This page belongs to:

Matt Ehrmann





summary of things to come.
alienation in the workplace.

My topic is alienation in the workplace. This is not just physical alienation which I speak of, but in some cases, an alienation of human rights. The following is an outline with some examples of alienation, and a few brief comments. Coffee will be served directly following.

1) What a crappy job takes away from a person.

A. Satisfaction of completion. If a worker is just a cog in the machine, he or she would not be able to look at the finished product and say "hey, I made that. The most this worker could say would be,"hey, I sewed that one button on that shirt. Four thousand times." Pride is important to people, and feeling unproductive can damage that pride, even though the workers are not the ones who imposed these conditions upon themselves.


B. The camaraderie one experiences in the workplace. If you work at Mcdonalds, there would not be much time to enjoy the company of your co-workers, and still respond to the series of dings and buzzes reminding you that every second counts. The hamburger game is no joke, kid. It used to be that one would come into work, have a cup of coffee, chat with the guys (or girls), and ease pleasantly into the workday. Now one must come in, clock in, and start working until they take their ten minute break four hours later.


C. Natural human conversation and interaction. If you have a job where time is a major factor, there is obviously no time to shoot the shit with the customer. I noticed this especially in Garson's chapter about airline reservation agents. When the phone rings on their end, the clock starts. Pick it up within 12 seconds, act cheery, get the customer to drop some cash, and get off the phone, in two minutes or less. The whole conversation is basically scripted. It is a prepackaged action. Were I an employee, I would have reservations about not giving the customer all the help and information they needed, while still trying to get them to spend their money. It is not fair to ask workers to compromise themselves or their ethics in the name of efficiency.


D. If you work at an idiot-proof job, people will think you are an idiot, along with all of your dope smoking, idiot co workers. If someone is standing at a cash register with no numbers, but little pictures of hamburgers and drinks, no matter how smart they are, people will not give them the respect they deserve. Mcdonalds does not have a different cash register for their smart employees, or name tags that say "Hi, I'm Bob. I graduated from college, and am working here because of a depressed job market." The company has no interest in making it a better place to work. They have no interest in making their employees feel better. They do know, however, that they will never run out idiots to hire.


E. How a bad job can take over your life. When Mr. low paid comes home at night, he will be tired, irritable, and pissed at the various forces which have him trapped. Since he cannot change his situation, his anger will be released in other ways. These ways could include blowing up at wife, kids, roommates, etc. He is so frustrated, that it does not occur to him that these people have nothing to do with his situation. His low paying job has thus alienated him from his right to have a normal life outside of work, and normal human interaction with those he sees on his free time. When he is at work, he thinks about leaving. When he is off, he can only dread going back. Bad jobs also lead to drinking and drugs. If one hates their job, they will want to do whatever they can to forget about it the minute they possibly can. Leave work, go to the bar, bitch about life, go to sleep. Next morning, back to work. Some people probably blow their whole paycheck on ways to forget their job, thus defeating the point of working altogether.


2) The desire to right vs. the duty to be efficient.

1986: "The doctor would like for you to stay for a week or so, just so we can keep an eye on your recuperation"

Result: Patient stays until doctor releases them.

1996: "The doctor would like to run these particular tests on you. It's probably nothing, but better safe than sorry."

Result: The HMO only allows you to stay for two days for this procedure. Your insurance will not cover those tests. If you want them, you will have to pay for them. Doctors will be penalized if they disobey the insurance companys lists of ailment-treatment rules.


Health care is now being run by the insurance companies, thus compromising care for profit. Medical decisions should be made by a doctor who is confident that the hospital will back whatever diagnosis he comes to. Insurance companies are alienating health care professionals from their duty to give the most thorough care they can. This is what they were trained to do in med school. Compromised care goes against the Hippocratic oath, which every health care professional has taken. It must be very frustrating to have those who know less than you controlling your actions, especially regarding something as important as peopleºs lives


Alienation from the true importance of things.


Large corporations rarely value people. The companies will try and find out all their is to know about you, but only to find the most effective way to get advertising of some sort in your hands. They are like private detectives, determined to find a way to get to you, somehow. If you are home all day, some data gathering service probably knows this, thus making you a target for telemarketing. If you are a TV head, you will see numerous avenues in which to part with your money, right in your own living room. There should be a law against trying to sell people things which they donºt need, and didnt ask for in the first place. Punishable by death with a spoon.


Stop thief! How corporate sponsorships have taken the glory out of sports.

Wander back to 92 for a minute, would you? The Dream Teamæ have just swept the Olympics, undefeated, bringing a tremendous amount of national pride to us folks in the states. Spirits were high, but after examining the dirty nature of things to come, maybe it was just the athletes who were. The presentation of the gold medal for excellence in athletics is without a doubt the highest honor that can be bestowed on an athlete. One would think that someone about to get this award would be in a state of unbelievable glee, but this was not so. The plot thickens


The Beaverton Connection

It was learned that Reebok had paid a considerable sum to have their warm-up suits on the athletes when they accepted their medals, and since many of the members of the dream team were sponsored by Nike, this was not good news. Instead of just wearing the suits, these players, backed by Nike, caused a very childish scene. The arguing went back and forth, and finally it was decided by the Nike players that while they had to wear these warm-up suits, their was nothing stopping them from casually dangling an arm in front of the Reebok logo while on the stand. Very 3rd grade. Heaven forbid that somebody might actually see Michael Jordan with something that was not a selling point. I feel that these men unknowingly robbed themselves of the glory of being the best, and were encouraged to do so by sponsors who felt that the solar system would collapse if their corporate logo was not present at this hallowed event. It is obvious where the priorities lie.

What these companies are doing is shifting the importance from the event to the accompanying product. Bud Bowl is a prime example. They turned a beer ad into a sensational festival of graphics and hype, which was visually more exciting than the Super Bowl itself. The companies do not respect you enough to just let you watch the game. They have to get you however they can, which could be hyping up a fictional football game between beer bottles.


Alienation from the true importance of things is not reserved for advertisers, however. Take a look at any modern political race for office. In this, the era of television, politics has been reduced to mudslinging. Bill Clinton smoked pot once. I was hearing this before I ever heard anything about his political stance. The goal of the modern candidate is to create enough moral question in the minds of the voters to disqualify their opponent, while hyping up their own values.{read"bullshit"}


Enough

Alienation in the workplace. What needs to be done about it will never be done unless modern business theory does a Dukes of Hazardesque 180 degree turn. The way companies are run affords no luxuries for employees. I am not trying to generalize, however. Iºm sure there are a few companies who really do care, but not many. In the fast paced world of big biz, it is all about cost cutting, deskilling, and increasing production. If this means you pay workers less, then that is just an unfortunateæ necessity. I went to the Nike world headquarters last Tuesday, and talked to one of their production employees. He said that Nike will no longer be making shoes in China, because the workers they have been exploiting for so long have finally wisened up, and refuse to work for what Nike was paying them. They are moving factories to places like Vietnam, and Bali. There are no morals in business anymore. You just have to be willing to do what the other guy wont, which isn't much anymore. {See Outsourcing & Nike}


Some sites of interest to this issue...

Disgruntled
poor treatment of workers
Funny Disgruntled postal worker page
Anti-Work

Comics and images Page

Created by ehrmann@lclark.edu
Updated: 1-Aug-95
Expires: 1-Dec-99