sign in a window reading "help wanted $20 an hour."

They hire him and he's told "we actually start our people at $18 an hour until they get the hang of things, but don't worry after a couple of months we'll put you up to $20"

After 2 months they pull him aside and say "we were going to give you $20 an hour, but you've been late a few times. Remember, we start at 9:00 not 9:15. Get that under control and you'll get your 20."

After 2 months of perfect attendance they pull him aside and say "well you've certainly earned your 20. So we'll take care of you in a couple of months when we start the next quarter."

After 2 months they pull him aside and say "we had a loss last quarter so we're suspending raises until the next one. In the meantime, if you want more money be willing to work extra shifts."

After 3 grueling months they pull him aside and say "how dare you ask us for a raise when you've been dragging your ass all week?"

At this point he tells the boss to kiss his ass, and walks. Next week the sign goes back in the window.

This is why unskilled laborers need unions.
 
A man finds a sign in a window reading "help wanted $20 an hour."

They hire him and he's told "we actually start our people at $18 an hour until they get the hang of things, but don't worry after a couple of months we'll put you up to $20"

After 2 months they pull him aside and say "we were going to give you $20 an hour, but you've been late a few times. Remember, we start at 9:00 not 9:15. Get that under control and you'll get your 20."

After 2 months of perfect attendance they pull him aside and say "well you've certainly earned your 20. So we'll take care of you in a couple of months when we start the next quarter."

After 2 months they pull him aside and say "we had a loss last quarter so we're suspending raises until the next one. In the meantime, if you want more money be willing to work extra shifts."

After 3 grueling months they pull him aside and say "how dare you ask us for a raise when you've been dragging your ass all week?"

At this point he tells the boss to kiss his ass, and walks. Next week the sign goes back in the window.

This is why unskilled laborers need unions.

Yep...nice break down!
 
They wilin, they are comparing themselves to starbucks...and moving way TOO QUICKLY,

it wasnt a good idea to strike before the meeting.... they shouldve went to the meeting FIRST,

to gather MORE information.... I dont think the owner was bullshitting, I think he was in the red,

and Hired a new ceo and manager to turn things around..

I do understand their plights... But they have realize....

Its a fuckin BUSINESS first and foremost...and its goal is PROFIT!!!

Personally I wouldve attended the meeting, collected data, and then

tailored the next move....

its really a non issue tho, workers took the risk, and it didnt work out,

as a growing small business owner he aint tryin to deal with none of that shit....

yea bad timing, they struck tooo soon!!
 
They wilin, they are comparing themselves to starbucks...and moving way TOO QUICKLY,

it wasnt a good idea to strike before the meeting.... they shouldve went to the meeting FIRST,

to gather MORE information.... I dont think the owner was bullshitting, I think he was in the red,

and Hired a new ceo and manager to turn things around..

I do understand their plights... But they have realize....

Its a fuckin BUSINESS first and foremost...and its goal is PROFIT!!!

Personally I wouldve attended the meeting, collected data, and then

tailored the next move....

its really a non issue tho, workers took the risk, and it didnt work out,

as a growing small business owner he aint tryin to deal with none of that shit....

yea bad timing, they struck tooo soon!!

Growing small businesses don't operate in the red. That's the opposite of growth.
 
Growing small businesses don't operate in the red. That's the opposite of growth.

exactly them employees were keepin up with starbucks and thought they were

a big chain!!

valiant effort.. but PISS POOR EXECUTION......

You have to be able to convince the owner, the NEW way is more profitable..

yea piss poor execution!!
 
A man finds a sign in a window reading "help wanted $20 an hour."

They hire him and he's told "we actually start our people at $18 an hour until they get the hang of things, but don't worry after a couple of months we'll put you up to $20"

After 2 months they pull him aside and say "we were going to give you $20 an hour, but you've been late a few times. Remember, we start at 9:00 not 9:15. Get that under control and you'll get your 20."

After 2 months of perfect attendance they pull him aside and say "well you've certainly earned your 20. So we'll take care of you in a couple of months when we start the next quarter."

After 2 months they pull him aside and say "we had a loss last quarter so we're suspending raises until the next one. In the meantime, if you want more money be willing to work extra shifts."

After 3 grueling months they pull him aside and say "how dare you ask us for a raise when you've been dragging your ass all week?"

At this point he tells the boss to kiss his ass, and walks. Next week the sign goes back in the window.

This is why unskilled laborers need unions.

Yes but MORESO

THIS IS WHY MUTHAFUCKAS NEED TO LEARN THE LABOR LAWS OF THE STATE

hey our PUBLIC "educational" system.... did the job it was supposed to do,

produce wage slaves who will refuse to read

especially contracts they sign!!!
 
Yes but MORESO

THIS IS WHY MUTHAFUCKAS NEED TO LEARN THE LABOR LAWS OF THE STATE

hey our PUBLIC "educational" system.... did the job it was supposed to do,

produce wage slaves who will refuse to read

especially contracts they sign!!!

It doesn't matter if he reads it.

When a company hires an employee they usually start them 7 days later. The employee spends that week telling prospective employers he's no longer looking. When the company presents him with a contract at $2 an hour less than promised he signs because now there's no other options.

If he complains to labor relations they'll tell him "don't cry to us, you signed the contract." If his complaint leads to an investigation the company can fire him for "unrelated" reasons.

He could sue, but where does he get money for a lawyer? Especially when the damages are $320 a month and he's been there less than a year. Even if he does no employee is perfect so unlawful dismissal is hard to prove.

When these unions formed a century ago most of their members were illiterate so the problem isn't education. It's an extreme imbalance of power.
 
exactly them employees were keepin up with starbucks and thought they were

a big chain!!

valiant effort.. but PISS POOR EXECUTION......

You have to be able to convince the owner, the NEW way is more profitable..

yea piss poor execution!!

Starbucks is a franchise. When their employees unionize it only affects that location. If that location is in the red the owner will do the same thing at Ada Coffee and Teahouse did.

It doesn't matter how big the chain is
 
It doesn't matter if he reads it.

When a company hires an employee they usually start them 7 days later. The employee spends that week telling prospective employers he's no longer looking. When the company presents him with a contract at $2 an hour less than promised he signs because now there's no other options.

If he complains to labor relations they'll tell him "don't cry to us, you signed the contract." If his complaint leads to an investigation the company can fire him for "unrelated" reasons.

He could sue, but where does he get money for a lawyer? Especially when the damages are $320 a month and he's been there less than a year. Even if he does no employee is perfect so unlawful dismissal is hard to prove.

When these unions formed a century ago most of their members were illiterate so the problem isn't education. It's an extreme imbalance of power.

He must read and understand that contract

I get the picture painted but it just prove my point.

How the public education system programmed it's subjects to be wage slaves

And worse.....like getting our children hooked on psych drugs

Talking bout learning disabilities

They are disgusting
 
Are you new this forum? A good portion of the forum are pro-plantation owners.

Well kniggas are

The original plantation owners..

You know!

Da fuck you think are the true Americans are...

News flash they are kniggas not Mongolians....

They running game on us with the you came from Africa story.....

Holy Hotteppers got the recipts

We all came from Pangea!!!

Before it split creating north America and africa
 
Starbucks is a franchise. When their employees unionize it only affects that location. If that location is in the red the owner will do the same thing at Ada Coffee and Teahouse did.

It doesn't matter how big the chain is

Bruh Starbucks is ultimately owned by fuckin

Vanguard bruh...through shareholders the last

Thing they want to deal with is a union...

The pushback is coming from way up past

Franchise owners...
 
Bruh Starbucks is ultimately owned by fuckin

Vanguard bruh...through shareholders the last

Thing they want to deal with is a union...

The pushback is coming from way up past

Franchise owners...
The corporation is, but the stores are independently owned.

These owners pay an upfront fee and a monthly royalty based on sales. In exchange Starbucks gives them the name, branding, advertising, machinery, coffee beans, etc.

The corporation fights unionization because higher wages mean lower royalties. If one location does it the rest follow and the stock goes down.
 
He must read and understand that contract

I get the picture painted but it just prove my point.

How the public education system programmed it's subjects to be wage slaves

And worse.....like getting our children hooked on psych drugs

Talking bout learning disabilities

They are disgusting

It's the Puritan idea that unemployment is a mortal sin.

If I hire you to build a house you're a good honest hard-working American. But if you quit your job to build your own house you're a bum.

It doesn't matter if it takes the same amount of labor, or if the house is worth more than what you'd make working for me. Not having a "job" makes you a parasite at best and a criminal at worst. Even if you never break the law or take a hand out.

I think these backwards values have a lot more impact on the problem than our schools' miseducation. I agree with you about psychiatric drugs, but that's a different conversation.
 
It's the Puritan idea that unemployment is a mortal sin.

If I hire you to build a house you're a good honest hard-working American. But if you quit your job to build your own house you're a bum.

It doesn't matter if it takes the same amount of labor, or if the house is worth more than what you'd make working for me. Not having a "job" makes you a parasite at best and a criminal at worst. Even if you never break the law or take a hand out.

I think these backwards values have a lot more impact on the problem than our schools' miseducation. I agree with you about psychiatric drugs, but that's a different conversation.

That's the public school system mentality at work..


Private school mentality train brains to think like a boss.

And not be subjected to pion mind fuckery.

That is thrown in our faces 24/7.

Most folks think they are watching TV and movies

Many have no idea they are being programmed...

You observe television and movies....

By observing you don't just watch you study..

Know who produced and who created and wrote the shit

You'd be surprised at the connections you are going to make
 
A man finds a sign in a window reading "help wanted $20 an hour."

They hire him and he's told "we actually start our people at $18 an hour until they get the hang of things, but don't worry after a couple of months we'll put you up to $20"

After 2 months they pull him aside and say "we were going to give you $20 an hour, but you've been late a few times. Remember, we start at 9:00 not 9:15. Get that under control and you'll get your 20."

After 2 months of perfect attendance they pull him aside and say "well you've certainly earned your 20. So we'll take care of you in a couple of months when we start the next quarter."

After 2 months they pull him aside and say "we had a loss last quarter so we're suspending raises until the next one. In the meantime, if you want more money be willing to work extra shifts."

After 3 grueling months they pull him aside and say "how dare you ask us for a raise when you've been dragging your ass all week?"

At this point he tells the boss to kiss his ass, and walks. Next week the sign goes back in the window.

This is why unskilled laborers need unions.
I understand your analogy, but at the end of the day, most people are not going to pay $6 for a cup of black coffee.
 
I understand your analogy, but at the end of the day, most people are not going to pay $6 for a cup of black coffee.

The moral of the story is when you advertise a job at $20 an hour keep your word. When you don't employees will band together and force you to.

It's also a compilation of real life excuses employers have used to cheat me out of the money they promised.

You're right about the $6 cup of coffee though. That's why I make most of mine at home.
 
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