If you had been at the hearing that day, then you probably would have fainted at what I told the Amazon representative right to his face. I honestly thought that the judge in that hearing was going to throw me out of the place, but, thankfully, she didn't because she saw for herself not only how corrupt the Amazon representative was, but also how corrupt other Amazon managers were for their own false documentation that they equipped this representative with. BELIEVE ME, I repeatedly told him that he was bold-faced liar who should be ashamed of himself and that the other managers who lied in his report were equally as corrupt. It was after this that Amazon told me that I could never work for them again, so they apparently got my message.
Since then, they've repeatedly begged me (a slight exaggeration) to come and work for them again, so I don't know what's going through their minds. My best guess is that they have no morals whatsoever, and that they're simply motivated by money.
It's a huge corporation that usually doesn't know what it is doing.
Petty, fiefdom tyrants trying to look good for an unconcerned higher ups is usually the case.
They are too big to be that specifically evil.
BUT
We do have a bank here that writes contracts that aren't worth the paper they are written on. Their legal team is always busy. You have to bring a lawsuit in order to get them to perform a contract. And then sue them more for egregiously interfering with it. They have a well worn path to the courtrooms. Everyone knows them well... except for the new people in town.
Everyone else knows their reputation. And as a result their buildings remain largely empty. Their in house real estate firm is another joke. They don't know what they are doing either most of the time.
It's not personal...they are incompetent with everything and everyone.
There's a guy in my Sunday School class that did legal work for them...he quit and went elsewhere. Lawyers try to keep things hush hush...but word still leaks out.
80%+ of all business failures are due to bad management but blamed on the workforce 99% of the time.
And often...account receivable/payable issues are usually caused by a "kid in a cubicle" not knowing or caring about doing their job with any precision.
High turnover rates are a big big clue that something is wrong. Overzealous staff recruiting is a sign of that.
Usually meaning that it's systemic.
If some company is actively recruiting all the time there is something wrong with the workplace. Could be anything from low wages to bad management or both.