Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most. Entitled. Generation. Ever.
Gen X raised them
Anonymous wrote:Most. Entitled. Generation. Ever.
Anonymous wrote:I was just complaining to my husband about my Gen Z colleagues (we’re older millennials). Not only do they have a very irreverent approach to work - no respect for hierarchy, no sense of urgency, no proactive problem solving - they ask a million questions instead of just doing stuff. Very aggravating.
Anonymous wrote:Dear gen z,
Please make a 30 hour work week the new norm. Getting off at 5 is too late to have a life with kids and a commute
Thanks
Anonymous wrote:I'm not entitled AT ALL and I'm a hard working millenial. But why do I have to take unpaid lunch breaks?? I don't want to eat lunch. I'm a T1 diabetic and eat small amounts all day as I sit at my desk. I don't stop working. I'd like to be able to not take a lunch and leave after 8 hours instead of having to be at work for 8.5.
Anonymous wrote:It's sad to see all the anti labor, anti union ranting on here. In the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s (the era when everything was better, right? traditional working class values?) paid breaks were standard. People worked a lot less and made more in real dollars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't the work day used to be 9-5, inclusive of lunch? I'm an older millennial/young Gen X, and I've put in the unpaid time to get the experience and position myself for more opportunities, but I don't look down on those who can't or won't do that. We really should respect the balance of work and personal time.
The boomers made a song lamenting the 9-5, which meant they were actually paid for lunch (3 🍸 s), so I hardly think Gen Z pushing back against the hourly creep is unwarranted.
We will see more of this, since Gen Z fully understands that working hard and producing results just results in more work, and that promotions and pay raises go to the boss’s mini-me, rather than the workers pulling long hours and getting things done.
You know song lyrics aren't indicative of actual law, right? I mean, pop tunes aren't exactly a full legal analysis of applicable employment laws.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't the work day used to be 9-5, inclusive of lunch? I'm an older millennial/young Gen X, and I've put in the unpaid time to get the experience and position myself for more opportunities, but I don't look down on those who can't or won't do that. We really should respect the balance of work and personal time.
The boomers made a song lamenting the 9-5, which meant they were actually paid for lunch (3 🍸 s), so I hardly think Gen Z pushing back against the hourly creep is unwarranted.
We will see more of this, since Gen Z fully understands that working hard and producing results just results in more work, and that promotions and pay raises go to the boss’s mini-me, rather than the workers pulling long hours and getting things done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's sad to see all the anti labor, anti union ranting on here. In the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s (the era when everything was better, right? traditional working class values?) paid breaks were standard. People worked a lot less and made more in real dollars.
?? All the people who supported unions etc in the 60s then became anti-labor anti union managers in the 80s. Don’t you remember this?? When these Gen Z people get off their parents payroll and have to pay for their costs on their own, they’ll be as anti union as the rest of them.
Anonymous wrote:Not clicking on a TikTok link.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's sad to see all the anti labor, anti union ranting on here. In the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s (the era when everything was better, right? traditional working class values?) paid breaks were standard. People worked a lot less and made more in real dollars.
?? All the people who supported unions etc in the 60s then became anti-labor anti union managers in the 80s. Don’t you remember this?? When these Gen Z people get off their parents payroll and have to pay for their costs on their own, they’ll be as anti union as the rest of them.