• @HairHeel@programming.dev
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    171 year ago

    Three days later, on November 20, the Seko union, which represents postal workers, will stop delivering letters, spare parts, and pallets to all of Tesla’s addresses in Sweden.

    It seems troubling that there aren’t regulations in place requiring postal workers to deliver mail indiscriminately.

    What if the postal union decided not to deliver mail-in ballots they thought might support a policy they disagreed with, for example?

    • Chahk
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      201 year ago

      Can’t tell if you’re being sarcastic, but the postal thing has already happened during the USA 2020 election.

      • TheRtRevKaiserM
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        21 year ago

        Hi, can you clarify what you mean or provide a source? I’m not away of any widespread examples of this but it could be that I’m misunderstanding or misremembering.

        • Chahk
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          81 year ago

          Louis DeJoy, the U.S. Postmaster General who was installed by Trump in May 2020, spent the months prior to the November elections undermining voting by mail and sabotaging the Postal Service. There were multiple lawsuits about it.

        • @abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          The Trump government shut down automated mail sorting machines, cut overtime for workers (so if they weren’t keeping up with the workload, they’d just stop delivering mail instead of working a longer shift), replaced a bunch of air mail delivery routes with road ones, added delays to re-delivery attempts when a letter couldn’t be delivered and removed mail collection boxes.

          Supposedly all of this would “improve the efficiency” of the postal service. Yeah right.

  • Pete Hahnloser
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    191 year ago

    The delicious irony here is that U.S. corporations want the government out of regulating worker rights and company obligations, and having actually encountered that, Tesla said, “no, we don’t like how that turned out, either.”

  • The Bard in GreenA
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    661 year ago

    Man, Unions in America are anaemic. I REALLY wish our labor force would grow that kind of spine and stand up for each other that aggressively.

    • astraeus
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      381 year ago

      This isn’t even aggressive, they’re literally showing they won’t work for the company if the company isn’t willing to work for them. All the unions in the US have to play politics with the government and corporations in order to keep things flowing smoothly, one false move and the corporations have the upper hand. With that kind of advantage, it’s the corporations who are aggressive here.

    • @Dominic@beehaw.org
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      71 year ago

      American unions are kneecapped by the government. The 1947 Taft-Hartley Act made solidarity strikes (and several other forms of labor protest) illegal. It also opened the door for states to enact “right-to-work” laws.

      This law is still standing in part because US courts have been anti-labor for their entire existence, aside from a brief period during FDR’s administration.