"Corporate crime" is an oxymoron in America. While it's true that the most consequential and profligate theft in America is #WageTheft, its mechanisms are so obscure and, well, *dull* that it's easy to sell us on the false impression that the real problem is shoplifting:

https://newrepublic.com/post/175343/wage-theft-versus-shoplifting-crime

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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/09/working-the-refs/#but-id-have-to-kill-you

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The Real Crime Isn’t Shoplifting—It’s Wage Theft

Why has the media gone all in on small time scofflaws when organized financial crime is robbing people straight from their paychecks?

The New Republic

@pluralistic
It was 30 years ago now, but I still remember like it was yesterday how my minimum-wage-paying employer stole an hour's wage from me because they unilaterally decided it shouldn't have taken me and one other worker as long as it did to close up shop one night. So they just didn't pay either of us for that last hour that we worked cleaning up.

And what were we going to do about it? Hire a lawyer with our $4.25/hr pay? Complain to the state and get fired for it in a town where jobs for people our age were already scarce?

They were scumbags taking advantage of people at a disadvantage who had little or no recourse, and nothing more. And I'm sure we weren't the only employees they did it to.

That $4.25 meant a lot more to me than it did to them. For me, that was a day's lunch.

@shyduroff

@spatula @pluralistic @shyduroff > unilaterally decided it shouldn't have taken me and one other worker as long as it did to close up shop one night. So they just didn't pay either of us for that last hour that we worked cleaning up.
Thereby incentivizing botching whenever time runs short and antagonizing your workers.

Sounds like a pretty bad idea to me.

In restaurants that can sicken or kill people.