Time for my quarterly “ethics in capitalism” work training. Struggling with the question: is it ethical or unethical to pour coffee grounds on extra bread at the end of your shift so homeless people can’t eat it?
Comments
Log in with your Bluesky account to leave a comment
Unethical, put left over food for sale for people to bid on in an app that sells leftovers at a discount and add extra task to employees to make them feel empowered
Capitalism is imposing tariffs capriciously and punitively so you can tax consumption and move that money into a slush fund for illegal (i.e., without Congressional oversight) uses.
i worked at a dunks once and we'd get in trouble for giving away food even if it was gonna get thrown out anyway, so when i closed i'd always put the leftover pastries in a clean trash bag and leave it next to the dumpster
Oh god. Working at panera it was awful having to throw out alllll that bread and pastries. Me and some of the other workers took a bunch to share to neighbors and stuff despite it being against policy. And only if the manager was okay with it. But fuck that coffee ground shit sounds extra awful
Comments
Ignore capitalist ethics. Make the bread edible.
questionin what's behind a heartbeat
Feeding the hungry is the priority
those that believe are in majority
yachts are backdrops for homeless camps
yet we hang basic rights from street lamps
I've had enough of oligarchs
acting like wealth is Noah's Ark.
#resist
Not give it away to people who might be hungry, mind you, you pay five bucks for the privilege of their dumpster.
I had no money and was looking for food to eat and they paywalled food trash. We're fucked.
What the fuck is going on, private equity?