• @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
    link
    8
    edit-2
    5 months ago

    I’m talking about the time period where one person (with only a high school diploma) working 40 hours a week could reasonably support a family of three or four, with a modest house and two vehicles. And then after staying with the same company for 25 years, that person could retire and receive a pension (not a 401k that they had been forced to invest their own money in) which was paid for entirely by the company. Because pay wasn’t absolute shit compared to the cost of living.

    • @bitchkat
      link
      English
      15 months ago

      And not once in that paragraph about everything except vacation did you explain your reasoning why you think boomers had unlimited vacation.

      • @UnderpantsWeevil
        link
        English
        15 months ago

        your reasoning why you think boomers had unlimited vacation.

        Strong domestic labor unions were able to establish contractual standards that became the national hiring benchmark. And the US was forced to compete with the USSR for international talent.

        • @bitchkat
          link
          English
          35 months ago

          I never heard of anyone having unlimited vacation time until the mid 2010s. And then, those so-called unlimited vacations aren’t really unlimited. They are just a way to get accrued time off the books.

          • @candybrie
            link
            15 months ago

            By unlimited vacation, they mean unlimited vacation banking. Like no use it or lose it policies or a cap on accrual.

            • @bitchkat
              link
              English
              15 months ago

              Having unlimited carry over is quite different from unlimited vacation.

              • @candybrie
                link
                05 months ago

                It is. But if you read more than the first sentence of their comment, you can tell that’s what they mean.