• @[email protected]
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    877 months ago

    It astounds me that people can be this fed up and somehow not become radical socialists, at least fucking unionize god damn

    like there’s a whole book written specifically about why this would happen and how workers can fight back

    • @[email protected]
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      97 months ago

      It’s extremely easy to mislead people who their enemy is when there is one group that has multiplicative magnitudes of wealth over the other

      • @[email protected]
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        247 months ago

        To be honest, the older I get the more I realize the value to being lazy.

        And for the record, the vast majority of people are fucking lazy. All life forms are, they don’t really don’t want to do work. We weren’t put on this earth to work to live.

        • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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          117 months ago

          Animals spend a lot of time doing nothing. Not sleeping, just sitting around:

          Contrary to the perceptions of nature as a well-oiled machine, we see inactivity in all corners of the animal kingdom. In fact, it seems that many creatures spend the majority of their time inactive, which is defined as time that an individual is awake but not engaging in any specific task or activity. Observations of animals have shown that some creatures spend between 75% (lions) to 85% (hummingbirds) of their time being at rest. That’s a lot of time doing nothing!

          There’s also estimates that hunter-gatherers only work 15-20 hours per week.

  • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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    527 months ago

    WFH solves at least three of those problems, but only if our corporate lords allow it.

    • @Klystron
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      207 months ago

      Wfh only benefits a pretty small subset of the population… Speaking as someone who can’t work from home.

        • @Klystron
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          47 months ago

          I work a graveyard shift so traffic doesn’t really affect me. Which I’m sure is at least somewhat common among the people who can’t wfh.

          • @[email protected]
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            27 months ago

            Yeah, I work in an underground lair in a barracks. It wouldn’t benefit me either, so not much interest in supporting it. I’d rather we vote for faster escalators. Now that’s something everyone can use.

    • @[email protected]
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      -297 months ago

      In my experience WFH wasn’t worth it. The jobs pay way less with shitty benefits and the pressure was intense. Hybrid jobs are much more chill and pay more so I can afford things like a weekly cleaning lady to take some pressure off home life.

      It shouldn’t be like this but here we are, and we have to make the best of it.

        • @mindbleach
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          17 months ago

          Arguably extensible to most of capitalism.

          All of this could be less shitty, and it wouldn’t not be capitalism.

      • @funkless_eck
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        167 months ago

        my wfh job pays above industry average, you just gotta keep switching it up until you win

      • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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        127 months ago

        This is proof that the plural of anecdote is not data. I’ve been working from home for almost six years and the pay and benefits are great and any pressure I have is made up for by the fact that I can work without pants.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        the jobs pay less

        You’re doing very

        Shitty benefits

        VERY

        pressure intense

        VERY wrong.

        I don’t work from home, but that’s a choice of field. As soon as I can, I’ll hop back to it.

  • @[email protected]
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    317 months ago

    Multiple things can be true simultaneously,

    You can hate all the shit you’ve got to deal with while acknowledging it’s some of the least bad shit people have had to deal with in human history. Arguably the shit we deal with now could be considered the last great hurdle left to us by generations of getting rid of worse shit.

    We’ve made a disease that was basically our natural predator go extinct in the wild, we’ve touched other worlds and reached the top and bottom of our own, we’ve gotten so efficient at work that we’ve started making strange collections of rocks do the mundane and mathematically tedious work for us.

    What’s left to us is taking our free time back, switching over to a cheaper power source than what we were using, pegging the bottom wrung wage floor to an automatically adjusting living standard ratio, and other fine tuned adjustments on big ideas others have already done the fighting and dying to set the foundations with.

    We’re not slaying dragons, we’re banishing the last ghosts of bitter lords and merchants.

    • Tar_Alcaran
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      7 months ago

      Exactly. Remember that time when the harvest failed, and you had to eat your pet dogs and your baby brother starved to death? Remember that time when your neighbour got a scratch in the woods and died from infection? Or how you all avoided old wife Johnson for two years because her husband got pneumonia the coughs and died gasping for air? Or that time two of your aunts died in childbirth? Remember how the most exciting thing to happen in your life was a traveler staying in your village and they told stories of huge wooden ships sailing on the seas? Remember how three townsfolk were mauled by a bear last year? Oh crap, you said it’s name, better hope nobody heard you, or you’ll get blamed for the next one!

      How about just your regular day? Spending 8 hours a day housekeeping, cleaning your dirt floors, fetching water from the mostly-clean well or the slow-flowing bit of creek outside the village, baking bread in your castiron pot after gathering firewood, preserving food for winter and knowing you’ll be eating old flour and salted meat/fish before christmas anyway, churning butter again because the batch you made last mondy is rancid already, etc etc etc.

      Life sucks, but it sucked WAY harder in the past. I can heartely recommend doing a week of early-medieval reenactment, because nothing makes you apreciate modern life more than spending 6 hours of your day, every day, making a stew and some bread.

    • harmonea
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      297 months ago

      This is why they call it doomscrolling.

      Learn when to walk away, if only for your own health. Even surrounding yourself with shitpost and meme communities can’t keep it at bay, as you can see.

      • insomniac_lemon
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        7 months ago

        I would say the issue is that it is relatable. In most cases, I don’t think people would be feeling the doom if they weren’t affected (in this case, I don’t think a healthy and happy person with a decent wage/job would feel anxious from this post).

        Also even escapism (using media) isn’t perfect both because old settings paint a picture of community/assurances that don’t exist for the viewer, and even in dystopia something needs to drive the plot forward (well, somewhat less so with anything less focused on action/plot).

        I mean I totally understand ignoring certain types of doom, for instance if MAD or an E.M.P. (/carrington event) happens I don’t really see any “preparing” for that so I don’t even bother thinking about it.

        • harmonea
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          07 months ago

          I don’t think a healthy and happy person with a decent wage/job would feel anxious from this post)

          No one is immune to anxiety, especially not when the main focus of a post is a failure to thrive and loss of time itself. Everyone ages.

          That’s why learning when to walk away is a crucial skill everyone needs to develop.

          • @[email protected]
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            37 months ago

            Learning to stay present and be ok with whatever happens is also another useful skill.

            When a subject causes anxiety it is easy to get caught in an avoidance pattern instead of working through it and having a learning experience. Why does that subject cause the anxiety? There’s usually some mental or emotional work there for you to ponder and work through over time.

  • @[email protected]
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    267 months ago

    That’s why I became a failed musician and writer addicted to drugs, bummed around a while, got clean and now I just work for myself doing something I can stand, while being absolutely mesmerized by how awful people are. 😢

  • @[email protected]
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    147 months ago

    I worry about this as well until I simply left to travel for three years. Working odd jobs here and there. Now I’m back in the wheel, but not forever. Break the chains.

  • @fibojoly
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    127 months ago

    Funny : Anon is from the US, but this exactly describes my brother in law’s life too, over in China.

    • Tar_Alcaran
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      57 months ago

      honestly, 3 hours a day is still a lot if you don’t have kids. If you have a newborn, I’d be surprised if you can manage it in just 8 hours.

    • @31337
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      157 months ago

      Depends on where anon’s family is. A lot of small towns have no jobs left for the people graduating high-school. Some cities, like Detroit, have a lack of jobs.

    • @[email protected]
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      37 months ago

      well a lot of listings are just straight up fake because companies want the optics of having open job offers but don’t actually want to hire people, and a huge chunk of jobs are either so out of the way that the commute would leave you without enough money to live on, or they require such absurd qualifications that basically no one is eligible.

      A favourite is when programming jobs require 5 years of experience in a language that was made 3 years ago.

  • rustydomino
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    67 months ago

    Look, I get the sentiment. But objectively, humans that lived in the past, even just a few decades ago, had a much worse standard of living than today. Example: the polio vaccine was invented in 1955. So not even 100 years ago, the likelihood you’d end up paralyzed or even worse in an iron lung for the rest of your life was a real threat. People had a crap ton of kids not because they liked kids but because infant mortality was so high. So saying that we are living in the most prosperous time in human history is objectively true.

    That said, yeah. Eat the rich. 100%.

    • @merc
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      57 months ago

      And, for most of human history, just surviving was a real challenge. Half of all children died even up to the 1780s. And, if you lived, you were probably a serf, living in a dirt hut, wearing a tunic which was a long piece of cloth folded in half with a hole for the head.

      Then, they had to spend nearly half the year working on their lord’s land for free. They weren’t paid wages, so the half year they spent doing jobs for their lord was time they weren’t able to spend doing their own household tasks. That was just the “taxes” that they had to pay with labour. In their “free time” they had to do all the basic tasks like get firewood for their homes, mill their flour and bake their bread, spin cloth for their clothes, take care of their farm animals, tend their crops, etc. OTOH, they did get frequent religious holy days (holidays). But, a religious holiday didn’t mean a completely free day. It was just one where you weren’t expected to work on your lord’s plantation. But, all your basic household tasks still needed doing.

      The real difference is that peasants back then probably believed the priests who told them that the aristocracy were selected by a god. Many of them probably couldn’t even conceive of a world where they could live like that. Meanwhile, in the modern world, we’re told that Elon Musk and Bill Gates got where they were through smarts and hard work. We should know better. We should be taxing the ultra-rich into non-existence so that maybe we still spend 1/3 of our lives working, but at least there’s a safety net when we get sick or injured.

      • Tar_Alcaran
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        47 months ago

        Most people who die from polio do so before they’re 5.