"We just can't find employees that want to work" [said by CEOs paying poverty wages]
Symbol KR
In a new survey of 36,000 Kroger hourly workers in Colorado, Washington, and California, 42% of respondents said they relied on borrowing money from friends or family to pay for basic needs over the last year, 34% said they cut portion sizes or skipped meals because they couldn't afford food, and 14% said they were homeless. Some of Kroger's hourly employees resorted to collecting aluminum cans to help pay their rent.
Kroger is the country’s largest grocery chain, where senior executives each made $5 million or more in 2020, with CEO Rodney McMullen earning $22 million, nearly double his 2018 pay.
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/al ... gc#4ldqpgc
"The Real Threat To Democracy Is Corrupting Wealth Inequality"
Kleptocracy
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/rea ... inequality