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Three pro return to the office stories in my city’s newspaper today: I smell a rat.

The Sydney Morning Herald has three largely positive stories about office returns today. It follows two the other day in which one almost appeared to be workshopped from the head of a big bank with the business council. The business council had previously come out and said workers shouldn't expect pay increases if they can't have those vital hallway conversations with management. What shit. How about judging the quality of your work? It also follows an incident just a few days ago where leaked internal correspondence came out catching the editor overriding journalists and other junior editors in calling something a “train strike”. It 100% wasn't. Workers weren't on strike and the state government made the decision to shut down the service. This used to be a reasonably liberal newspaper that took a better line than any of Rupert Murdoch's shitrags. Not any more – it just kowtows to its…


The Sydney Morning Herald has three largely positive stories about office returns today.

It follows two the other day in which one almost appeared to be workshopped from the head of a big bank with the business council. The business council had previously come out and said workers shouldn't expect pay increases if they can't have those vital hallway conversations with management. What shit. How about judging the quality of your work?

It also follows an incident just a few days ago where leaked internal correspondence came out catching the editor overriding journalists and other junior editors in calling something a “train strike”. It 100% wasn't. Workers weren't on strike and the state government made the decision to shut down the service.

This used to be a reasonably liberal newspaper that took a better line than any of Rupert Murdoch's shitrags.

Not any more – it just kowtows to its pro business corporate masters like the rest of the mainstream media.

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