• @ZapBeebz_
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    24012 days ago

    If you are in an industry where an emergency at 2 am cannot wait until 0900 (or whenever shift starts in the morning), fucking pay a swing shift to be there. Or fairly compensate your employees for calls off the clock. Either way, stop expecting free labor from your employees. And if your business can’t afford to exist without fairly compensating those who work for it, then your business should not exist.

    • haui
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      5812 days ago

      I feel like this is a rare and very sane view. Businesses went over the edge at some point. No idea when though.

        • @WhyDoYouPersist
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          912 days ago

          The only thing that’s trickled out of Reaganomics successfully.

      • @[email protected]
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        3312 days ago

        They didn’t go over the edge, people had to fight and die to get us to the edge we’re on now. They were actually worse in the past if you can actually believe it.

        • @gothic_lemons
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          611 days ago

          Businesses are the ones who put child in coal mines. They will take everything we can. Only together do we get any rights or protections

      • @Soup
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        1912 days ago

        There was a factory in NYC that locked the doors so people wouldn’t take breaks outside. A fire happened and people died because of this. Afterwards they…did it again. Regulations are written in blood and usually because anyone expecting a business to do the right thing, especially a larger one, is so bewilderingly stupid that I’m shocked that their shriveled up brain can even keep their heart beating when they go to sleep at night.

        • @brygphilomena
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          1011 days ago

          As someone else pointed out. The triangle shirtwaist factory fire.

          But as another example of businesses doing shitty things that led to people dying. The Iroquois Theater fire in Chicago. They didn’t want poor people changing seats to nicer ones so locked the doors to those areas when the play started and they bribed people to not finish their fire safety equipment but still get approved to open. Hundreds died.

          • @Soup
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            311 days ago

            Jesus fucking Christ.

            • @brygphilomena
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              711 days ago

              Yea. If I remember my fires correctly, this one also has doors that opened into the theater so as mobs of people pushed to get out, the doors jammed and couldn’t be opened. It directly led to the regulation for outward swinging egress doors and “crash” hardware. Which are those bars on exit doors so in an emergency people can just crash into them and they open.

      • JustEnoughDucks
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        411 days ago

        It started in the 1980s with massive deregulation. I wonder who might have done that 🧐

    • @markstos
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      2312 days ago

      Sounds like dude doesn’t know about the concept of teams paid to be on-call 24/7.

      I’m sure those are exempt. If a well-managed critical server goes down at 2am, you can be sure some employee is part of an on-call team for just such an event.

      That’s not with this about. This is about bugging people to work when they are off the clock.

      • @ZapBeebz_
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        3212 days ago

        This is about bugging people to work when they are off the clock.

        And that’s exactly what Kevin is advocating for. He wants the benefits of an on-call team without having to pay for an on-call team.

    • @Nuke_the_whales
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      1111 days ago

      I’m extremely lucky. I’m a condominium superintendent, and my current job I am on call, but only for emergencies. There’s a security team that will handle most things but call me if it’s actually an emergency, residents don’t actually call me directly after hours.

      I get maybe one real emergency call every other month or less and they rarely take very long to deal with.

      And my compensation is that I get a free 2 bedroom condo, in which I don’t pay rent, utilities, or even my tv or internet bill. And I’m part of a union.

      • @LordCrom
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        111 days ago

        What would be a real condo emergency? Like a pipe burst? Doesn’t sound like something the super could handle without a plumber coming.

        • @Nuke_the_whales
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          211 days ago

          Yeah usually floods from a pipe or such. Generally I can at least isolate the area and shut off water to the Apartment causing the flood until the plumbers can come and repair things. Or like I may get a call that the garage gate is stuck and I gotta call an emergency repair or something

  • smokebuddy [he/him]
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    8412 days ago

    Why does anyone think this guy is some kind of business expert? Why is he propped up by CNBC all the time (and apparently FOX) as if his opinions are at all relevant?

    He got rich by using VC money to prop up a real dog of a software company, cooked the books, then sold it to Mattel in what is regarded as one of the worst business deals of all time

    Now he makes all his money like Trump did, licensing his brand to sad companies and getting appearence fees. He sells mutual funds with his name on them even though he’s not licensed, because he has nothing to do with them. He ran for Conservative party leadership, then dropped out because he couldn’t be bothered to (or is incapable of) learning French, even though he’s from Montreal.

    Business people with real wealth don’t spend all their time on TV or sell Cameo videos from a fake Shark Tank set, willing to endorse any shady business for a few thousand dollars.

    Just ignore this guy, he’s the worst.

    • @Olhonestjim
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      1612 days ago

      But he looks so tender, juicy, and marbled. How can we ignore such a tasty morsel when so many have so little, and so few so much? We must waste not.

    • @[email protected]
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      711 days ago

      Sounds kind of like he’s a cartoon of a businessman that the media pretends is real and relevant for the sake of generating engaging content.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 days ago

      Kevin is bad, but I really hated it when Shark Tank brought on the Vitamin Water guy. That shit is worthless. Overpriced water containing trace amounts of vitamins that probably cost $0.02/unit. If the free market worked anything like libertarians say, it would have been laughed out of the room.

    • Encrypt-Keeper
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      211 days ago

      He appeared as a fake testimonial on a crypto investing learning site ad and that was point I realized dude was just a washed up reality TV celebrity and literally nothing more lol.

    • @Olhonestjim
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      112 days ago

      But he looks so tender, juicy, and marbled. How can we ignore such a tasty morsel when so many have so little, and so few so much? We must waste not.

    • @Tylerdurdon
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      2312 days ago

      The secret is thyme. Low and slow of course, 225 degrees until it reaches about 198, then pull it, wrap it, and let it sit for an hour so the fat can melt right into the meat. Your guests will declare you a culinary genius.

  • MapleEngineer
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    6212 days ago

    If employees start ignoring their boss’s calls, texts, and emails outside of work hours, an after-hours emergency might have to wait until the next business day, which O’Leary finds unacceptable.

    Did this fucking fascist consider hiring more staff and going 24/7? How is it the problem of salaried workers that their boss is too fucking cheap to hire enough people to get the level of support that he wants?

  • @[email protected]
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    4811 days ago

    Who dreams this up?

    Nobody. Nobody dreamt it up. They are just remembering the hard reality of the early 90’s and the before times.

    You know, before everyone was connected and online 24/7/365. Before “online” meant anything.

    When you left your 9-5 job, drove home listening to the radio, because you didn’t have anything else to listen to, and got home to dinner on the table because you didn’t need your spouse to work for a living to make ends meet, in your home that you were able to purchase, and food that wasn’t largely artificial.

    The phone would ring during dinner, and it would just keep ringing, because you’re spending time eating with your family. There was no answering machine, so it would just ring and ring.

    And if nobody ever answered it, they couldn’t tell you to get back to the office because some emergency happened.

    Maybe you went to the park, maybe you were out to dinner with the Mrs… Maybe you just didn’t care enough to pick up the phone. Anything could have happened.

    Unlike today, where we’re bombarded by marketing and notifications constantly. All of which are demanding that you address them ASAP. Everything is an emergency, so put down your “three ingredients away from plastic” dinner, and pick up your master, and obey.

    I am all out of bubble gum.

  • @Nuke_the_whales
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    4611 days ago

    If O’Leary hates it, you know it’s a good thing

    • Splount
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      711 days ago

      Him and Jamie Fucking Diamond (CEO of JP Morgan-Chase) who always seems to get quoted as some sage of the economy when in reality he is seeking media attention to push a market or stock a certain way that benefits him or those like him.

  • @Sterile_Technique
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    4312 days ago

    Every job I’ve had that requires me to be on call, has paid me for being on call. If I was in an interview and they told me I was expected to pull call for no additional pay, I’d have to sue for injury after enduring the side pain from all the laughing I’d be doing in between them spewing that batshit insane expectation and me promptly walking my ass out of that room.

    Put that shit in the job description and reimburse accordingly… this ain’t rocket surgery.

  • @[email protected]
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    3612 days ago

    “What happens if you have an event in the office and it’s closed? Or you have an emergency somewhere, and you have to get a hold of them at two in the morning because it affects the job they’re working on?” he questioned.

    sounds like a not my fucking problem

    i haven’t had a ton of jobs, but at every interview i’ve ever had, i made sure it was clearly understood by everyone in he room and put in writing that as far as the job is concerned, i simply don’t exist between EOD and 8am.

    • @[email protected]
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      912 days ago

      Feel free to call me after hours. Just be aware, I charge $50 for answering the call up to 9am, $100 after that and $25 per five minutes I’m on the phone. If I’m required to log into a computer, $100 additional for the login, and again $25 per five minutes I’m on it. If you call me back before work hours, the prices double. Don’t like it? Don’t fucking call me. Want to fire me for it? Good luck, I’ll collect unemployment and drag it out as long as humanly possible while taking a much needed break before getting a better job.

      • @indepndnt
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        612 days ago

        One time I got a mass email from the director’s assistant telling us to send them our cell phone numbers. I was quite irritated, so I ignored it initially to calm down and think of a rational response. Anyway, the following week the director was dead, I’m sure there was no connection.

  • @[email protected]
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    3111 days ago

    Guy who is the reason this rule is needed is upset about the rule dealing with some of his bullshit

  • @Triasha
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    2611 days ago

    If it’s important enough that it can’t wait until tomorrow, it’s important enough to pay someone for.

    • @Xanis
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      911 days ago

      They agree. 100%. They’re aware it’s super important.

      Paying someone to deal with it when vague threats exist?

      Naaaahhh!

    • @[email protected]
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      1211 days ago

      I have watched more than a few of his CBC pieces. Where employees and work-life balance are concerned, the man is toxic AF.

      I mean, sure; if you are looking to become obscenely wealthy his attitude makes a lot of sense. But not all of us want to become parasites sucking the lifeblood out of other hard-working, working-class Canadians. Some of us just want enough to be comfortable, because smelling the roses and enjoying life is more important than spending a lifetime grinding to accumulating “stuff” only to die without having enjoyed any of it. You can’t take those obscene levels of wealth with you when you die, and all that accumulating those “brownie points” do is impoverish those from whose labour you coerced and forcibly extracted it.

      • @[email protected]
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        511 days ago

        It’s a lose-lose situation when somebody sees money and assets as the end goal rather than as one of the various tools we use in trying to find a comfortable enjoyable existence.

    • @[email protected]
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      411 days ago

      Haven’t really heard of him before today but already hate him lol. I have heard of Shark Tank, but never watched it.

      I’m sure it’s a good show, I know some nice people who watch it, but I’ve always imagined it in my head as poor people groveling for rich people’s money for their bakeries and such.

  • @[email protected]
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    2112 days ago

    It’s called being on call. It requires an hourly wage for the duration. That said, call pay is usually garbage (like $4/hr). I would posit that call pay should be minimum wage, or more.

    This is no different that being required to pay out a lunch break if and when you’re required to remain available during said lunch break, can’t leave campus, or have to carry a live walkie/radio while “on break”. Federal definition of a lunch break defines it as “uninterrupted”.

    My on call works with garbage pay but if I’m called in it’s automatically OT, even if that’s my one shift that week. Ofc, I’m Union. Even so, the stand at the starting line, available pay, should be at least minimum wage.

  • @Sanctus
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    1612 days ago

    Fucken power dial this Goober’s number. Watch how quick he flips his shit.

  • @p5yk0t1km1r4ge
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    1511 days ago

    Eat shit bud you are nothing outside of work. Fuck you.