If they can't afford to rent the building, the business gets evicted. If they can't afford to pay their suppliers, they have to slow down or shut down production. If they can't afford to pay their employees enough to keep them, they bitch about how nobody wants to work anymore. One of these things is out of place.
Category: Antiwork
I live in Colorado & maybe I’m just hopeful but I read an article from the Colorado Sun that it’s being reintroduced, making it illegal for employers to discriminate you if you use cannabis on your off time. Why can’t we use public pressure to make this happen??? Can we sign a petition or something??? How do I support this.
Put on the clown costume wagie
I left a job 3 months ago because I hated it for many different reasons. Now they want me back and they want me to move to another city. I asked for a certain amount more than they offered me, as I know it's more expensive to live there, in order to justify actually moving there. They said no, but I can work extra hours to help make up the difference. Pretty sure that's a big NOPE from me.
I got a new career!!!
Old Job: Retail Manager. 50+ hour work week. Retail Hours(as in no life) 1 hour commute each way. 2% raise last year. $46k salary Boss was micromanager New Job: Human Resources 40 hour work week. No nights or weekends. After 6 months can work from home. 20 min commute. $65k base salary Boss is a former coworker. After 6 years with current employer I hit my breaking point. Nothing is good enough that we did. Despite massive sales increases. And making profit. I will be giving my notice Friday at 5pm.
It’s not your Daddy’s capitalism anymore
Whenever I get into discussions with strong supporters of capitalism, I find it very common for people pro-capitalism to defend the system by using examples which are simplistic reductions of the system itself. John is a baker, Jim is a butcher and Joe is candlestick maker and they all get to meet in the town square of their local village to set prices and negotiate the value of their own labor. Sounds great, right? What could be bad about a system like that right? Nothing really. Under those conditions and those assumptions, capitalism and free markets are one of the greatest things to happen to mankind. The problem is those conditions and assumptions no longer match reality in the age of technology and automation. John and Jim have had their bakeries and butcher shops put out of business by grocery stores and now work for them directly with the value…