Hate to break it to you but "zero workers' rights" absolutely IS a feature of capitalism, as you maximize profit and minimize costs at the expense of everything else.
Workers' rights are social policies which didn't come out of nowhere but sprung up mostly in post-WW1 and post-WW2 times when communist and socialist moves were becoming more and more popular with the labor class due to poor living and working conditions following the destructive wars, so the owner class, in Europe at least, along with governments, had to make concessions on working time, vacation days, sick pay, and implement public pensions, public healthcare, stuff which didn't really exists before, in order to prevent more riots and strikes and have the social stability to start rebuilding the nation.
The US didn't, firstly because of strong anti-communist movements and the red scare propaganda, despite socialist-labor movements existing there as well(see Oppenheimer), and secondly because the post-WW2 US workers had it way better than European workers meaning US workers were less incentivized to strike and riot for better living standards when they already had the best living standards in the world at that time, see the baby boomer generation.
Only the US workers of today, not counting tech workers, have it (largely) worse than their predecessors in terms of wages, purchasing power, debt, healthcare, education and housing affordability.
So time to unionize and strike maybe? Especially that before mass industrialization and urbanization, the US was basically a socialist country due to the way its communities were organized and worked: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkO63lMyAhE
Workers' rights are social policies which didn't come out of nowhere but sprung up mostly in post-WW1 and post-WW2 times when communist and socialist moves were becoming more and more popular with the labor class due to poor living and working conditions following the destructive wars, so the owner class, in Europe at least, along with governments, had to make concessions on working time, vacation days, sick pay, and implement public pensions, public healthcare, stuff which didn't really exists before, in order to prevent more riots and strikes and have the social stability to start rebuilding the nation.
The US didn't, firstly because of strong anti-communist movements and the red scare propaganda, despite socialist-labor movements existing there as well(see Oppenheimer), and secondly because the post-WW2 US workers had it way better than European workers meaning US workers were less incentivized to strike and riot for better living standards when they already had the best living standards in the world at that time, see the baby boomer generation.
Only the US workers of today, not counting tech workers, have it (largely) worse than their predecessors in terms of wages, purchasing power, debt, healthcare, education and housing affordability.
So time to unionize and strike maybe? Especially that before mass industrialization and urbanization, the US was basically a socialist country due to the way its communities were organized and worked: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QkO63lMyAhE