• Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    In what year was Reagan elected? I’ll give you a tip, it was the same year the country started to get fucked.

  • solsangraal@lemmy.zip
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    1 month ago

    this is why everyone who’s getting screwed on pay should be quiet quitting with no remorse

    • The Pantser@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Been doing that for 3 years and they still haven’t fired me. They beg me to join other projects without extra pay so I just decline them every time.

      • LogicalDrivel@sopuli.xyz
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        1 month ago

        I was just recently laid off for doing that for several years at my last job. I wasn’t “being a team player” and I “do great work, but I could do more” and my “attitude was affecting the team negatively” (read: your enlightening other employees to the fact we are taking advantage of them). Never mind the fact they fired my assistant 3 years ago and never rehired anyone so i was doing two jobs the entire time. Or the fact during my time there i improved a core function of the job by over 20% and saved the company 10s of thousands a year. No, i needed to do more for free. Fuck every employer who operates this way. /rant

        • Narauko@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          No good deed goes unpunished. I found out my job was breaking labor laws about overtime, informed my coworkers that were really getting screwed over by it (being worked 70 hours one week then 10 hours the next week and told OT was calculated by the 80 hour pay period), including unsalaried middle management, to read the labor law poster in the break room. Guess who got relentlessly harassed and then constructively fired by the new store manager, but was young and dumb enough to not recognize retaliation? Turns out all ownership was directly involved intentionally making my life a living hell at work because I expected basic labor law to be followed. That’s how I figured out middle management are usually class traitors too.

  • TexMexBazooka@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    This is why doing the bare minimum in your job is important. They’re doing the bare minimum for you.

  • I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Just want to note that the 80s was when the Boomers started taking over/inheriting companies and leadership positions from the generation before them. The Greatest Generation passed the torch to the Worst Generation and things have gotten worse ever since.

  • Ibaudia@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Production can be cut, without lowering pay for most workers

    Companies have a fiduciary responsibility to their shareholders, so unless you’re running a co-op or we transition to a socialist economic structure then this will likely never happen sadly. That huge gap between production and wages is what fuels our current economic paradigm. The system just needs to be rewritten.

  • okamiueru@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    So, generated value vs what is compensated. It looks like to me like the difference is the basis for the absurd wealth inequality. So, if we increased wages, let’s say roughly 2x for the mean, 5x for the bottom 10p, and 1.5x for 90p, and 0.5x up to 95p. Has anyone done a calculation similar to this, to determine just how few people, that is, how high the percentile, and how low that factor, for that to actually add up? Maybe it even allows for everyone to live decent lives, just mildly inconveniencing a few thousand?

    One can start wondering if a few hundred heads rolling isn’t a valid moral least-evil proposition. Life considered equal. More people die every single day due to arguably greed. In most of the 99.9p+ cases, I assume is due to inherited wealth, and existing market capture. So it’s not like some exceptional value is lost to humanity either.

  • Adori@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Note this is before the pandemic, and now there are way more 200+ billion dlls billionairs

  • FundMECFSResearch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 month ago

    Switzerland is one of the few countries where this graph hasn’t strayed. I wonder if it is because how strong apprenticeship and manual jobs are valued in our culture?

    • perestroika@slrpnk.net
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      1 month ago

      Unfortunately I don’t know.

      To correlate the effect with social processes, one would have to plot the same graph for multiple countries and see what processes occur in each history at the time of the lines forking apart (assuming they do so).

      Some guesses: automation, perhaps globalization of supply chains, something related to the effectiveness of employees at bargaining with employers?