I did retirement home training and used to think it was a sweet job. Then I got in the business and underestimated how demoralizing it was as they give you the easy elders in training while the others make you, or at least me, really think of the fact the job just amounts to an unkarmic freebie.

  • @[email protected]
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    1312 months ago

    Private equity/venture capitalists - they acquire unique brands and then extract all the value and enshitify them into the ground

    • @[email protected]
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      362 months ago

      One of the reasons Boeing sucks is this. First reason is McDonnell Douglas bought Boeing with Boeings money, hallowed out the soul that built the world’s greatest aircraft, then sold what was left off to the big investment funds. Then the investment funds were like “look at all this money Boeing is spending on safety and suppliers” so they cut out the safety and bought out the suppliers. The horror stories of quality control at some of the suppliers is just as bad if not worse than some of the horror stories of quality control at Boeing. What if I told you Boeing fought to have ECS (environmental control systems) software that was written by third world “programmers” that didn’t speak English to remain on their aircraft illegally, claiming it didn’t pose a threat to safety, you know those systems that determine if there is enough oxygen to breath at altitude and whether the temperature inside the plane is survivable…

    • @SirDerpy
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      122 months ago

      Capital is dead labour, that, vampire-like, only lives by sucking living labour, and lives the more, the more labour it sucks.

    • @ComicalMayhem
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      22 months ago

      I’m morbidly curious at how that happens/works

    • @[email protected]
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      32 months ago

      Well, lobbyists work not only for evil corpos, but also for NGOs and movements… Lobbyism is the process to sway politics to a direction through interpersonal meetings, and is necessarily in a democracy.

      However, one thing that would benefit the US is transparency around lobbyists; who they are, how they are funded, their agenda etc. The EU has a database on registered lobbyists and the transparency helps with parts of the problem.

    • @Stupidmanager
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      22 months ago

      This needs higher up. Lobbyists are a cancer

  • @[email protected]
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    642 months ago

    Literally anyone who works in health insurance.

    Currently work in biotech, and have worked in medtech; I have had to integrate systems with insurers (payors is the industry term). I know exactly how fucked it is on a statistical level.

    • @linearchaos
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      I used to work for an insurer. Our entire health system is just a steaming pile of crap. Providers will double or triple bill. Hospitals raise their rates through the absolute roof so they have room for negotiations. The uninsured people more often than not get billed at the unnegotiated rate which is many times what it should be. If the insurers are short on money or profit margins are down and their stockholders are angry they end up turning down shitloads of procedures looking at the statistics for what’s least likely to cause lawsuits and death. Medicare requires you to go and recertify every patient every year, Mr Johnson’s an amputee, well you better get him back in to make sure he still is or you’re not going to pay for DME. Half the big insurers are still running on Big iron of one form or another, FTP over SSL coming hot off of mainframe.

      It’s not a good look.

    • @thesporkeffect
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      142 months ago

      Landlord isn’t an occupation, any more than ‘white collar criminal’

    • @[email protected]
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      There’s another comment that mentioned a landlord that was published exactly 30 seconds before yours. :P

       

       

      (Please keep in mind that I’m just teasing you. Obviously, there’s no way you could have known.)

    • @[email protected]
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      -22 months ago

      I’m staying in a city temporarily for about 6 months, whers would I live if I couldn’t rent?

      • @SmilingSolaris
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        72 months ago

        The lack of a land lord does not mean the house disappeared off the planet.

          • @SmilingSolaris
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            22 months ago

            The lack of a landlord also does not prevent you from temporarily using open housing either.

              • @SmilingSolaris
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                22 months ago

                Imagine a world where housing was given on a per-need basis. People still need to travel for work and stay for months at a time, except it’s understood that the job getting done is more important than a landlord profiting off the fact you have to travel for it.

                • @reddit_sux
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                  02 months ago

                  Who maintains such supply of houses, who pays for it, who would own it, who would carry out repair works as and when they are needed.

      • @thesporkeffect
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        42 months ago

        Hotels used to be the standard temporary housing.

        • @finitebanjo
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          So basically only rich should be allowed to do extended travel? Since the supply of hotels would stay the same if rental homes weren’t allowed, hotel rates wouldn’t go down.

    • @[email protected]
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      How much do you hate them?

      Name a number!

      How about if I drop that hatred by 22% with a 2.1% financing? And throw in a free coupon to Chili’s if you verify within the next 45 minutes! Hurry act now we’re running low on coupons. And you don’t want to go home empty handed, do you?

    • @grue
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      272 months ago

      This. “Marketing” is just a euphemism for “propaganda” – it is inherently manipulative and therefore evil.

    • @[email protected]
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      That shit should be illegal, with, like, a living whitelist so you can still put out a sandwich board in front of your restaurant.

      Yes, I know that will implode entire sectors. They deserve it.

      • Iron Lynx
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        There’s a city in France - Toulouse, IIRC EDIT: Correction: it is Grenoble - where the mayor ran on a promise that “if you elect me, I’ll remove all the billboards.” Turns out that was really popular, so now that city does not have any billboards.

        ETA: A video about it. (Dutch, but it has (auto-generated) English subtitles)

        • @[email protected]
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          32 months ago

          I cannot for the life of me understand why billboards are legal in general. We’ve gone through the effort of banning distractions like even touching your phone while you’re driving, which makes sense, but yet these massive advertisements who’s literal sole intention and purpose is to get you to look at it instead of the road exist and are everywhere. They’re also complete eyesores. Why?! It surprises me there hasn’t been more campaigns like that, I can’t imagine billboards are exactly a popular idea

        • @[email protected]
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          22 months ago

          Dope.

          There’s a good next pet issue for me once over-restrictive zoning is gone and dead. I guess public transit is a perennial bee to put in my bonnet, too.

    • Iron Lynx
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      I once saw a video report on bullshit jobs, where they also interviewed a researcher into how much value is gained or destroyed by various professions.

      They said that for every £1 (the researchers worked in the UK) given to marketing executives, that society suffered £11 in lost value.

      ETA: The video in question (Dutch, with a few local English bits)

    • @[email protected]
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      62 months ago

      Mad Men was hard for me to keep up with because I just hated everyone and it made me angry

    • @WhatYouNeed
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      12 months ago

      And vulture hedge funds.

      Read up on the shit people like Eric Hermann has done buying up debt from distressed countries, then siphoning off their aid money to cover those debts. Zero humanity.

  • Alabaster_Mango
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    362 months ago

    Human Cannonball

    Hear me out: Many circus performers are multi disciplined, or put on an incredible display of training and talent. The last big top I went to had a knife throwing couple who also did a fantastic roller skating routine, a few very talented clowns/jugglers, and a bike troupe in a ball of death. Just to name a few. These people have devoted days or years of their lives to their craft. Do you know how hard it is to ride a bicycle across a tight rope with someone on your shoulders?

    The Human Cannonball? He got launched out of the cannon and did one flip before getting caught by the net. That’s all he did that night, yet he came out and bowed with the rest of the performers like he was an equal contributor.

    • @FutileRecipe
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      172 months ago

      The Human Cannonball? He got launched out of the cannon and did one flip before getting caught by the net.

      That’s what it looks like to the untrained eye. But they’re not really going to fire a person out of a cannon. That’s not safe. So he just huddles in the cannon, they light a decoy fuse, it makes a bang (with no projectile), and he spring out and jumps that distance by himself. Requires a lot of core and leg strength.

      • @[email protected]
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        102 months ago

        This is equal parts so silly and so possible that I have no idea if this comment is a joke (I’ve never been to a circus)

        • snooggums
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          142 months ago

          There is a launch pad thing using springs or compressed air to give them a boost or they wouldn’t go as far.

          The explosion is just for sound, and it is funny if the timing is off.

    • davel [he/him]
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      HR only contributes to the good of the business, which is owned by the capitalist class. It’s a class war, and HR is not on the side of the working class. Which makes HR employees—witting or not—class traitors, something they have in common with cops.

      • @[email protected]
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        -32 months ago

        Since when are HR working class?

        And you don’t even need to bring class into it, their role is the same even when the employees aren’t working class either.

        • davel [he/him]
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          52 months ago

          HR employees must sell their labor for wages to survive, because they don’t own the means of production; therefore they are working class. The capitalist class makes money by owning the means of production, and exploiting the labor of the working class.

    • wuphysics87
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      102 months ago

      Somewhat agree. The good ones you’d never know exist until you need help. They are a god send. Fuck the rest of them

    • @[email protected]
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      52 months ago

      That’s because you only ever dealt with them from the employee’s side. They contribute to the good of the company/organization. Sometimes that also means good for the employee, but that’s just coincidence.

      • @[email protected]
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        102 months ago

        I think it’s because they use their position to professionalise a bullshit job, presenting it as a field (HR Management), when their skills are rather ordinary. Really, they should be doing payroll and employment admin, not setting the tone for the organisation or being seen as specialists in any meaningful way. Also, job competencies and profiles disproportionality reward the “skills” found in HR, which i think reflects their input in designing these tools and templates.

        Further, i find people who work in this field to have quite a high opinion of themselves and their usefulness.

    • @whotookkarl
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      22 months ago

      Company stooges seems a more appropriate department title than human resources, also who the fuck wants to be called a resource I’m a human being not a number.

  • @[email protected]
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    322 months ago

    I’m not sure I do, but one thing I haven’t seen mentioned here yet is consumer psychologists. I once read an argument that they could be improving people’s mental health, instead they are working on manipulating people into buying more.

    • @WhatYouNeed
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      22 months ago

      This. They were the first thing I thought of when thinking of useless.

      I have ad-blockers to filter out crap. Now I need influence-blockers.

  • @DirkMcCallahan
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    272 months ago

    Guidance counselors. One of them tried to convince my parents that I was on drugs…in 4th grade. Turned out that I had an undiagnosed mental disorder.

    • @[email protected]
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      I had similar experiences. It’s like there’s a small but noticeable subset of the population that wants to pin “drug user” on any person they meet and think is weird. Meanwhile, actual drug users are everywhere and mostly manage to act normal.

  • @[email protected]
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    262 months ago

    Naturopaths.

    Don’t get me wrong, I’m sure there’s folks doing sane, evidence-based care in this area. But I’ve seen so much bullshit from practitioners, ranging from the grossly unethical to the blatantly dangerous, that I find them hard to trust about anything as a group.

    Besides, we already have health professionals that can provide good, evidence-based care (issues like ego v. evidence/new findings to improve care notwithstanding - but there’s crappy people in all fields) - we call them doctors and nurse practitioners. And we need more of those.

    • @sudo42
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      32 months ago

      Local natural food store sells Homeopathic medicines. We’re talking water selling at the same price as ink jet printer ink.

      • @SkyezOpen
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        32 months ago

        Let’s throw our morals away and sell homeopathic meals. Like “this is a cheeseburger diluted 10c” and slap a picture of a burger on a water bottle.