Amazon warehouse workers attempt to commit suicide on the job due to …

archived 13 Apr 2019 03:17:08 UTC
Close

Hmmm, you are using a Gmail.com email address...

Google has declared war on the independent media and has begun blocking emails from NaturalNews from getting to our readers. We recommend GoodGopher.com as a free, uncensored email receiving service, or ProtonMail.com as a free, encrypted email send and receive service.

Amazon warehouse workers attempt to commit suicide on the job due to atrocious “slave-like” work conditions

0Views
Image: Amazon warehouse workers attempt to commit suicide on the job due to atrocious “slave-like” work conditions

(Natural News) You might have a few complaints about your job, but has it ever made you want to end your life? Not long ago, horror stories emerged of workers at Amazon warehouses being seriously overworked and having to urinate in bottles to meet their quotas. While Amazon tried to brush these off as isolated incidents, it’s becoming more difficult for them to deny that there is a serious problem with their working environment – and it’s driving people to take their own lives.
A recent investigation revealed that emergency services were called on at least 189 occasions for attempts at suicide, suicidal thoughts, and other types of mental health episodes at Amazon warehouses during a five-year period. The incidents occurred at 46 different Amazon warehouses across 17 states. The accounts are troubling, with 911 calls detailing people trying to cut and kill themselves.
Workers have told the press that breakdowns are a common occurrence at warehouses. Investigative journalist James Bloodworth, who worked undercover at a U.K. Amazon warehouse, told Business Insider that the atmosphere was how he imagined prison must feel. Dozens of workers interviewed by the publication reported having to work long shifts that caused physical pain.
He reported that some of the 700,000-square-foot facility’s 1200 workers had to take a 10-minute, quarter-mile trek to the two toilets situated on the ground floor. A fear of being reprimanded for wasting time on the journey to the restroom prompted many of them to urinate in bottles and garbage cans. He also said workers only get 15 to 20 minutes for lunch in 10.5-hour work days.
100% organic essential oil sets now available for your home and personal care, including Rosemary, Oregano, Eucalyptus, Tea Tree, Clary Sage and more, all 100% organic and laboratory tested for safety. A multitude of uses, from stress reduction to topical first aid. See the complete listing here, and help support this news site.
Last year, Amazon raised the minimum wage it offers workers to $15 per hour following pressure from lawmakers and labor groups. However, the conditions at its warehouses have yet to improve, according to those who work there.

Workers trying to cut themselves with box cutters, writing suicide notes

One 41-year-old worker told The Daily Beast that the “crack the whip” atmosphere there left him suicidal, telling a security guard he was going to drive his car off a cliff after months of at-work misery. He said he ended up on a 72-hour hold in a psych ward over the issues caused by the working environment. A man who worked at the same facility did take his life after working 280 hours in five weeks.
In one emergency call that has come to light, a worker called to say an employee was trying to leave the building to kill herself and asked for medical help. Another employee called for help after a worker was found with a suicide note to her children. On another occasion, an Amazon worker asked for EMS to come for a suicidal employee who attempted to cut himself several times with a box cutter at work.
This isn’t the first time we’ve heard about the horrific working conditions at Amazon. In 2011, reports emerged that the company hired ambulance crews to wait outside on hot days for workers who experienced problems related to the heat as they tried to keep up with demanding production requirements. A local ER doctor who had treated some employees for heat stress actually reported it as an “unsafe environment” to OSHA, who stepped in and gave them corrective steps.
A year later, the Seattle Times reported that the underpaid, overworked employees at a warehouse in Campbellsville said they were pressured to manage their injuries in ways that wouldn’t trigger an OSHA report – for example, by claiming to medical personnel that their workplace injuries were actually due to pre-existing conditions. One worker said certain doctors refused to work with them because their managers would call them and argue with them.
The next time you’re marveling at how quickly and cheaply Amazon can deliver goods to your door, keep in mind how much all that “efficiency” is costing the people who work there and their loved ones.
 Sources for this article include:
0Views

Receive Our Free Email Newsletter
Get independent news alerts on natural cures, food lab tests, cannabis medicine, science, robotics, drones, privacy and more.

More news on Amazon



Disqus

Sorry, the browser you are using is not currently supported. Disqus actively supports the following browsers:
This page is forcing your browser to use legacy mode, which is not compatible with Disqus. Please see our troubleshooting guide to get more information about this error.
We were unable to load Disqus. If you are a moderator please see our troubleshooting guide.
Ngallendou Dièye • 4 weeks ago
No, no. If you do not like to work, then just walk away. Go home, switch on your flat-screen TV and take a nap. Next day, open your phone, go on line and re-activate your welfare payments.

Take Action: Support Natural News by linking to this article from your website

Permalink to this article:
Embed article link: (copy HTML code below):
Reprinting this article:
Non-commercial use OK, cite NaturalNews.com with clickable link.
Follow Natural News on Steemit, MeWe, and GAB
Most Viewed Articles
Today
Week
Month
Year
Reference Information
Science.NaturalNews.com
Conduct powerful scientific research in mere seconds for your book, blog, website article or news report.
NaturalPedia.com
A free online encyclopedia of natural health knowledge from the industry's top authors and writers.
HealingFoodReference.com
A free public service to promote health freedom and empower consumers with information about the healing power of foods.
HerbReference.com
A free public service to promote health freedom and empower consumers with information about the healing power of herbs.
SupplementReference.com
A free public service to promote health freedom and empower consumers with information about the healing power of supplements.
NutrientReference.com
A free public service to promote health freedom and empower consumers with information about the healing power of nutrients.
HonestFoodGuide.org
This free to download food guide offers genuine nutritional information, not watered-down information designed to boost the sale of milk, beef and grains.

Get alerted on heavy metals and pesticide test results for foods and supplements

Natural News is about to begin releasing lab test results for off-the-shelf food, supplement and pet food products, covering heavy metals, nutritive minerals, pesticides and herbicides. These details will be released exclusively to Natural News email newsletter subscribers (FREE) and will NOT be publicly posted on the website. To be alerted, join our free email newsletter now, and watch for lab test results in the weeks ahead.
Enter your email address below to subscribe to our email announcement list (but don't use gmail). Your privacy is protected and you can unsubscribe at any time. If you don't join our email list, you may never see our valuable content again via Facebook, Google or YouTube. CENSORSHIP has now reached EXTREME levels across the 'net. The truth is being suffocated. Subscribe now if you want to escape the delusional bubble of false reality being pushed by Google and Facebook.
Once you click subscribe, we will send you an email asking you to confirm your free subscription.

Amazon warehouse workers attempt to commit suicide on the job due to atrocious “slave-like” work conditions

Image: Amazon warehouse workers attempt to commit suicide on the job due to atrocious “slave-like” work conditions
(Natural News) You might have a few complaints about your job, but has it ever made you want to end your life? Not long ago, horror stories emerged of workers at Amazon warehouses being seriously overworked and having to urinate in bottles to meet their quotas. While Amazon tried to brush these off as isolated incidents, it’s becoming more difficult for them to deny that there is a serious problem with their working environment – and it’s driving people to take their own lives.
A recent investigation revealed that emergency services were called on at least 189 occasions for attempts at suicide, suicidal thoughts, and other types of mental health episodes at Amazon warehouses during a five-year period. The incidents occurred at 46 different Amazon warehouses across 17 states. The accounts are troubling, with 911 calls detailing people trying to cut and kill themselves.
Workers have told the press that breakdowns are a common occurrence at warehouses. Investigative journalist James Bloodworth, who worked undercover at a U.K. Amazon warehouse, told Business Insider that the atmosphere was how he imagined prison must feel. Dozens of workers interviewed by the publication reported having to work long shifts that caused physical pain.
He reported that some of the 700,000-square-foot facility’s 1200 workers had to take a 10-minute, quarter-mile trek to the two toilets situated on the ground floor. A fear of being reprimanded for wasting time on the journey to the restroom prompted many of them to urinate in bottles and garbage cans. He also said workers only get 15 to 20 minutes for lunch in 10.5-hour work days.
100% organic essential oil sets now available for your home and personal care, including Rosemary, Oregano, Eucalyptus, Tea Tree, Clary Sage and more, all 100% organic and laboratory tested for safety. A multitude of uses, from stress reduction to topical first aid. See the complete listing here, and help support this news site.
Last year, Amazon raised the minimum wage it offers workers to $15 per hour following pressure from lawmakers and labor groups. However, the conditions at its warehouses have yet to improve, according to those who work there.

Workers trying to cut themselves with box cutters, writing suicide notes

One 41-year-old worker told The Daily Beast that the “crack the whip” atmosphere there left him suicidal, telling a security guard he was going to drive his car off a cliff after months of at-work misery. He said he ended up on a 72-hour hold in a psych ward over the issues caused by the working environment. A man who worked at the same facility did take his life after working 280 hours in five weeks.
In one emergency call that has come to light, a worker called to say an employee was trying to leave the building to kill herself and asked for medical help. Another employee called for help after a worker was found with a suicide note to her children. On another occasion, an Amazon worker asked for EMS to come for a suicidal employee who attempted to cut himself several times with a box cutter at work.
This isn’t the first time we’ve heard about the horrific working conditions at Amazon. In 2011, reports emerged that the company hired ambulance crews to wait outside on hot days for workers who experienced problems related to the heat as they tried to keep up with demanding production requirements. A local ER doctor who had treated some employees for heat stress actually reported it as an “unsafe environment” to OSHA, who stepped in and gave them corrective steps.
A year later, the Seattle Times reported that the underpaid, overworked employees at a warehouse in Campbellsville said they were pressured to manage their injuries in ways that wouldn’t trigger an OSHA report – for example, by claiming to medical personnel that their workplace injuries were actually due to pre-existing conditions. One worker said certain doctors refused to work with them because their managers would call them and argue with them.
The next time you’re marveling at how quickly and cheaply Amazon can deliver goods to your door, keep in mind how much all that “efficiency” is costing the people who work there and their loved ones.
 Sources for this article include:
Thanks for sharing!
Facebook Twitter Email Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Gmail Telegram Pocket Mix Tumblr Amazon Wish List AOL Mail Balatarin BibSonomy Bitty Browser Blinklist Blogger BlogMarks Bookmarks.fr Box.net Buffer Care2 News CiteULike Copy Link Design Float Diary.Ru Diaspora Digg Diigo Douban Draugiem DZone Evernote Facebook Messenger Fark Flipboard Folkd Google Bookmarks Google Classroom Hacker News Hatena Houzz Instapaper Kakao Kik Kindle It Known Line LiveJournal Mail.Ru Mastodon Mendeley Meneame MeWe Mixi MySpace Netvouz Odnoklassniki Outlook.com Papaly Pinboard Plurk Print PrintFriendly Protopage Bookmarks Pusha Qzone Rediff MyPage Refind Renren Sina Weibo SiteJot Skype Slashdot SMS StockTwits Svejo Symbaloo Bookmarks Threema Trello Tuenti Twiddla TypePad Post Viadeo Viber VK Wanelo WeChat WordPress Wykop XING Yahoo Mail Yoolink Yummly
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%