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dimva | 3 years ago
That being said, they should definitely prosecute wage theft much more than they are now. Maybe the fear of jail time if wage theft were actually prosecuted a few times would deter most other potential wage thieves.
dimva | 3 years ago
That being said, they should definitely prosecute wage theft much more than they are now. Maybe the fear of jail time if wage theft were actually prosecuted a few times would deter most other potential wage thieves.
burkaman|3 years ago
Also, wage theft seems to be a much simpler thing to prosecute. You don't have to investigate the owners of anonymous websites or track down any foreign nationals, just show up to a job site, see how long people are working, see how much they're paid, and prosecute if the numbers don't match. Obviously I'm exaggerating, but it's a much more tangible, sort of "old-fashioned" crime, one I would imagine the FBI is pretty good at solving.
DoingIsLearning|3 years ago
Yes, and of those there are a handful doing it to millions of employees. Wage theft is not a few night shifts rounded off at SMEs. Plenty of traded companies doing it, no reason why you cannot target low numbers of big fish.
JumpCrisscross|3 years ago
Has someone credibly identified them?
1letterunixname|3 years ago
WeylandYutani|3 years ago
Western Europe is not much different than Quatar in that respect only nobody cares.
kwhitefoot|3 years ago
loloquwowndueo|3 years ago
tomp|3 years ago
If you genuinely believe that, why don't you move to Qatar?
retconn|3 years ago