Black Friday is the perfect American holiday. Originally called such by the retail workers bracing for the worst part of the shopping season and what it brought out in the people they had to serve, stripped of its meaning, renamed and rebranded as something to celebrate, gleefully ignoring the irony.
A "holiday" where the culture is consumerism. A false day. A day by an actual holiday, that ruins the real one.
a day that if you celebrate it as they intend, actually ruins the day of the people who created it! A day where the ones who thought it up HAVE to work. I could go on, but I'm just repeating myself. It's just too on the nose.
We don't even have Thanksgiving in the UK, but we somehow imported Black Friday. It lasts all fucking month and the prices are about what they are in any other sale.
There are benefits for those that can avoid getting sucked into the consumerism.
We usually look for things we need (for the house, the dogs, etc.) and compare to normal price and sales during the year. Anything on its deepest discount during Black Friday sales we buy, and in large quantities to stretch our money.
For example, I just bought a bunch of 12”bully sticks for ~$3.50/each and which is better than any other time of the year.
We also like to shop the post holiday clearance, especially the shelf stable food items.
The best way to ‘celebrate’ in my opinion is to identify the loss leaders stores have to draw people in and only buy those. Take advantage of the corporations.
Originally called such by the retail workers bracing for the worst part of the shopping season and what it brought out in the people they had to serve
This stuck out at me, because I think a lot of us know the narrative of why we think it's called Black Friday, eg: the day the companies go from "red" to "black," which in accounting terms means when they become profitable.
Turns out, that's scam and the source linked actually suggests that there is a little more to it.
Lol I hope they do it close to a facility I used to work at. Amazon fucking sucks, they give you a nigh impossible box packing rate to do. Get this: 250 singular packed boxes in one hour. I barely made it above 120 an hour. It's Soo unrealisticly high it just burns you out. I asked to be transferred back to the ship dock, but I got turned away. They told me if I can't make it to 250 an hour for a while month then I can go back to the ship dock. I saw what they were doing. They put me in a high demand area to get me burnt out and leave. Idk why tho, maybe they were bringing in more temp workers. Considering they were making the temps work at the inbound side. I wouldn't be surprised if they got the temps to do every job. Oh man..
The robots at my facility moved shelves of product around a caged grid system for quick inventory and holdover until it gets packed by a person manning a station at the grid. It flashes a projector light on which slot to grab from, you scan it, and the robot drives away with the shelf. There's a robot arm too, but it's job is to just stack plastic totes in a 3x3 stack on a pallet, then a conveyor pushes the full ones to the side
I'm way too fucking tired to search for a source, but there was some news a while back that Amazon was concerned that they would literally turnover to the point where everyone who was willing to work for them would and their practices would turn them over and they'd run out of workers.
I wish the strike was larger and that it had sympathy strikers like it does in Sweden where even harbourbdockwrs and the post office joins in on the strikes against Tesla
Black Friday in store traffic has been dropping for years in the States. Mostly because of extended online sales weeks before Black Friday, and consumers getting wise to the fact stores raise prices in the preceding weeks so they can mark prices down around Black Friday. Not sure what it’s like in the UK now, but I hope it’s also in decline. Oddly enough, the only people I personally know here in the US going shopping today are my family that are UK citizens.
It is wholly negative, and I develop automation and AI stuff for a living. The issue is that as automation accelerates, population growth will still be exponential as it has always been. That means fewer and fewer workers needed while the population continues to explode. Without obscenely massive reforms to society and law, we are careening towards a social and economic collapse the likes of which we have contemplated. Stop for a second and think what just Amazon fully automatic packing centers would mean. A few million people are working in those facilities. What happens when they are all fired because Amazon automates their jobs? There are moved to automate fast food production as well. Burger flipping robots already exist. Cashiers are being replaced with apps and kiosks in every McDonald's. Those jobs make up the bottom rung in the economic chain.
In the US, 60% of the population already lives below the realistic poverty line (not the legal one, because that one is a joke). What happen a when you unemployed > 2% of the entire population in less than a year? That isn't the working-age adult population, that is all of us. At the same time, cut social safety nets, remove consumer protections, and deregulate rent.
I am not trying to be a doomsayer, I am just realistically looking at the whole of the trajectories of our society. Unfortunately, those trajectories carry us over a rather dystopian cliff. Tell me you honestly believe that a realistic and functional UBI will ever happen, even when there are 5 employees to every job, so 80% of us are finctionally incapable of obtaining gainful employment?