Nay. The sacred 40 hour work week has been decreed as just and holy since the ancient era of.... the early 20th century. Clearly it is the epitome of natural order
-
-
-
Medieval peasants thought they were hard done by if they worked more than 2 days a week. I was shocked to find this out in a book about the Protestant work ethic. I'd always had this idea that they were worked into the ground, but it appears I'm wrong.
- Još 5 drugih odgovora
Novi razgovor -
-
-
We have the technology to do away with most jobs. Spread the workload and allow technology to do the rest. More time for leisure with 10 hour week. Where’s the ambition?pic.twitter.com/2iRNzAq39X
-
You’ll be poor unless you own the technology that creates the products. That’s not a lack of ambition, it’s the way capitalism is.
- Još 2 druga odgovora
Novi razgovor -
-
-
That’s why this. Governments that take social responsibilities seriously end up putting their countries top of the list of happiest ones.pic.twitter.com/1IFlGp1wm6
- Još 3 druga odgovora
Novi razgovor -
-
-
Lol sure ..run that by the farmer that puts the food on our tables everyday
-
Have you ever even met a farmer?
- Još 2 druga odgovora
Novi razgovor -
-
-
Most jobs are like this: quality of life would rise markedly with more leisure time. The key would be catching up typical wages to where they'd have been without the post-1980 divergence between median income and productivity. 1/2
-
For the creative professions, what's needed, IMO, is not a 24-hour week, but sprints of 60-80 hours weeks with ample downtime in between, averaging out to something much lower.
- Još 5 drugih odgovora
Novi razgovor -
Čini se da učitavanje traje već neko vrijeme.
Twitter je možda preopterećen ili ima kratkotrajnih poteškoća u radu. Pokušajte ponovno ili potražite dodatne informacije u odjeljku Status Twittera.