When Marisa Fernández lost her husband to cancer a few years ago, her employers at the Eroski hypermarket went, she says, “above and beyond to help me through the dark days afterwards, rejigging my timetable and giving me time off when I couldn’t face coming in.”

She had a chance to return the favour recently when the store, in Arrasate-Mondragón in Spain’s Basque Country, was undergoing renovations. Fernández, 58, who started on the cashier desk 34 years ago, and now manages the store’s non-food section, volunteered to work extra shifts over the weekend along with her colleagues to ensure everything was ready for Monday morning. “It’s not just me. Everyone is ready to go the extra mile,” she says.

Such harmonious employer-worker relations are the stuff of corporate dreams, and they are no accident here: the Eroski retail chain is part of Mondragón Corporation, the largest industrial co-op in the world. As a fully signed-up member, Fernández co-owns part of the supermarket chain that also employs her. “It feels like mine,” she says. “We work hard, but it’s a totally different feeling from working for someone else.”

  • FartsWithAnAccent
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    5423 days ago

    American here: A ton of us will call all sorts of shit communism out of ignorance because our public education system got gutted by a bunch of rich assholes.

      • @[email protected]
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        723 days ago

        We regulate capitalism with socialist constructs. That’s why you don’t get billed from a firefighter after a rescue, or why you pay school taxes if you own property, regardless of having children in school.

          • @[email protected]
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            723 days ago

            I understand the ownership aspect of pure socialism, and its contrast to capitalism. That doesn’t change the fact that roads, schools, and police and fire departments are socialized through taxation. It’s not socialism, but a socialist construct.