• @WindInTrees
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      111 year ago

      Sounds incredible. What book is this?

      • @[email protected]OP
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        131 year ago

        I can’t say for certain unless I go look through the book since I just took this from my photo library for the rule, but I’m nearly certain this is from Bullshit Jobs by David Graeber (Rest In Power).

          • Varadin
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            31 year ago

            Thanks for the link!

          • @[email protected]OP
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            21 year ago

            Graeber was such a great mind, everything I watch or read of his is just truth after truth nonstop.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              Bullshit Jobs is actually the only thing I’ve read from him, besides maybe one article. What else do you recommend?

              • @[email protected]OP
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                21 year ago

                The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity is amazing, as is Debt: The First 5000 Years, but if their length is daunting, davidgraeber.org has a bunch of great articles and papers he’s done. I like “Are you an anarchist? The answer may surprise you!” And “The Practical Utopians Guide to the coming collapse”, but it’s mostly all worth reading. He has a lot of great lectures on YouTube also, if that’s more your style, and a few longer form interviews on podcasts like SRSLY Wrong.

  • PrunesMakeYouPoop
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    61 year ago

    I build satellites and actually enjoy my job. Sometimes I am disappointed when my 8 hours is up and I have to go home. What about those people?

    • @[email protected]OP
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      101 year ago

      With significantly more capital and free time, you would be able to develop and manage your own projects outside of the workplace, allowing you to continue developing yourself, your skills, and your contributions to your field. If you prefer to put the majority of your efforts into a single project or workplace, incentive structures could be developed to acknowledge your outsized contributions while not imposing such as necessary for everyone.

      I think you have a great question though, and things like that would best be answered collectively, through discussion and experimentation.

      What do you think? What would you prefer? What would be fair to you to recognize your extra efforts? What checks and balances would be needed to have a 16hr week as the basis for a livable wage, while still allowing for people to work more when desired?

      • PrunesMakeYouPoop
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        31 year ago

        I think definite exceptions would have to be made. For instance, some operations take more than 4 hours to complete, such as getting the satellite ready for install in the launch vehicle, or the work has to be done in a tight finite timeline, such as “you have 1 week to fully test, prep for launch, and install the satellite in the launch vehicle.” Of course, these are edge cases.

        With my personality, I feel like my work ethic would suffer since I’d spend so much more time at home than at work and I wouldn’t want to do shit when I am actually there. I also think my skills would degrade, and I’d spend a lot of time trying to remember where I left off and what I was doing. Perhaps it’s just my career, and other careers/jobs wouldn’t have my issues.

        I pride myself and my high work ethic, quality products, and kick-ass attitude, but I also need structure, routine, and discipline to function as an adult. When left to my own devices for too long, it all falls apart. Again, perhaps that’s just me.

        I won’t turn down a bigger sack of money though. I do like money.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          1 year ago

          I can definitely see that, and can foresee certain critical projects also that may require longer shift times. I worry about endorsing an exception system allowing people to continually subject themselves to longer working hours indefinitely though, because I believe that much of the ability of the current 40 hour system to sustain itself lies in its reliance upon necessary but uncompensated labor. Domestic labor is part of our responsibilities to our community just as much as engaging in compensated labor, and when we allow for such long working hours, it often becomes untenable for many to maintain both their compensated and uncompensated responsibilities, which leads to the uncompensated portion of the responsibilities falling on a partner or relative or lower paid roommate. This to me, is unsustainable.

          If you do not have the time to engage in your personal domestic responsibilities, it often means you’re neglecting your wider community responsibilities also. We need an active and engaged populace, and that means we need time for the populace to engage in governance, time that 8 hour days 5 or even 4 days a week do not allow for. Participating in governance isn’t casting a ballot once or twice a year. It’s going to every city council meeting and most community events. It’s engaging in shared labor such as community gardening. It’s volunteering in different contexts depending on one’s ability to help sustain others with differing abilities.

          So while I think there will always be auteurs and geniuses who will want to work all of the time, I am hesitant to allow them, because by doing so they are withholding those talents from the rest of society for their own personal benefit. It would be better to have the Einsteins in the meeting room, than to have them off researching all of the time, because limiting those insights to one realm in order to full exploit them is allowing myopic thinking to cloud our idea of progress.

          I do think that specific projects may warrant burst activity, wherein individuals work long hours, but I think those need to be contrasted with extended periods of respite, whether or not those involved want to do so.