• @9tr6gyp3
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      08 months ago

      “We want the zero hour work week!” Vs “nobody needs to work”

      “We want the zero hour work week!” implies a desire to reduce the standard work week to zero hours. It suggests people still want to work and contribute value through their work, just with fewer required work hours.

      “Nobody needs to work” is a broader statement that questions whether work itself is necessary. It could be interpreted as meaning that people should not be obligated or required to work at all, and that their basic needs should still be met without contributing labor.

      Overall, the first sentence focuses more on reducing work hours while still valuing work itself. The second calls into question whether work is inherently needed for people to live and thrive. Both discuss reducing the role of work, but they have slightly different philosophical implications.

      • @[email protected]
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        08 months ago

        You asked what was said, not what what was implied.

        If everyone is entitled to a 0 hour work week, that means they are entitled to do 0 hours of work.

        • @9tr6gyp3
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          8 months ago

          Yes. There are zero places in the original post where it says “nobody needs to work” It says “We want the zero hour work week!”.

          • @[email protected]
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            08 months ago

            If everyone is entitled to a 0 hour work week, that means they are entitled to do 0 hours of work.

            • @9tr6gyp3
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              08 months ago

              Thats a totally different thing than “nobody needs to work”.

              • @[email protected]
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                08 months ago

                No it isn’t.

                If everyone is entitled to work 0 hours, then nobody is required to work. They are equivalent.

                • @9tr6gyp3
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                  -18 months ago

                  Agree to disagree then.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    08 months ago

                    You are welcome to disagree with the standard definitions of words, yes.

                    Its not generally advised, but you do you.