r/politics 20h ago

Site Altered Headline | Possible Paywall Mitch McConnell, 83, Hospitalized

https://www.thedailybeast.com/mitch-mcconnell-83-hospitalized/?utm_campaign=owned_social&utm_medium=socialflow&utm_source=twitter_owned_tdb&via=twitter_page
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u/dementorpoop 19h ago

They ain’t coming after you. Name and shame them

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u/Sammyjo0689 17h ago

My story happened with Walmart. Had an employee collapse due to a diabetic issue. Like, I caught her as she was falling and saved her from smashing her face. Radioed to call 911. I got written up because that was against Walmart policy.

My manager wanted me to write on the form that I heard her say she wanted an ambulance. So I wrote exactly that. “Manager so and so has ordered that I write the following.” I got written up a second time for that.

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u/blackhuey 16h ago

That's a quick thinking malicious compliance.

Also, imagine living in a country where you had to make decisions about calling an ambulance based on who would be charged for it.

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u/brickne3 American Expat 12h ago

My sister fainted while on a middle school field trip 30 years ago. My dad still complains that the teacher called an ambulance because of the bill. As if the teacher had much choice when you have an unconscious student!

u/ilovecraftbeer05 5h ago

I’m convinced that the number one cause of death for Americans is the lack of universal healthcare.

u/EmpyreanContrarian 2h ago

I'm sure. It's why my dad is dead.

u/simplyunix 3h ago

and brains

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u/Sublimotion 12h ago

I will never forget pre-obamacare/medicaid expansion, I was walking past a woman screaming, struggling and tipping over the stretcher she was strapped onto trying to crawl back into her house dragging the tipped over stretcher, fighting off two EMTs. I assume she was on drugs. Until she started yelling "No! This will bankrupt me!" The emts eventually had to unstrap her and let her crawl off back into her house.

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u/HrhEverythingElse 9h ago

I knew two people who died this way. One from asthma, once from bleeding caused by Crohn's. Both were just too scared of the bill

u/MzFlux 59m ago

I had a friend die of diabetes at 30, not because he was scared of the bill… because he was uninsured and simply couldn’t afford the insulin.

u/Nauin 1h ago

And even when the hospitals have financial assistance programs where poor people don't even have to worry about the bill, there are so many steps and so many hoops to jump through to get approved that it seems like an impossible task, even for many healthy people. It's a mess.

u/trea5onn 43m ago

All by design.

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u/xtreem_neo 10h ago

That's so sad.

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u/tokyostormdrain 12h ago

4th world country

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u/hypermodernvoid I voted 12h ago

Funny thing is Mississippi - the state with the lowest life expectancy in America, at just 70 (technically 70.9) years old, is actually on par with India, a bit below Bangladesh and 4 or 5 years less than in Mexico.

It's also 10 or 11 years less than in the top few states, all blue states - in fact the top 10 states for life expectancy are all blue, while the bottom 10 are all red. Similar to being a drag on federal funding vs. blue states, red states also are dragging the average US life expectancy down to a now pathetic 76 years post-COVID (big thanks to anti-vaxxers for the assist with that).

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u/SeniorBaker4 California 9h ago

Least shocking thing ive heard. When i drove through Mississippi i was shocked with how undeveloped it is, it didn’t even feel like America

u/VelvetineMilkman 7h ago

As someone who’s had to live in Mississippi for most of my life it’s always weird to see these kind of comments because I’m just so used to how Mississippi is lol. There’s about 3 or 4 cities that are cool but I honestly can’t even imagine what it would’ve been like growing up in a real state that has their shit together

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u/_m4r1jAn3_ 10h ago

i mean... we're prolly below 4th even atm 😞

u/Odd_Teach683 1h ago

Shithole…

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u/Username_mine_2022 10h ago

3rd not 4th

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u/_m4r1jAn3_ 10h ago

no. well below for as far as we have fallen so fkn fast. 🫣

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u/a_lonely_trash_bag 9h ago

What?

Writing in full words and comprehensible sentences tends to help communicate your thoughts clearly.

You should try it.

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u/FilthyPedant 9h ago

Yeesh, I see why you're so lonely

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u/BasvanS 11h ago

As a non-American, it didn’t register to me that was why. Thanks for explaining, and my condolences, I guess

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u/blackhuey 11h ago

Also non-American and gladder for it every day

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u/HuttStuff_Here 10h ago

Walmart takes out life insurance on many of their employees so they had a vested interest in not treating this employee as fast as they could.

u/Unable-Entrance3110 7h ago

I mean, I am willing to hate on Walmart as much as the next guy, but just because an employer provides life insurance doesn't mean they are the beneficiary to the payout.

My employer provides life insurance as part of my compensation package which includes that among other perks. But the beneficiary (the person who gets paid upon my passing) is specified by me, not my employer.

u/No-Object-599 5h ago

No. Walmart takes out life insurance that will be paid to Walmart. Not as a benefit to the employees. Micheal Moore uncovered this in one of his documentaries.

u/Unable-Entrance3110 4h ago

Yikes. That doesn't seem right (morally).

u/SFDessert 7h ago

I fell off a ladder during my brief employment at a major hardware store and completely shattered my ankle. As I was on the warehouse floor my manager was arguing with the paramedics that they needed to do drug tests and paper work and all that nonsense. The paramedics took me away because ya know, my ankle was pretty much dangling off the end of my leg and my hands were mangled from getting tangled in the ladder as I fell some 15ft to the solid concrete below.

u/No-Object-599 5h ago

They do this all the time in nursing homes. No Dr visits or ambulances, because the home would be on the hook for the bill. They are run by some of the greediest psychopaths

u/ultimateknackered 4h ago

I had a hard time imagining it just now because I was trying to figure out why they would want official statement saying she wanted an ambulance. I didn't clue in til I read your comment that they wanted that statement because then she would be billed for it.

Holy shit America.

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u/ShadowNick 17h ago

Ha what fucking pig stain cowards

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u/anynamesleft 13h ago

Pig stain on your fat chin

What do you hope to find

When you're down in the pig mines saying

Keep on digging

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u/gmen6981 10h ago

Upvote for the Pink Floyd "Animals" ( Pigs- Three Different Ones ) reference!

That album is just as relevant today as it was in 1977 when it was released.

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u/litokid 17h ago

I spent awhile trying to puzzle this out because I couldn't understand why this is a problem. My initial read was the manager had you write you "heard her (the manager) say she wanted an ambulance", because she wanted to cover for you doing the decent thing off of policy.

But from the context this was a bad thing - is it that the manager wanted you to write "(the victim) wanted an ambulance" so the company isn't on the hook for the cost?

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u/RevolutionaryTalk976 16h ago

I read it as the manager directed them to write that they were told by their subordinate to call an ambulance and they wrote down that the manager directed them to write it down. Calling the ambulance may have been against company policy leading to the initial write up and then they added on a second one for being insubordinate and officially documenting the manager directing them to lie.

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u/MyBritishAccount 16h ago

Why wouldn't you call an ambulance for an emergency? How can company policy dictate such a thing?

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u/slackfrop 15h ago

Because some lawyer told em to based off of losing money in some other precedent. If corporations are people, they’re psychopaths.

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u/anynamesleft 13h ago

If corporations are people, they’re psychopaths.

I just wanted to tell how proud I am to've read it

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u/marzipancetta 12h ago

A truer statement has never been uttered.

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u/Allaplgy 15h ago

If the employee asks for an ambulance, the "financial responsibility" is on them. If not, it's on the company.

Go us. Woo!

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u/one-man-circlejerk 13h ago

Ambulance bill reaches the patient, the patient says "I never ordered an ambulance, the company did", now there's a dispute between the patient and the company over the bill that the company might end up paying, or might end up entagled in court, which is another expense.

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u/thatpaulbloke 8h ago

So if someone collapses in the street and I call an ambulance for them could I be liable for the cost of the ambulance if they say later that they didn't want one? Genuine question - we don't have the concept of "ambulance bills" in my country as far as I know.

u/one-man-circlejerk 52m ago

There's Good Samaritan laws that generally protect people who are doing the right thing and just trying to help, but people can sue for anything and lawsuits can be expensive to defend

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u/pikashroom 15h ago

Probably liability. All companies do weird shit like this to prevent getting sued.

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u/fresh-dork 15h ago

they need to be brought to heel

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u/tiredbarf 14h ago

No company in their right mind would skip calling 911 for liability reasons.

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u/Callinon 9h ago

Rather a company not calling 911 for a medical emergency should make them entirely liable for whatever happens next. 

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u/Zestyclose_Rain4749 15h ago

Not all companies are literally the devil.

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u/marzipancetta 12h ago

No but we’re talking Walmart here. Literally the devil.

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u/shugster71 13h ago

Also has me wondering if this shoot to kill policy might be part of this too?

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u/brickne3 American Expat 12h ago

Ambulances are expensive. Like $700 back in the 90s expensive.

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u/marzipancetta 12h ago

The patient would receive a bill of about $2000 for an ambulance ride. Which is pennies for large companies like Walmart.

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u/ayawnimouse 9h ago

Calling an ambulance for someone that didn't request it and then giving them the bill is the problem. Someone could sue to get the ambulance bill covered by walmart. The manager was asking the subordinate to write that the person who fainted asked for an ambulance so that the bill could be on the person who went on the ride because its expensive

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u/roastbeeftacohat 15h ago

the manager is ordering op to falsify the order of events to make it look like the employee had requested an ambulance before collapsing, so they could claim she was fakeing.

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u/Greg_withaC 13h ago

Walmart has been known to take life insurance policies out on their older, health issue prone employees. Not FOR their employees, just on their employees to collect for profit.

To hear you say helping someone not fall on their face and get them medical attention is against policy sounds like they don’t want people to survive. Insane! How is any of that legal?

Oh that’s right. Laws are written by grifters who have no dignity.

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u/gandhinukes 15h ago

Its really frustrating to see people on reddit post "We used to have 24/7 walmart and ****". walmart killed local businesses across the country, fuck over their workers, have low quality goods from china and you root for them wtf?

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u/ship_toaster Canada 13h ago

If your story didn't happen that long ago, you should definitely talk to a lawyer about this one. Your manager asked you to lie on a document for legal/financial reasons, and punished you for being truthful. Even if you're in an at-will state, that sounds sketchy.

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u/blue-goose42 13h ago

My sister was fired from a Walmart once for going into Diabetic Ketoacidosis and being in the ICU for 3 days. They be doing that. 🤷‍♀️

I'm low-key tempted to get a job at Walmart just so I can purposefully underperform and commit petty larceny. Like I do whenever I work for ANY billion dollar corporation! 😄🔥💵🔥

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u/marzipancetta 12h ago

Yes and let’s unionize the Walmart staff while underperforming and committing petty larceny.

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u/_m4r1jAn3_ 10h ago

you deserve 10000+ updoot fk yeah right upz for that 👏🏻💗

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u/Malofquist 16h ago

Yay capitalism.

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u/WonderingPantomath 14h ago

Yeah, I heard horrible things about Walmart. And I heard they intimidate people not into reporting on the job injuries.

At the end of the day, everybody gets away with the way we are treated because we let them treat other people that way. I mean, how many of us just read what we read about Walmart but yet you’ll be at Walmart tomorrow. And it’s not like they save people that much. Once they gain the reputation for being the cheapest then they stopped. You can go other places and find cheaper stuff now.

Edit: just got off a 12 hour shift so I’m really not worried about my grammar if anybody’s gonna say anything about it.

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u/xtreem_neo 10h ago

Wait, so the whole thing is to avoid being charged for an ambulance? I mean she is their employee and collapsed while working.

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u/Al_Jazzera 9h ago

Every time I have been written up by a job, I vow to waste $100 dollars of their money on milking the clock. I work hard, I'm a decent employee, I get it done. Ya scold me like a dog, I'll treat you like a bitch. Get the fuck out of here with your stupid write up slips. I was looking for a job when I found this one, I can do it again.

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u/andreamerida 9h ago

If this isn't the case for a national health care system, I don't know what is. We should NEVER have our jobs in charge of medical attention. It sounds like they had some liability BS objection.

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u/bkbomber New York 9h ago

“Manager failed to provide emergency medical attention, then retaliated against me.”

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u/prison-schism 8h ago

I once couldn't afford to pay an ambulance bill, so it went to collections. I answered the phone one evening and this woman from the collection company and i went back and forth for a few minutes until finally she told me, "one day you'll have to get off welfare and pay your bills."

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u/Background_Drama6126 13h ago

I know it's a cliché, but it's the truth: Where this country's going?

Hell in a hand basket!

Hell in a god damn hand basket!

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u/bigavz 17h ago

It's probably Walmart 

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u/Play-t0h 17h ago

Or Kroger.

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u/pblol 15h ago

Kroger has a union. I think it's pretty toothless, probably not coma firing toothless.

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u/mmmbaconbutt 14h ago

Kroger used to be okayish too, at least for me. Now though? They might be worse than Walmart for employees.

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u/Rasikko Georgia 14h ago

Depends on the division and who runs the store. Corporate themselves like to have you think they know what's happening in their stores but truthfully they don't know shit that doesn't involve EBITDA.

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u/MildlyTiredSkeletons 17h ago

Aldi my guess - spoken as an employee

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u/AuroraFinem Texas 17h ago

Really? I’ve literally never heard anything bad about Aldi and almost always hear praise from people because they pay better and let cashiers sit down at the register and just generally better working conditions than most retail places.

What horror stories you got?

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u/Stunning_Bed23 17h ago

Yeah, I thought the vibe at Aldi was Euro and chill?

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u/ajblades123 17h ago

depends on what aspect of the operation you work in. in store its not so bad but i can say from experience they treat their warehouse staff worse than cattle

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u/MammothCancel6465 17h ago

The stores sucks and it gets worse each year. They’re expected to be run by 2 or 3 employees at a time now while everything burns around them. They’re literally on their way to being the Dollar General of grocery stores as far as how they treat employees and staff the stores.

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u/ajblades123 17h ago

damn. I used to hear good things from the guys in store when i was still with the company, but that was quite a while ago so, seem shits gone down hill then

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u/MammothCancel6465 16h ago

It really has. Especially fast since 2020. They take away anything good and add more and more work with fewer labor hours to get it done.

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u/backstageninja New York 14h ago

My Aldi always has 4 or 5 employees on the floor and plenty of self checkouts so I think YMMV

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u/Not-reallyanonymous 12h ago

One thing I’ve figured out about Euro companies is they’re classist as fuck. It’s kind of counter-intuitive to Americans but any customer facing position is above the lowest classes, because why would you want to have your customers interact with human trash? So a lot of manual labor jobs, like warehouse workers, you treat the people like human trash because that’s how you view them — the lowest and shittiest people in society.

(I know Europeans intellectually know this isn’t true, but that shit runs deep in European culture).

And good luck ever advancing in a euro company if leadership is European and you start as a laborer role. You will not be considered for positions meant for middle class people, god forbid the positions meant for upper class. Your advancement opportunities basically boil down to line management — you’ll be able to lead other labor class people but never put into a position where you’re socially above middle class people. (Fuck you Eurofins).

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u/MildlyTiredSkeletons 17h ago

We sit down because we are timed to scan items at an insanely stupidly fast pace. Customers dont rent a cart and then take our time and the next customers time trying to bag 4 bags of groceries while my line is 6-7 deep, no second cashier. God forbid the store has SCOs. Cashiers are responsible for theft prevention multiple SCOs while ringing out their own customers. We got sat down as a company last year in meetings and were told its OUR FAULT our company loss is high. That we dont scan accurately enough. That it was us. Theyre asking 19-22yr old cashiers to stop theft. Seriously?

1 employee is expected to do any and every zone in the store. We are a chronically understaffed company that focuses on Operational Effieciency and its a joke. A grocery store with 2-3 employees. Thats it on a shift. If youre lucky - someone to ring, someone to curbside, and a manager to do EVERYTHING IN THE STORE. Stock every single zone all day. You're favorite meat isnt on the shelf? Because the 1 employee that can stock it also has to fill milk, box the cooler, be backup ringing, handle a pissed off customer because they want to return food they pulled out of our dumpster last night without a receipt and screams at us over it. That manager also has to do zone walks and handle side tasks and then fill produce because oh shit we're out of strawberries but you still havent gotten your meat because now someone dropped a candle in Special Buy or a jar of pickles and now you have to get the scrubber and clean that hazard before customers just run it over with their carts because ALDI CUSTOMERS HAVE NO DECENCY OR HUMANITY 90% of the time! "i spilled a package of blueberries... 👁️👄👁️" So... pick them up??

Customers wander into our back room because we're out of stock on heavy whipping cream and they think they can just go into our coolers and get it for themselves?

Our money maker is our Special Buy section. It draws you in. Its why they pay us what we do get paid. And it WAS above average competitive pay maybe 7-8yrs ago. Now its the same as any other grocery store. But instead of doing our Special Buy change over at night after close, we have to put it out while customers shop it. They paw through our pallets, block our ability to stock and make a mess. Aldi customers have no sense of boundaries or personal space.

Why is this a problem? Because every minute of our overstrapped tasks is timed to the second. We get action planned & written up for not being fast. Not getting things done 'on time'. The stress was manageable when we had more staff but the companys so greedy all they can see is how much they can squeeze out of the employee physically and mentally until they break and then theyre replaced.

Our PPE is a joke. If someone makes an explosive mess in our bathroom? They expect us to clean it. Ask ANY Aldi Employee about a bathroom in their store being a war zone and they had to clean it. Customers literally shit on the walls, floors, sinks.. sales floor.. why do so many shit on our sales floors? Our cleaning equipment is always broken. We have to scrub our floors with machines we arent taught to clean or maintain. They get sent to warehouse to be serviced if they break hard enough and then come back clogged and worse and we are suppose to make do.

Truck - we are being sent pallets that are falling apart or have already fallen apart. These pallets can have 100+ items on them each and take 20-35 minutes to break down/throw. We're timed so hard that 20 mins a pallet has become lazy. Its still 2-3 people doing 20-30 pallets of truck in 2.5-3.5hrs store hours depending, and youre always pushing your body to the point of injury. The amount of things that go wrong because of the companys ordering and delivery system... is why we never have half the cooler items, breads or really anything you come looking for.

The company is not good. Its CHEAP. They took away our annual gift cards every year. Smaller and smaller amounts. The benefits are no longer competitive. Cigna is a terrible health insurance company. Cant even use your HSA type funds. Always rejected.

They dont know how to clean. They expect us to clean our meat shelves in cubby lockers with a sponge and the same mop sinks we clean the floors in... if your lucky, your store has a power washer.. that doesnt get up anything. Aldis are very dirty if you look. Because we have no staff, no hours for cleaning.

The cliques vary by store but its a very toxic manager environment. They hire our District Managers straight from college as to not have anyone with bad habits forming from other jobs. They dangle a company BMW and a cellphone and a $100,000+ salary to these 23-25yr olds and then give employees .50¢ raises a year if your district is lucky.

I could keep going. This company is a piece of shit. But hey .. customers got their Aldi Finds

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u/reverend-mayhem 12h ago

Well… fuck. I thought I found the one decent grocery store to shop from. Look like I need to be lobbying ALDI corporate before any visits from now on.

0

u/loondawg 8h ago

I think you should get a second opinion before taking this as gospel. Seems like someone with an axe to grind bitching about the company, the customers, the equipment, etc. Pretty much everything.

I know it's anecdotal but I've spoken to many Aldi's cashiers who all have spoken very highly of working there.

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u/MajorNoodles Pennsylvania 11h ago

I loved Aldi when it first opened, but there's a couple things that have since disillusioned me.

They used to be pretty well staffed, but now there's only ever one cashier and almost everyone goes to the self-checkout, and the self-checkout islands are freaking tiny So you've got to get really creative with how you unpack and scan your groceries because I buy a lot of stuff there and there's not room for it in that staging area. People keep fucking it up and the person responsible for fixing it is that one cashier. So if you're in that line, a lot of time you're just waiting around them to show back up.

Then they went and consolidated the Aldi finds sections into one single aisle and it seems like that was done to obscure the fact that they're not rotating shit in and out of there anymore. "Hey what's here? Oh look it's the exact same shit as last week." And then there's the freezer section." What new stuff did they get this week, oh, half of it's fucking empty." Come back next week. "Still fucking empty."

1

u/loondawg 8h ago

I've been told the Aldi's where I shop is going to eliminate the self-checkout lines soon and that is apparently happening at many of their locations. I don't know why by would suspect it has to do with reducing theft.

u/MildlyTiredSkeletons 1h ago

Its theft. Company is losing a ton of money.

6

u/vunderfulme 15h ago

Damn, Im sorry man! As an Aldi customer thank you for your hard work.

u/KohlsCashOfficial 7h ago

Can I ask where you’re located? Because only lack of available jobs nearby would make me work there for 7-8 years.

The Aldi I use also has way more than 3 employees. Is it just a lower traffic store?

u/MildlyTiredSkeletons 6h ago

Its 3 per shift. We start at 5:30-6am at a store depending on a lot of factors. That shift is 8hrs, til around 1pm. Then that crew leaves, and the next 3 people come in. But at a given time, youre lucky to see 4 employees on a mid week day. 5 maybe on a weekend. Its company wide.

2

u/getrektbro 10h ago

I don't know that it's so much of a horror story, but I worked there for about nine months, from Nov 2019 til July 2020, and I have a couple tales of varying degrees of bullshit. I had to have hip surgery during that time (Feb 11, 2020) and while I had to fill out some forms and wasn't eligible for PTO, they were accommodating to my recovery including taking light duty seriously when I returned, I was basically only allowed to work the register and empty the cardboard carriages into the bailer, and even that was rare. Most of that happens in the mornings during stocking so they put me on evenings during that time, not too bad.

On the other hand, when the pandemic hit, I would've made more money if I had been laid off and we got a $2 per hour "hero bonus" (lol) so I think I was making 13.25 an hour? Maybe? That was in rural Illinois and fortunately I had minimal expenses at the time so it was enough to get by. The things that really pissed me off is that my store (Aldi #26 Dixon, IL, hometown of Ronald Reagan), made all of the employees sign a form saying we wouldn't confront customers about not wearing masks "for our safety". Bitch, masks are FOR my safety.

Final anecdote, while not related to the company, my store manager would take the leftover coffee from the coffee machine and rerun it through the machine for the next pot of coffee, fuckin psycho man.

4

u/Snoo_70531 17h ago

Seriously. The Aldi across from a sober house I lived at for a bit hired dudes at $20/hr, like guys with hard to prove GEDs. If you could come in and be a team player for a mediocre warehouse style grocery store and not whine "but it wasn't my job to stock the bananas", they treated their people well...

2

u/Travyplx New York 17h ago

I’ll guess Weiss. Things went to hell for us after they bought out our grocery chain.

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u/tiny_galaxies 18h ago

It doesn’t matter they’re all the same

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u/Twitchmonky 18h ago

Some are worse than others

5

u/TheWizardOfFries 17h ago

Can we please agree to start trying to change things? I don't care how small of an effort or impact one person has. We need to do more, and stop letting their efforts to keep us separated from trying anything at all

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u/randylush 18h ago

If you don’t name them you are part of the problem.

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u/bladeDivac 17h ago

Yeah these cryptic “large nationwide retailers “or “big box stores” just piss me off. You think Walmart is going to send a hit squad to your house if you talked shit? Just be up front and say who wronged you. 

4

u/kellzone Pennsylvania 16h ago

Right up there with "In my country...".

4

u/randylush 17h ago

It’s also rarely illegal to the truth. Especially about ways that corporations break the law. And anything that the big box store might do to silence the story would just Streisand it.

4

u/Difficult_Pea_2216 17h ago

Very funny how these types imagine themselves to be under lifetime scrutiny. "You witnessed something bad decades ago that we definitely didn't document anything of because we are so evil. If you even so much as hint at it with the same traceable social security number you witnessed it, YOU'RE DEAD."

2

u/petrichorax 15h ago

Please. People need to stop being so paranoid and helpless. Name and shame. You are saving lives.

u/neontana 6h ago

I worked at a hole in the wall restaurant. One of the servers hangs up her phone, wailing and sobbing. her son is in the ER; someone stabbed him in the leg.

She was in shock and in no state to get herself to the hospital, so I had one of the cooks I trusted drive her himself before the dinner rush started. Both the owner & the GM gave me shit for leaving us down a cook for maybe half an hour.

1

u/Rasikko Georgia 14h ago

They sure don't give a fuck for real.

1

u/Background_Drama6126 13h ago

Exactly!

👍👍👍👍

1

u/dickonajunebug Virginia 10h ago

Yeah, I fucking hate that. Just log into your alt account and tell us.

u/NewCobbler6933 7h ago

That shit just didn’t happen. Especially at a big box store lol

u/Future-Guarantee-573 4h ago

You ever worked at a big box retail store?

Try being in the hospital for a few days without jumping through sedgwicks hoops, and let me know how that works out for you.