You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.
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@jolly said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
My son said he'll be glad to go back. They're about to kill him at home.
He can have fun with that. Don't plan on ever returning to an office again, thanks.
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My wife's company dropped their lease in downtown DC. Didn't renew. They picked up office space across the street, and complete renovations are taking place now. Once they're done, there will be half as many individual offices as they had prior. It will be impossible for her entire department to work in the office at the same time.
Anyone who thinks WFH is temporary is completely out of touch.
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I am currently working from my basement in Minnesota, with the windows open (and birds chirping, a lawn mower in the distance). Just ordered a new standing desk, and plan to upgrade all the tech (desktop, monitor, even a glass chair mat) in the near future.
BTW, all of my colleagues have to go into the office (in DC... it's a government requirement) but they made an exception for me.
If the bubble bursts, I'd imagine other employers will most likely approve work from home for most if not all of the time. I work in IT so lots of what I do is just ones and zeroes.
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If we had a slightly bigger house, I would freaking love working from home. Unfortunately,....
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I don’t think we will spring back to pre-pandemic levels of office work but the notion of everyone working from home is way overblown. Reminds me of the first internet bubble where everyone in their 30’s was talking about early retirement.
A young person with little experience is not going to grow their career and become a leader from home. OTOH those that think of themselves as contract workers and don’t care about where they fit in any particular company will do fine if they are talented.
I think urban cities will become vibrant places again and I don’t see how you pay big city rents and avoid the office. Makes no sense to me.
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I am currently working from my basement in Minnesota, with the windows open (and birds chirping, a lawn mower in the distance). Just ordered a new standing desk, and plan to upgrade all the tech (desktop, monitor, even a glass chair mat) in the near future.
BTW, all of my colleagues have to go into the office (in DC... it's a government requirement) but they made an exception for me.
If the bubble bursts, I'd imagine other employers will most likely approve work from home for most if not all of the time. I work in IT so lots of what I do is just ones and zeroes.
@89th said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
I am currently working from my basement in Minnesota, with the windows open (and birds chirping, a lawn mower in the distance). Just ordered a new standing desk, and plan to upgrade all the tech (desktop, monitor, even a glass chair mat) in the near future.
BTW, all of my colleagues have to go into the office (in DC... it's a government requirement) but they made an exception for me.
If the bubble bursts, I'd imagine other employers will most likely approve work from home for most if not all of the time. I work in IT so lots of what I do is just ones and zeroes.
A belated wedding present to the guy who married a gal from Minnesoooooota.
oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
I already know what to get you for your anniversaries.
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Google tells its employees their pay will be adjusted downward based on where they work from, for those who wants to work-from-home permanently.
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It’s nice that we can still take a moment to feel sorry for oppressed Google employees. Even amidst a pandemic, 5-percenters-working-from-home lives matter.
Let’s not even get started on the lack of free gourmet food at home. After having grown accustomed to it? Oh, the humanity.
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It’s nice that we can still take a moment to feel sorry for oppressed Google employees. Even amidst a pandemic, 5-percenters-working-from-home lives matter.
Let’s not even get started on the lack of free gourmet food at home. After having grown accustomed to it? Oh, the humanity.
@horace said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
It’s nice that we can still take a moment to feel sorry for oppressed Google employees. Even amidst a pandemic, 5-percenters-working-from-home lives matter.
Let’s not even get started on the lack of free gourmet food at home. After having grown accustomed to it? Oh, the humanity.
Some folks would rather root for elevating other employees to get the level of compensation and benefits enjoyed by Google employees (pre-pandemic). Some folks, like you, I suppose, would rather see Google employees' compensation and benefits lowered towards the mean.
I have seen similar psychological reactions elsewhere. For example, Hong Kong vs. mainland China with regards to the freedoms and liberties enjoyed by the populations. When looking at the protests that took place in Hong Kong against the CCP's policies to curtail the freedoms and liberties that used to be the norm in Hong Kong, some mainland Chinese would accuse the Hong Kong protesters for "not appreciating how good they have it" rather than aspiring to also fight for the same rights for themselves, all while the CCP keep suppressing away freedoms and liberties.
Another example concerns unionization and pensions in the US labor market. Quite frequently you'd see non-union workers chiding the union workers for enjoying "too much benefits" negotiated through the unions rather than fighting to get those same benefits for themselves. You'd also see workers without pension plans chiding the those with pension plans that somehow the ones with pension plans are "asking too much" when litigating to preserve their pension benefits rather than fighting for the same benefits for themselves, all while the shareholders and senior management capture more labor cost savings.
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@horace said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
It’s nice that we can still take a moment to feel sorry for oppressed Google employees. Even amidst a pandemic, 5-percenters-working-from-home lives matter.
Let’s not even get started on the lack of free gourmet food at home. After having grown accustomed to it? Oh, the humanity.
Some folks would rather root for elevating other employees to get the level of compensation and benefits enjoyed by Google employees (pre-pandemic). Some folks, like you, I suppose, would rather see Google employees' compensation and benefits lowered towards the mean.
I have seen similar psychological reactions elsewhere. For example, Hong Kong vs. mainland China with regards to the freedoms and liberties enjoyed by the populations. When looking at the protests that took place in Hong Kong against the CCP's policies to curtail the freedoms and liberties that used to be the norm in Hong Kong, some mainland Chinese would accuse the Hong Kong protesters for "not appreciating how good they have it" rather than aspiring to also fight for the same rights for themselves, all while the CCP keep suppressing away freedoms and liberties.
Another example concerns unionization and pensions in the US labor market. Quite frequently you'd see non-union workers chiding the union workers for enjoying "too much benefits" negotiated through the unions rather than fighting to get those same benefits for themselves. You'd also see workers without pension plans chiding the those with pension plans that somehow the ones with pension plans are "asking too much" when litigating to preserve their pension benefits rather than fighting for the same benefits for themselves, all while the shareholders and senior management capture more labor cost savings.
@axtremus said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
@horace said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
It’s nice that we can still take a moment to feel sorry for oppressed Google employees. Even amidst a pandemic, 5-percenters-working-from-home lives matter.
Let’s not even get started on the lack of free gourmet food at home. After having grown accustomed to it? Oh, the humanity.
Some folks would rather root for elevating other employees to get the level of compensation and benefits enjoyed by Google employees (pre-pandemic). Some folks, like you, I suppose, would rather see Google employees' compensation and benefits lowered towards the mean.
I have seen similar psychological reactions elsewhere. For example, Hong Kong vs. mainland China with regards to the freedoms and liberties enjoyed by the populations. When looking at the protests that took place in Hong Kong against the CCP's policies to curtail the freedoms and liberties that used to be the norm in Hong Kong, some mainland Chinese would accuse the Hong Kong protesters for "not appreciating how good they have it" rather than aspiring to also fight for the same rights for themselves, all while the CCP keep suppressing away freedoms and liberties.
Another example concerns unionization and pensions in the US labor market. Quite frequently you'd see non-union workers chiding the union workers for enjoying "too much benefits" negotiated through the unions rather than fighting to get those same benefits for themselves. You'd also see workers without pension plans chiding the those with pension plans that somehow the ones with pension plans are "asking too much" when litigating to preserve their pension benefits rather than fighting for the same benefits for themselves, all while the shareholders and senior management capture more labor cost savings.
Or, I think it’s reasonable labor market dynamics to pay employees differently if they live in less expensive places. I think the story is a cheap play on the corporations are bad, workers are good idea.
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@axtremus said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
@horace said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
It’s nice that we can still take a moment to feel sorry for oppressed Google employees. Even amidst a pandemic, 5-percenters-working-from-home lives matter.
Let’s not even get started on the lack of free gourmet food at home. After having grown accustomed to it? Oh, the humanity.
Some folks would rather root for elevating other employees to get the level of compensation and benefits enjoyed by Google employees (pre-pandemic). Some folks, like you, I suppose, would rather see Google employees' compensation and benefits lowered towards the mean.
I have seen similar psychological reactions elsewhere. For example, Hong Kong vs. mainland China with regards to the freedoms and liberties enjoyed by the populations. When looking at the protests that took place in Hong Kong against the CCP's policies to curtail the freedoms and liberties that used to be the norm in Hong Kong, some mainland Chinese would accuse the Hong Kong protesters for "not appreciating how good they have it" rather than aspiring to also fight for the same rights for themselves, all while the CCP keep suppressing away freedoms and liberties.
Another example concerns unionization and pensions in the US labor market. Quite frequently you'd see non-union workers chiding the union workers for enjoying "too much benefits" negotiated through the unions rather than fighting to get those same benefits for themselves. You'd also see workers without pension plans chiding the those with pension plans that somehow the ones with pension plans are "asking too much" when litigating to preserve their pension benefits rather than fighting for the same benefits for themselves, all while the shareholders and senior management capture more labor cost savings.
Or, I think it’s reasonable labor market dynamics to pay employees differently if they live in less expensive places. I think the story is a cheap play on the corporations are bad, workers are good idea.
@horace said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
Or, I think it’s reasonable labor market dynamics to pay employees differently if they live in less expensive places.
Hence the outsourcing of manufacturing jobs to Mexico and China, and outsourcing of software development and customer support jobs to India.
You have folks who advocate to extend American labor protection standards to Mexico and China and India, and you have folks who would rather lower the labor protection standards in the USA and hope that that would then also lower the American labor cost enough to bring the jobs back to the USA.
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@horace said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
Or, I think it’s reasonable labor market dynamics to pay employees differently if they live in less expensive places.
Hence the outsourcing of manufacturing jobs to Mexico and China, and outsourcing of software development and customer support jobs to India.
You have folks who advocate to extend American labor protection standards to Mexico and China and India, and you have folks who would rather lower the labor protection standards in the USA and hope that that would then also lower the American labor cost enough to bring the jobs back to the USA.
@axtremus said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
@horace said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
Or, I think it’s reasonable labor market dynamics to pay employees differently if they live in less expensive places.
Hence the outsourcing of manufacturing jobs to Mexico and China, and outsourcing of software development and customer support jobs to India.
You have folks who advocate to extend American labor protection standards to Mexico and China and India, and you have folks who would rather lower the labor protection standards in the USA and hope that that would then also lower the American labor cost enough to bring the jobs back to the USA.
That all sounds more nuanced than the point of the story, which was to make a lame stab at evil corporations trodding on their poor workers, and using Google of all places as an example.
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@horace said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
Or, I think it’s reasonable labor market dynamics to pay employees differently if they live in less expensive places.
Hence the outsourcing of manufacturing jobs to Mexico and China, and outsourcing of software development and customer support jobs to India.
You have folks who advocate to extend American labor protection standards to Mexico and China and India, and you have folks who would rather lower the labor protection standards in the USA and hope that that would then also lower the American labor cost enough to bring the jobs back to the USA.
@axtremus said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
@horace said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
Or, I think it’s reasonable labor market dynamics to pay employees differently if they live in less expensive places.
Hence the outsourcing of manufacturing jobs to Mexico and China, and outsourcing of software development and customer support jobs to India.
You have folks who advocate to extend American labor protection standards to Mexico and China and India, and you have folks who would rather lower the labor protection standards in the USA and hope that that would then also lower the American labor cost enough to bring the jobs back to the USA.
It is the competition that matters.
Just keep the government out of it.
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Google tells its employees their pay will be adjusted downward based on where they work from, for those who wants to work-from-home permanently.
@axtremus said in You can't make me come to work - I wanna work from home.:
Google tells its employees their pay will be adjusted downward based on where they work from, for those who wants to work-from-home permanently.
No shit Sherlock. Who didn’t see this coming?