Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sometimes junior staff are abusive to their team leads. When you agree to work but refuse to work, usually one person is left doing the work of 3 people.
This doesn't get talked about enough.
well yes I agree but that has nothing to do with this topic?
Anonymous wrote:The labor participation rate for 25-54 year olds is 81.8%. About the same as 2018, so I call this a non movement probably made up by someone needing to talk about something. The highest the rate has ever been is about 84%, we are 2 points from that and trending up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sometimes junior staff are abusive to their team leads. When you agree to work but refuse to work, usually one person is left doing the work of 3 people.
This doesn't get talked about enough.
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes junior staff are abusive to their team leads. When you agree to work but refuse to work, usually one person is left doing the work of 3 people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Why do you want to end work?
Because the modern day workplace is one where you are expected to work despite your own individual needs or desires. Work puts the needs and desires of managers and corporations above and beyond workers, often to the point of abuse through being overworked and underpaid."
I fully support reforms. But this sort of statement indicates that the movement is for white collar employees who have options. There is a lot about American industry that requires schedules and showing up in person for designated periods. Even in some white collar professions, such as education, the needs of society require set hours regardless of your personal needs or desires.
It has been interesting to see how flexible jobs have become as a result of the pandemic. But people working at the grocery store or operating trains and buses or fixing your vehicles still have to show up in person at the appointed time in order to make the world go round. There hasnt been any change for them.
While that's true there are a lot of service sector jobs that require you to be "on call" on your days off. It's a totally sh*t practice where you're expected to be available to come in if they need you but you're not guaranteed a shift that day. I don't know how employers get away with this practice of requiring employees to be available but not paying them for that time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 37, make over 200K a year, and have worked since I was 16 with the longest break being 2 weeks for my wedding and honeymoon. I've managed teams as large as 18.
I find many of the anti-work points compelling. At a minimum, I think a lot more people should be unionizing.
I am 43, work in health care, married, and we make a decent living as a family. I used to scroll past the anti-work stuff on Reddit because the idea of not working is just absurd. But then I started to read some of the threads. It shouldn't be called anti-work just workers' rights/work-life balance. It calls out how lots of people-even college educated ones-can barely make it in many places, how the minimum wage is a joke, lack of sick leave/vacation time/PTO in many places/unreasonable expectations of bosses. It also questions Americans' veneration of workaholism. I have heard of it outside of Reddit like on podcasts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 37, make over 200K a year, and have worked since I was 16 with the longest break being 2 weeks for my wedding and honeymoon. I've managed teams as large as 18.
I find many of the anti-work points compelling. At a minimum, I think a lot more people should be unionizing.
I am 43, work in health care, married, and we make a decent living as a family. I used to scroll past the anti-work stuff on Reddit because the idea of not working is just absurd. But then I started to read some of the threads. It shouldn't be called anti-work just workers' rights/work-life balance. It calls out how lots of people-even college educated ones-can barely make it in many places, how the minimum wage is a joke, lack of sick leave/vacation time/PTO in many places/unreasonable expectations of bosses. It also questions Americans' veneration of workaholism. I have heard of it outside of Reddit like on podcasts.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 37, make over 200K a year, and have worked since I was 16 with the longest break being 2 weeks for my wedding and honeymoon. I've managed teams as large as 18.
I find many of the anti-work points compelling. At a minimum, I think a lot more people should be unionizing.
Anonymous wrote:"Why do you want to end work?
Because the modern day workplace is one where you are expected to work despite your own individual needs or desires. Work puts the needs and desires of managers and corporations above and beyond workers, often to the point of abuse through being overworked and underpaid."
I fully support reforms. But this sort of statement indicates that the movement is for white collar employees who have options. There is a lot about American industry that requires schedules and showing up in person for designated periods. Even in some white collar professions, such as education, the needs of society require set hours regardless of your personal needs or desires.
It has been interesting to see how flexible jobs have become as a result of the pandemic. But people working at the grocery store or operating trains and buses or fixing your vehicles still have to show up in person at the appointed time in order to make the world go round. There hasnt been any change for them.
"Why do you want to end work?
Because the modern day workplace is one where you are expected to work despite your own individual needs or desires. Work puts the needs and desires of managers and corporations above and beyond workers, often to the point of abuse through being overworked and underpaid."
Anonymous wrote:I joined this movement, but I call it 'retirement'.
Anonymous wrote:I think the antiwork movement is for a very specific subset of people who are able to depend on others, usually parents, to provide their basic needs.
I honestly haven’t heard about it other than on Reddit, where it’s clearly mostly college-aged people still living at home.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a millennial in my mid 30’s and support it. I’ve watched my (almost all male) friends who went to Silicon Valley or hedge funds get absurdly rich (like $1mil+ annual salary in your late 20’s rich), and everyone else struggle no matter how hard they work. People who work 50 hour weeks, who have graduate degrees from good schools, should NOT be struggling to buy a modest starter home in their mid-30’s. Then even if you do, childcare costs more than a mortgage. Enough!