cheapbag214s |
|
|
|
Joined: 27 Jun 2013 |
Posts: 20570 |
Read: 0 topics
Warns: 0/5
|
Location: England |
|
|
|
|
|
|
had something we didn't,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych] outlet, the mystique of the blue-collar worker. Like most of my generation,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], I made my living in the service industry. We worked, sure,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], but we weren't 'workers.' Somehow,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], our shiny tech world was exempt from class struggle. Our economy depended on market speculation. It revolved around saleable ideas, stock options and vesting. People at Microsoft and Amazon were walking away with hundreds of thousands of dollars after two or three years. By fall of 1999, though, fewer and fewer people were getting lucky and jobs were growing scarce. If you wanted in to Microsoft, you had to spend years temping with rolling layoffs. And if you did get in,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], you better not complain. 'Be grateful you have a job' became the new mantra. Besides,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], your manager probably listens to Sonic Youth and won't care if your hair is green-isn't that enough? For some it wasn't. A nascent tech workers union called WashTech had sprung up and was trying to organize contract employees out at Microsoft. The campaign failed,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], but not |
|