Work Reform

uriel238 , in Most Americans have no idea how anti-worker the US supreme court has become
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Reagan was super anti-worker, and that's when the drift started. After the PATRIOT act, the entire justice system (including the court systems) started seeing the public as the enemy (after all, we were harboring terrorists) which corresponds to the shredding of the Bill of Rights (specifically the fourth and fifth amendments to the Constitution of the United States). Business interests (and their plutocratic masters) were the true citizens of the US, with us lowly proletariat becoming second class citizens. Citizens United took us by surprise but we haven't really done anything and won't until the police are busting our own heads (or we see enough officer-involved brutality -- which is, incidentally, how La Résistance got started in Paris).

Now recently

  • SCOTUS neutering regulatory agencies in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo
  • SCOTUS deciding in City of Grants Pass v. Johnson that civil and criminal penalties for camping on public land do not constitute cruel and unusual punishment of homeless people.

If you're too broke to have a place to live (easy to do right now), then you can have life, liberty and property stripped from you by the state. Essentially, being a human being is very much insufficient to have rights in the US. You must also be able to afford renting or owning a place to sleep. (As tempted as I am to rant about this, I'll stop here.)

refurbishedrefurbisher , in Most Americans have no idea how anti-worker the US supreme court has become

You mean they were previously pro-worker?

aleph ,
@aleph@lemm.ee avatar

From the article:

A 2022 study found that of the 57 justices who have sat on the court over the past century, the six justices with the most pro-business voting records are the six members of today’s 6-3, rightwing super-majority, all appointed by Republican presidents

Asafum ,

Because in the past they thought they had to care about the law, they know now that they don't need to do anything other than what the owning class wants, but they must drop the large bombs like this one on a Friday and preferably after another event that will keep the media occupied like say a debate? That way there is as little pushback and attention to it as possible...

100 , in Most Americans have no idea how anti-worker the US supreme court has become

every other american seems to talk about their huge salary compared to other western countries but then complain all they do is work and have little free time to use the money

ShinkanTrain ,

Then die of a preventable illness because they can't afford to go to the doctor

queue ,
@queue@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

"Unlike the Europours, we have so much money! We get paid more!"

  • No healthcare if not working
  • Rarely paid time off
  • Less holidays
  • Less workers rights
  • Most states don't allow time off for voting
  • Tax dollars go more to bombing people than education of the future workforces
  • No major way of sending donations to political groups
  • Taxes are done inefficiently on purpose to enable companies to get money from doing your yearly legal requirements as a citizen
  • Still tested for drugs on your private time
  • Longer commutes other nations
  • Commutes are often paid by the worker, not the company
  • Commutes are in cars because public infrastructure doesn't allow most workers to get to work on time or doesn't have the last mile covered.
  • Cars that cost money to just exist, let alone actually use.
  • Commutes and needing to eat food take time away from the 16 hours "free" from work, meaning people have to cut on sleep or other important self regulations

I feel so fucking free you guys man we have it good.

djsoren19 ,

It's mostly just Americans lying to ourselves because we happened to get a bad roll on where we got born.

CitizenKong ,

Oh, don't worry, most European countries are on their way to become just as shitty as the US.

pdxfed , (edited )
  • Unemployment insurance payouts are at or below poverty level at best, short in duration (normally 12-24 weeks at most) despite complete wildcard on how long finding a job may take, and aggressively restricted or even denied in many states(remember Republican controlled states refused free federal funding to bolster their unemployment payouts because they wanted people back working during a global pandemic without a vaccine at that point).

  • Unions and organizing and employees thinking of organizing are aggressively and illegally attacked, discriminated and retaliated against while the enforcement mechanisms to hold powerful companies to law are so underfunded the laws nearly don't exist

  • OSHA, FLSA and other cornerstone pieces of workplace law are so routinely broken and have been by so long and enforcement so underfunded and penalties so trivial the laws don't exist in practice. Injuries at work, minimum wage, overtime are so commonly violated, suing through the courts has been the only recourse for employees. With the court system now captured, even that menial disincentive is gone for companies to comply.

  • Companies systematically underpay and are able to collude on wages thanks to market salary tools to suppress wages. Switching companies is the only way to get a raise.

saltesc ,

Just looked up the average US salary and I'd be emigrating.

Allonzee , (edited ) in Most Americans have no idea how anti-worker the US supreme court has become

Most Americans at this point are a product of capitalist indoctrination via privately owned for profit media propaganda, and public schools defunded and in utter ruin by capitalist captured government to cut their taxes, despite still profiting directly from a pre-literate workforce to draw from that they just don't want to pay for.

And now, through the long laid, long paid for installation of capitalist interest to the SCOTUS through their Federalist Society judicial extremist group, they now effectively own our... I'm sorry, their judicial branch of the government we have to suffer without recourse or appeal.

...They spend billions of dollars every year lobbying, lobbying, to get what they want. Well, we know what they want. They want more for themselves and less for everybody else, but I'll tell you what they don’t want: They don’t want a population of citizens capable of critical thinking. They don’t want well informed, well educated people capable of critical thinking. They’re not interested in that. That doesn’t help them. Thats against their interests. Thats right. They don’t want people who are smart enough to sit around a kitchen table to figure out how badly they’re getting fucked by a system that threw them overboard 30 fucking years ago. They don’t want that. You know what they want? They want obedient workers. Obedient workers. People who are just smart enough to run the machines and do the paperwork, and just dumb enough to passively accept all these increasingly shittier jobs with the lower pay, the longer hours, the reduced benefits, the end of overtime and the vanishing pension that disappears the minute you go to collect it...

-George Carlin, decades ago.

This is also why study of the humanities is under attack in academia, btw. Believe it or not, maximizing growth/metastasis/GDP isn't healthy as society's sole practiced value and pursuit. Gotta hurry, a few thousand greedy sociopaths aren't getting richer fast enough, herp derp.

Asafum ,

maximizing growth/metastasis/GDP isn’t healthy as society’s sole practiced value and pursuit.

One of their greatest achievements was brainwashing the country into believing that somehow higher higher higher GDP somehow means a better economy for everyone when it's literally just tracking business profits...

They're perfectly ok with the idea that our income doesn't need to increase at all, but their profit MUST increase at all costs...

queue , in Most Americans have no idea how anti-worker the US supreme court has become
@queue@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Most Americans don't see themselves as workers, they see themselves as just some a main character who is only struggling due to a personal fault in a quick time event rather than corporate planed actions that worked with the government to enable that thinking in the first place.

Jerkface ,

Why are you cheering, Fry? You're not rich.

True, but someday I might be rich. Then people like me better watch their step.

Lemjukes ,

They’re called ‘temporarily embarrassed millionaires’

queue ,
@queue@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I was going to quote that but it seemed too obvious when I could try to express my own words.

Not calling you out, I just wanted a way of expressing my frustration.

ImplyingImplications ,

You say "tax the rich" and they think you mean them because they made $100k last year. Nah you're good! You could make 10x that and you'd still be good. I was talking about the people who make 450,000x that amount in a year.

Sanctus , (edited ) in Most Americans have no idea how anti-worker the US supreme court has become
@Sanctus@lemmy.world avatar

It's absolutely terrifying. Especially with the NLRB lawsuit from the richest fucks in the world.

IndustryStandard , in Pillaging by the Super-Rich Will Continue Until the Working Class Revolts

CommonDreams coming in clutch with the 2A

southsamurai , in is this the right way to establish boundaries with my nosy coworkers at the hospital?
@southsamurai@sh.itjust.works avatar

I've never needed anything beyond the combination of the whole "I don't do politics, or religion at work", and a blank stare until people go away.

And I was a nurse's assistant, so it was a similar situation, where I was often the only male employee. I didn't learn how to give good blank face until almost 30, though. It's harder to do when you're younger.

Later on, I had to add the bits about sex/romance because, believe it or not, some women will mess with you just to cause trouble. I would add sexual matters to the politics and religion, and just walk away. There's zero way to engage in those kinds of talks as a man in the workplace. It can not end up in a good place.

Now, I could easily get away with the stone face because I'm typically a very friendly, polite, and affable guy. I'm even downright charming at times. So when I drew firm boundaries, it was rare for anyone to take it personally. Those that did, well, they're not the sorts that last at any job.

Now, if it's break time, and we're swapping recipes or other nice things, I was often at my most affable because as much as I actually hate people in general, and get worn out from group interactions, I can fake being an extrovert very well. That's mostly about a lot of listening, laughing in the right places, then offering the occasional bit of conversation to let them know you're paying attention.

Workplace conversation should be casual at all times, no overly personal stuff, no hot button topics ever. If things are that friendly, meet up outside work and get back to the job. Not because of some bullshit protestant work ethic or capitalist bullshit, but because you agreed to do a thing for a period of time, and fucking around while the job is still on is lame.

dennis5wheel OP ,

Workplace conversation should be casual at all times, no overly personal stuff, no hot button topics ever. If things are that friendly, meet up outside work and get back to the job. Not because of some bullshit protestant work ethic or capitalist bullshit, but because you agreed to do a thing for a period of time, and fucking around while the job is still on is lame.

exactly...

Steve , in is this the right way to establish boundaries with my nosy coworkers at the hospital?
@Steve@communick.news avatar

It doesn't usually much more than, "I'm not going to talk about that."
After repeating that a few times, when people ask or talk about something too personal, they'll give up.

sloppy_diffuser ,

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1098624.When_I_Say_No_I_Feel_Guilty

Its dated and probably misogynistic given the period, but when I did read it many many years ago, the broken record technique is probably the one thing I do remember. It also had some role play dialog for how others may try and break the loop. I found it helpful at the time.

I think I read/heard something similar in one of the Love and Logic parenting books/ebooks. "Maybe so, but <repeat assertion>" comes to mind. Acknowledge the statement that attempts to break the loop, don't add any new information, and repeat the assertion.

Jake_Farm , in Joe Biden is old. So is Donald Trump. So are millions of other American workers
@Jake_Farm@sopuli.xyz avatar

There are millions of 80 year olds working?

focus , in Joe Biden is old. So is Donald Trump. So are millions of other American workers

What was the important point that was missed?

jeffw OP ,

Old people shouldn’t be workers

some_guy , in Joe Biden is old. So is Donald Trump. So are millions of other American workers

Was reading Wikipedia about a string of serial murders last night. One of the victims was an 81 yo man on the way home from his work. This was in 1973. It's not a new problem, it's just worse than before.

MehBlah , in Joe Biden is old. So is Donald Trump. So are millions of other American workers

Neither one of them cares anything about workers. Young or old.

mydude , in Joe Biden is old. So is Donald Trump. So are millions of other American workers

I don't like this headline because it implies that Joe Biden and Donald Trump are, or ever has been, a worker...

rockSlayer , in Joe Biden is old. So is Donald Trump. So are millions of other American workers

That's the real crime. Leaders can be old. Workers should never be forced to be old.

seaQueue ,
@seaQueue@lemmy.world avatar

You mean working until you drop dead isn't normal in a civilized country? /s

sik0fewl ,

One still works because they can't let go of power, the other works because they need to survive.

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