• Flying Squid@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    11
    ·
    1 年前

    If a ton of people take the 10x4 schedule, then there will just be a new rush hour. And the problem is working 10 hours a day, not working 4 days a week. This isn’t the 19th century. The idea that we even need to work 40 hours a week is playing into the hands of the capitalist oligarchs. They want you to be happy dong 10x4 and not, for example, 8x4 or 6x5. They think the more you work, the more productive you are when that’s utter bullshit and it just wears people out.

    • just_change_it@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      1 年前

      If a ton of people take the 10x4 schedule, then there will just be a new rush hour.

      If there was a universal “Friday off for everyone” this could be possible but Saturdays and Sundays are work days for a big portion of people. I don’t think it could ever happen, instead you’d just have schedules with coverage. Billy gets Monday off, Sally gets Tuesday off, etc etc.

      They want you to be happy dong 10x4 and not, for example, 8x4 or 6x5. The thought of working 6x5 is maddening to me. I GREATLY value full days off and I never take partial days off even though I could easily take 2 hours off a day for several months a year. At least a couple of hours of work a day are bullshit but that’s just my Job, many others have nonstop work where they never get to stop aside from brief break periods which are closely monitored.

      I don’t disagree that many jobs could easily be part time to the tune of 20hours/week or even less and be fine but if you’re in any kind of critical role - take almost any job that was in person throughout the pandemic - there’s just no way to not staff people during those hours.

      If the idea of happy employees working short shifts or fewer days paid off for companies they would do it because money is #1. I don’t want to kid anyone. The benefit here is employees at effectively no benefit to the employers, so they have zero incentive to do it even if it doesn’t help them whatsoever. Already it’s nearly impossible to accurately gauge performance in countless roles but the idea that an ass isn’t in a chair is a hard habit to break for some people, my boss included.