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McDonalds [The Master]: McJobs for Slaves
by
max blunt
at 12:07PM (CEST) on May 27, 2007 | Permanent Link
| Cosmos
"McJob" is defined as a low-paying
menial job with no opportunities
In the minds of the corporate think modifiers,
there is an unfair and patently wrong meaning
attached to the dignified and opportunity-filled
enterprise experience that flipping burgers
at McDonalds actually is Why does McJob leave a bad taste
in big business's mouth?
Concern for employee morale?
Hey, give them a raise. Let a union be formed
No, the problem is brand name and image:
both mean money, and the struggle over it
is a matter of corporate profits
The class struggle and the battle of ideas:
you couldn't get a better example of itEveryone knows what a McJob is. It is exactly what the Oxford English Dictionary says:
"An unstimulating, low-paid job with few prospects, esp one created by the expansion of the service sector."
Now McDonald's is trying to get the word removed or re-defined by putting up some patsy MPs to sign an early day motion, and organising a petition and an open letter signed mainly by other service employers and some who have taken the McShilling at some time or another.
Oddly enough, they are not protesting - as perhaps they might - at the rubbishing of their brand name.
Instead the McMuffins who have signed the letter claim to be protesting on behalf of the company's 67,000 employees who, they say, are being insulted and demeaned by the derogatory word (though it's not the people but the work and pay that "McJob" traduces).
All this is have-a-nice-day newspeak, pretending that changing words changes the reality.
Should the OED re-define a McJob as a "challenging, starter-job on the entry-level ladder to success"? The government itself is inclined to mis-describe dead-end jobs as "entry-level". - Polly Toynbee McDonald's: Class Struggle and the Battle of Ideas
If anyone ever doubted there was an ideological struggle, a battle of ideas afoot in the world today, a story in this morning's news might give them reason for pause.
McDonalds's corporation apparently has launched a new campaign directed at the folks who produce the Oxford dictionary to get them to change the definition of the word McJob.
"McJob" is defined as a low-paying menial job with no opportunities. In the minds of the corporate think modifiers, there is an unfair and patently wrong meaning attached to the dignified and opportunity filled enterprise brimming experience that flipping burgers at McDonalds actually is.
That the burger and fry transnational is a union busting, minimum wage paying, and no benefits providing enterprise is apparently lost on company executives.
McDonald's concern apparently run's deep, as this is not the first time they have challenged the definition of McJob.
In 2003 they attempted to get Merriam-Webster to do the same thing and even threatened to sue, because McJob is similar to MCJOBS, a training program for the disabled and mentally challenged.
Then according to a CNN story, McDonald's spokespersons said the definition was a "slap in the face" to the 12 million employees who work in the restaurant industry.
It seems this face slapping has been occurring for about 15 years when dictionaries first began using the term. McJob is similarly defined by Webster's, American Heritage dictionary and Oxford according to the 2003 CNN report. At that time Merriam-Webster decided to stand firm. CNN reported:
"For more that 17 years 'McJob' has been used as we are defining it in a broad range of publications," the company said, citing everything from The New York Times and Rolling Stone to newspapers in South Africa and Australia.
The widespread common usage and definition of McJob is a class phenomenon and is good example of how working-class life and experience influences mass consciousness.
Clearly this is no small matter as McDonald's campaign suggests. Why do they care?
Why does McJob leave a bad taste in big business's mouth? Concern for employee morale? Hey, give them a raise. Let a union be formed.
No, the problem is brand name and image: both mean money, and the struggle over it is a matter of corporate profits.
The class struggle and the battle of ideas: you couldn't get a better example of it. Joe Sims @ PA
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