Some More News - SMN: The Past, Present, And Future Of Work
Episode Date: March 23, 2022In today's episode, we pee in bottles for the good of the company. After all, that bottle isn't going to fill itself with pee, is it? Get back to work! We now have a MERCH STORE! ...Check it out here: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/somemorenews To get your new wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month, and get the plan shipped to your door for FREE, go to http://MINTMOBILE.com/morenews. For everyone watching right now, Trade Coffee is offering a total of $20 off your first three bags when you go to http://drinktrade.com/morenews. Go to http://magicspoon.com/MORENEWS to grab a variety pack and try it today! And be sure to use our promo code MORENEWS at checkout to save five dollars off your order! Follow us on social media! Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews Source List: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1J0jfr3qC6x5Pid3gl8iqRqGFcyj6zvVonQHFMqjFUag/edit?usp=sharingSupport the show!: http://patreon.com.com/somemorenewsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh, hey everyone.
Sorry, it's going to be a minute.
I'm trying to figure out our HR management app
and I just forgot the password.
Security questions.
Anus shape.
Okay, I'm just gonna...
Katie, hello. I know you can hear and see me. Those stuffed owls are clearly cameras. security questions. Anus shape? Okay, I'm just gonna... Katie!
Hello!
I know you can hear and see me.
Those stuffed owls are clearly cameras.
Oh, hey, buddy.
Just randomly checking in to see how my favorite news host is doing.
Yeah, hey.
Where's my bathroom?
I'm sorry?
My entire bathroom is missing.
Did you go through the app?
The app?
The app wants to know about my anus.
Well, it is the body's fingerprint. Where is my bathroom? Did you go through the app? The app? The app wants to know about my anus.
Well, it is the body's fingerprint.
Where is my bathroom?
Listen, Cody, I hear you.
I see you through those owls.
And you took just too many pisses on company time.
I do not pay you to piss, man.
You get paid to consume the news, process it, and then shoot it out at the camera.
I want you to eat news and crap news also.
You sweat, you bleed, and you piss news, man.
This is my home.
You took my home bathroom.
Where am I going to pee now?
Pee in a bottle.
Pee in your pants.
I don't care.
The camera's only waist up anyway.
Just figure it out for yourself for once.
Be creative. Be a thought leader, Cody.
All right, good talk. I'm off to go play executive sushi golf.
Executive sushi golf?
Yeah, you play golf, but with sushi into each other's mouths.
That seems kind of gross.
Yeah, okay, like I'm gonna listen to what Admiral Pisspants thinks is gross.
Okay, break time's over, remember to give this 110%!
Wait, no, better make it 111%.
Bye!
111%?
But that's more of my all than exists!
Anyway, back to the news!
One second.
All right, sorry about that. Boy, working kind of sucks, right?
It's not exactly popular right now either.
In fact, here is some news.
According to the leading experts,
nobody wants to work anymore. You guys have stayed open the entire time,
but as it's reopened and mandates have been lifted, it's tough to hire people right now, right?
Yes. Nobody really wants to work. Everybody is staying home. Why do you work if you can't
collect the money and the government is feeding them?
So I don't think it's a good idea.
They should stop it.
And it's good for people and good for the business and good for the country, good for the economy.
Why is there a demand for labor and seemingly high unemployment, but we can't marry the two?
Well, I mean, I don't think anybody's wanting to say it, but with unemployment and the stimulus and tax income, everyone's kind of saying, you know, I make more at home. They make
more on unemployment. They make more with these benefits and they're just not wanting to go to
work. The government's made it too easy. Just basically all the stimulus money and then the
extra money on the unemployment
and then extending the unemployment for people
that have just been on unemployment.
They make more money to stay home than work.
Did I say leading experts?
I meant random people and business owners
being asked to speculate as to why there's a hiring crisis
in order to push a specific narrative
without having to consult actual experts
who might not reach the same conclusion.
Also, Kim Kardashian, apparently.
And according to those experts,
it turns out that after the pandemic,
all of America's working class became listless
and self-centered loaf mongers suckling on handouts
from that socialist Uncle Sam, Donald Trump.
No need to look into the deets
around how all the low wage work,
which we rely on in the US has become more cumbersome,
stressful and often traumatic during this pandemic.
No, that would be too cumbersome and stressful
and often traumatic to acknowledge.
Also, geez, I don't know,
if giving people like 600 bucks a week for unemployment
turns out to be more money
than what they made doing a service job, perhaps the finger pointing should be aimed at the people paying dirt
wages.
Or at the very least, maybe the news could ask the people on unemployment about why they
aren't going back to work instead of the people running the businesses.
Or heck, perhaps they could point out that the deadly pandemic that killed nearly a million
people and caused lasting side effects might have something to do with people not rushing back to the office.
Or by golly gee whiz, perhaps one of these reporters can open a fucking laptop and clack
a few typey type words to see if unemployment benefits have any kind of historical or measurable
connection with causing people to not look for work. because it turns out that there are a bunch of studies
all concluding that no,
unemployment benefits do not slow down
the labor market recovery.
It's simply not true.
These are all things that the media could have done
instead of sticking a mic in the face of a storekeeper
or a rich celebrity who inherited a bunch of her money
or in one of those clips,
just a random nurse who took a viral photo
and asked them to speculate why people aren't working
and then run with their answers
like they were the fucking lords of facts.
But instead of doing any of that,
the second those no one wants to work anymore memes
started popping up in 2021,
we saw the news jump on this narrative
like a bunch of horny squirrels,
followed by a series of Republican governors
ending crucial unemployment benefits during a pandemic
to try to force people into low-paying, often unsafe jobs.
A few signs at a Wendy's suddenly became proof
that America's working class were living high on the hog
and taking advantage
of completely unnecessary unemployment benefits
distributed at a time when only 35% of US adults
had received two shots of a coronavirus vaccine.
Not to mention that most of the same governors
slashing unemployment benefits and declaring,
it's time for America to get back to work,
were doing so while banning mandates for vaccines and masks
and being generally super duper wrong
about how and when the pandemic would end.
Of course, it's always those dipshit
GOPs, isn't it? And by dipshit GOP, I of course also mean President Joe Biden.
We're going to make it clear that anyone collecting unemployment who is offered a
suitable job must take the job or lose their unemployment benefits.
It's time for America to get back to work and fill our great downtowns again with people.
People working from home can feel safe and begin to return to their offices. We're doing that here
in the federal government. Hey Joe, I know you're like 90 and live in your office, but most people
have this thing called the internet now and shouldn't be required to physically go into work
for all kinds of jobs, no matter how much those sad downtown buildings miss us.
Surely we can think of a new use
for a bunch of lonely buildings
in a time where people are struggling
to find affordable housing.
Also, maybe we live in a time where people
shouldn't have to take the first suitable job
under the penalty of starving.
Where COVID related side effects
are still incredibly hard to diagnose
and could result in seriously sick people
being shoved back into the workforce.
Maybe there are worse things out there
than someone leaning on unemployment benefits
a little longer than they should.
And most finalist of all, just possibly, maybe, perhaps,
after several years of being paid dirt wages
and killed off for the sake of the economy,
amassing serious anxiety and medical problems,
the last thing anyone struggling in the workforce
actually wants to hear is how having a job
equates to having your dignity back.
My dad used to have an expression, he said,
Joey, a job's about a lot more than a paycheck.
It's about your dignity.
And then he'd say, Joey,
a job is about a lot more than a paycheck.
It's about your dignity.
It's about respect. It's about your place. It's about respect.
It's about your place in the community.
Yes, family budgets are still tight,
but a lot of Americans are getting paychecks this year more than they got last year
and restoring the dignity of work
so they can show up at work with some pride.
Mmm, yes, dignity.
One second, hold on.
All right. Sorry, I had a lot of coffee this morning.
Didn't expect my bathroom to be torn from my apartment.
Anyway, nothing says dignity more than going to a place
you hate for eight hours a day.
This framing from the president that work is dignified
and that it's sad that no one wants to work anymore
to apparently fill our struggling skyscrapers is all,
as you might've noticed, from the perspective
of the people in charge of these workplaces.
And so what I'm getting at here is that post-ish
the pandemic, it seems that a lot of Americans
who aren't running a business or office
are wondering just why they're expected to work long hours
for very little money.
They do not, as Biden keeps putting it,
see the dignity in that.
And yet at the same time, a lot of,
let's call them the more wealth inclined individuals,
well, they see this as the common folk
getting a little too big for their britches
instead of say the beginnings
of a workers' revolution in this country.
And I guess my question now is, which is it?
Did a massive unemployment system create a nation of people
who want to make money doing nothing?
Or perhaps are workers finally realizing their value?
Is it wrong to even complain in these modern times
compared to the olden days of black lunged children
hand shoveling toxic rat turds for penny slivers?
Or perhaps we shouldn't compare the worst labor moments
of our history with today
as a way to justify contemporary problems.
See, it seems like it's that last thing.
You know, seems extremely obviously like it's the last thing.
But wait, perhaps we actually should look at history
as a whole when talking about labor
in this country after all.
I know I literally just said we shouldn't,
but while there certainly were worse times to be a worker,
there were also way better times as well.
In fact, you might argue that the concept of working
was actually much better
for the majority of history before now.
And that only for a very tiny sliver of our existence
as sapiens, you know, the humankind.
Have we been expected to expend energy
in the service of some other non-personal goal
for so much of our lives?
So darn, let's, I don't know, talk about that.
Are you ready?
The past, present, and future of work.
Oh yeah, I am so ready.
So no better place to
start. Time for ads!
Fucking what the hell?
You like it? Instead
of a toilet, you now have a
giant speaker that tells you when to
cut to ads. Unfortunately,
it is on a timer and cannot be turned off
during non-working hours, though.
You serious? Or like, I don't
want to turn it off?
I forget which.
Either it can't be or I won't let it turn off.
Point is, you need to do an ad break.
I was just starting!
Congrats!
Oof, better cut to ads, pissy.
Okay!
Wow, fine, great, let's cut to the ads.
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She's right, but still, it hurts to hear.
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One moment.
Okay, super, and we're
back from ads! And as I
was- Back from ads!
Why?
Why?
Okay, so we were about to talk about the history of work,
and no better place to start
than the beginning of our entire species.
No, really, it sounds whack and or bogus,
but human beings have existed with essentially
the bodies and minds we have today for like 200,000 years.
Unfortunately, we don't have much info
on that first 190,000-ish years,
but if you look at the indigenous communities
that managed to maintain their traditional
hunter-gatherer structures into the modern era,
those groups worked, on average, about 15 hours a week.
One group of people from Southern Africa,
which managed to live as hunter-gatherers until the 1970s,
had plenty of time and energy to devote to leisure
and operated in a system whereby individual attempts
to either accumulate or monopolize resources or power
were met with derision and ridicule,
which sounds pretty fun if I'm being honest.
Researchers believe that most hunter-gatherer societies,
which again, is how we humans live
for the vast majority of our history,
spent most of their time on purposeful activities
such as making music, exploring,
decorating their bodies, and socializing.
You know, things only communists like to do.
Some even theorize that these pinko homo sapiens
were only able to develop language
because of all of this free time.
And that makes sense.
If you're laboring for 14 hours a day,
that doesn't leave you a lot of time
to yak about your opinions around the water cooler,
which back then was called a river.
Now, I'm not trying to go all edgelord Tyler Durden
on everyone and propose we all revert back
to the days of hunting and or gathering,
preferably with robot dinosaurs like in that Horizon game, that would be pretty sweet.
And so I guess I'm actually proposing that.
But what I'm trying to say here is that perhaps
the human brain wasn't exactly built to be
in a work task mode for 40 plus hours a week.
And in fact, didn't operate this way
for the majority of our history,
even in the most socially unequal and brutal societies,
and yes, they were unequal and brutal,
most people still didn't work as much as they do today.
In medieval England, working days would typically
not last longer than eight hours
and were notable for leisurely meals,
naps, refreshment breaks, and banging two coconuts together
in order to comically simulate the sound of a horse.
And given how crops have both on and off seasons
and the harvest is not year round,
most people had holiday time
lasting about one third of the year.
And those Brits of the 16th century
were probably themselves overdoing it a little.
In the later middle ages,
like the top half of the middle of the ages, I guess,
people in Spain typically had five months of time off per year.
And entire peasant families around Europe
would usually only work until they had earned
what they needed for the year,
after which they would stop.
They would stop working.
That's a choice people could make in the past, I guess.
They would look at the amount of money they had and say,
well, that's all the money I'll need.
And then just stop.
Making money for the year?
And that was possible?
Because for some wild reason,
these people didn't think making money
was the most important thing in life?
Welcome, comrade medieval peasant.
So what exactly happened?
Well, that would be a thing called
the Industrial Revolution.
Now, first off, a little historical housekeeping.
There were actually two Industrial Revolutions.
The first involving a rapid expansion of machine processes,
including steam power and mechanization
from 1760 until around 1840.
And the second involving the mass industrialization
of American and European production and labor,
plus the adoption of new technological achievements
like railroads, sewer systems, electricity,
and stuff like that, lasted from the late 19th century
until about World War I.
I'm going to just say the Industrial Revolution
over the next few minutes,
and I'm gonna need you to stick with me
on the general understanding that a lot changed
during this 150-year period of time.
And some stuff happened in the first industrial revolution
and other stuff happened in the second.
And you should really just get off my ass about it.
What are you, King History?
I think not, you're an Earl at best.
Now, the industrial revolution is often thought about
just in terms of factories, long hours,
workplace accidents, and novels
where even the CliffsNotes were a struggle to get through.
But this is also the era
where modern capitalistic institutions
like credit, stock markets,
and incorporation became commonplace.
The entire idea that most individuals
would work for a company and get paid a wage,
nowadays just accepted as if there could be no alternative,
came out of the rapid expansion of non-agrarian industries
during the Industrial
Revolution.
The impact this era still has on us today is pretty incalculable.
Our cities swelled, railroads were built to connect them all, and an economic system that
relied on low-wage workers suffering through harsh conditions was established.
The attitude of laissez-faire capitalism in this era meant that the government set very
few regulations as to worker treatment,
hours, or conditions. Working 16 hours a day in a mine or factory wasn't uncommon.
Workers were often either denied breaks or docked pay during their breaks and frequently had to
perform maintenance on machines while they ate lunch. And you have to remember, in late 19th
century America, this probably seemed like an improvement for much of the country,
given the US had only recently started dismantling
its much more horrifying system
of having millions of no wage workers
just a few decades before.
Without any regulation, companies had carte blanche
to work employees as tough as they wanted.
Between that and the newly developed machines
those workers operated, production increased.
Production meant more goods to sell and export and more money coming into the companies Between that and the newly developed machines those workers operated, production increased.
Production meant more goods to sell and export
and more money coming into the companies
that had figured out how to use technology
and labor efficiently.
Much like today, the people who got rich
off of this increased productivity
didn't want to share all of the money
coming in with their workers.
Unlike today, they didn't have an outlet
for their totally epic weed sex inflation jokes.
Do you get it?
Do you get it?
The guy who runs segregated factories
said the funny numbers.
Do you get it?
Over 69 worker lawsuits.
Oh, lol.
But also unlike today,
the classic robber barons of the late 19th
and early 20th centuries were probably,
and this is gonna sound wrong to you at first,
hoarding less in profits than today's wealthiest people.
No, really, it is much worse now.
You might have heard that John D. Rockefeller,
the founder of the Standard Oil Company,
was the richest American who ever lived,
if you adjust for inflation.
But Rockefeller died in 1937 with a net worth
of $1.4 billion, which would be about $27 billion today.
Far below your Gateses and Buffetses and Zuckersbergses.
That richest person ever line
only comes from calculating Rockefeller's wealth
as a percentage of GDP at the time.
It's a minor distinction,
and look, Rockefeller wasn't like a good dude,
but it's part of this overall narrative
that intensive unfair work and the massive hoarding of wealth
was a product of a bygone era.
So given that the industrial revolution in the now times,
both feature long hours, low wages,
often unsafe working conditions,
and massive amounts of wealth flowing to the richest 1%,
the major difference between then and now
is that the struggle was a lot more blatant and violent
back during this time.
In 1877, when railroad workers went on strike
to protest reduced wages,
states gathered militias of more than 60,000
to put them down,
leading to the deaths of 10 people in Cumberland, Maryland.
A decade later, workers rallied in Chicago
to support the standardization of an eight-hour workday. They were attacked by cops, an action which led to more rallies, and ultimately anarchist violence
against police. Since labor leaders were blamed for the violence, this incident is said to have
served as a setback for the labor movement. That was in 1886. The eight-hour workday was won
gradually over the ensuing decades, but didn't become codified into law for most US workers
until the Fair Labor Standards Act was passed in 1938.
So despite mobilizing,
since we had a president named Millard,
it took forever to see the visible fruits of these actions,
like the 40 hour work week, child labor laws,
the minimum wage, and ladies and gentlemen, the weekend.
Those protections, won largely in the first third
of the 20th century, provided a significant benefit
to American workers after World War II.
After the war, more people were able to pursue
what they wanted to for employment
instead of spending all day building tanks,
shells, and this is true, bat bombs.
But also after declining in the 1920s,
union membership surged during the Great Depression,
World War II, and then peaked in the mid 1950s.
Working hours for most stabilized
at around 40 hours per week, worker injuries declined,
and some workers were even able to save for retirement
because of profit sharing incentives at companies.
In one of the most prominent examples of the benefits
of this kind of arrangement,
Sears earmarked 10% of its pre-tax earnings
for a profit sharing program with workers.
By the 1950s, Sears employees owned a quarter
of the company.
A quarter being how much Sears is currently worth.
The union membership of this era is credited
with earning workers additional benefits,
including regular pay raises, healthcare,
and retirement packages.
The U.S. was able to sustain a robust middle class that allowed a single individual
working as an insurance agent, bus driver,
or Mambo bandleader to afford a comfortable life,
maybe own a house, have children,
and even take a vacation once in a while.
And that was because, and this is pretty key,
we fought for those things over a long period of time.
Now, don't think I'm gonna spend the next
amount of time waxing nostalgic about the 1950s.
Don't get me wrong.
The 1950s sucked.
Racist housing and banking laws
kept most non-white people from purchasing property.
Safe and legal abortions were unavailable
to all but the affluent.
The CIA started having a real fun time
overthrowing the governments of other countries.
And one of the hottest comedies on TV was produced by a fucking toothpaste company.
But the correlation between robust union efforts and broader protections for workers is readily
apparent, and it's one of the artifacts of post-World War II America that might have made
things better for workers today. Unfortunately, the strength of unions, and thus the power of
the American worker to maintain a reasonable working day for good pay
started a steady decades long decline during this period.
This was due to a number of factors
such as manufacturing jobs moving overseas,
allegations of corruption,
and most notably a political scene
that promoted irrational and frequently racist fears
about communism.
After World War II,
the Congress of Industrial Organizations
launched a campaign to promote unionization
among workers in the South called Operation Dixie.
This effort was partially undercut
by the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act,
which restricted the power of labor unions
and set the stage for dozens of states
to establish right to work laws,
further exempting companies from having to negotiate
with unions when hiring.
But it also failed because industries took advantage
of conditions in the Jim Crow South to stoke fears
and prevent black and white workers
from organizing together.
Institutionalized racism,
you probably won't be terribly shocked to find out,
was one of the primary catalysts
for the decline of unions in America.
People at the time, much like today,
would try to find other dog-whistley ways
of saying the racist thing
without using overtly racist language. But since this was the 50s, much like today, will try to find other dog-whistley ways of saying the racist thing
without using overtly racist language.
But since this was the 50s,
you could just call someone a closet communist,
light up a Lucky Strike, slap a child, and then move on.
But believe it or not,
even as union membership started to decline in the US,
compensation for workers still kept going up
until about the early 1980s, when, you know,
when Ronald Reagan
and his flagrant disdain for workers
led to the firing of thousands
of air traffic controllers in 1981
who were striking for a pay raise and shorter work week.
And his monster tax cuts for the rich
hollowed out the middle class
and led to four decades of politicians saying,
maybe if we give all the rich people more money again,
this time it will trickle down mommy.
Despite the fact that this has never, ever, ever happened.
And that's what leads us to charts like this
and the way we all work today.
A system where every adult pretty much has to work
at capacity all of the time, just to hang on
to whatever bottom rung
of a ladder we have been presented with.
We covered that most recent era from Reagan to the present
pretty thoroughly in a video a few months ago
and not to toot my own bulbous horn,
but we did a decent job laying out
why modern American workers, particularly millennials,
are so frustrated at what we inherited.
But between 1979 and 2018, productivity jumped
another 69.6% and compensation grew by just 11.6%.
In other words, we're working our asses off
and inheriting very little in return.
So I don't know, maybe let us have our stupid green toast.
Man, what was I thinking with that beard?
Ugh.
So to recap, union membership has been on the decline
for decades despite union workers earning 19% more
on average than non-union workers.
The largest block of workers in the US has lower wages,
works longer hours, and are generally unhappy with their jobs.
So why doesn't it change?
Well, that's a very good question
that deserves a whole bunch of words
coming out of this pretty mouth of mine,
which will happen right after these ads.
So just sit tight.
Time for ads.
I was literally just doing the ad thing.
Let's do, all right, we're gonna do the ad.
Ad break in three.
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Two.
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Well, we're back from ads.
So we're back from ads.
And we were talking about the history
of how work in this country became all encompassing
and why now in these exhausting times,
our society seems barely able to change that.
Not because it isn't possible,
but rather that the people in power,
as well as a lot of workers,
seem actually unwilling to do anything.
So why is that?
Well, for one thing, it's kind of the same reason
most of us still sing happy birthday
when it's someone's birthday.
It's what we were always taught to do.
Seems innocuous enough at first glance,
and it might be a little uncomfortable
if you just suggested something else out of the blue.
Even though Crazy Town's Butterflies are a really bad song,
is it really worse than Happy Birthday?
It's possible people might prefer it.
Or maybe we can just sit in silence
while the cake is brought out.
There's no reason we can't,
but we will probably keep singing Happy Birthday, right?
Who's gonna spearhead a movement to change that?
You? Me?
I can't even shit in a toilet anymore.
I have to use the garbage disposal,
which is really just me wiggling a butter knife
around down there.
Of course, there are some other reasons
we work the way we do as well.
Some of them uniquely American.
And we will split these into two categories,
starting with the cultural reasons.
You've perhaps heard of something called
the Protestant work ethic,
the idea that a significant chunk of the American identity
comes from the teaching and work of Protestant theologians,
Martin Luther and John Calvin,
which is that work is built into our bones
and we wouldn't even want to live any other way.
And sure, I guess you can find some examples
to back this up.
There have been surveys in the past
finding that most Americans like their jobs
and that many people,
especially if they don't work in the private sector,
glean a certain amount of meaning and pride from their work.
There's nothing wrong with taking pride
in the work you're putting in.
You think Prince Goro enjoys shoving someone's head
into their torso and then ripping off
the front of their chest
so they look like Krang from Ninja Turtles?
No, he does that because the work needs to get done.
Also, he probably enjoys it.
However, this idea of work ethic is strongly tied in
with a concept of American exceptionalism
and is often used as the expectation
for how people should work,
often as a political point used to alienate those
who don't feel this way.
It's good that some people enjoy work,
but we shouldn't assume everyone does.
When Rand Paul announced his,
and excuse me while I stifle laughter here,
2016 presidential campaign,
he strongly delivered this message
and countered what he saw as a nation struggling
with its work ethic.
From an early age, I worked.
I taught swimming lessons.
I mowed lawns.
I did landscaping.
I put roofs on houses.
I painted houses.
I never saw work, though, as punishment.
Work always gave me a sense of who I am.
Self-esteem can't be given, it must be earned.
Work is not punishment, work is the reward.
Ah, yes, work is the reward.
Mowing lawns and teaching kids how to swim, I bet Rand Paul had a lucrative lemonade stand
and a paper route to deliver his dad's racist newsletters.
Of course, you can tell what kind of person he's visualizing
while promoting the American work ethic,
given that he's previously said
that only unemployed people use heroin,
and that he's glad his train didn't stop in Baltimore
during protests over the death of Freddie Gray,
it seems pretty clear exactly who he considers the Americans with a strong work ethic. Also,
and maybe this is obvious, but when it comes to jobs, the money is the reward.
Paul's ideas, though, go way back. It's taken as a given in American life that working oneself to
the bone is the innate and natural order of things,
and not something that was developed over time
by the capitalists in charge
and the economic conditions they have created.
The phrase Protestant work ethic
was not part of some holy Anglo-American doctrine
passed down from, where are things passed down from?
Like a mountain?
Gross.
No, the phrase was coined by the German sociologist
Max Weber in his 1905 book,
"'The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism."
Weber argues that the Protestant mindset
that took root hundreds of years ago
was essential to ending feudalism
and creating our modern market-driven capitalist system.
The theory suggests that Protestants valued work and success
more than those who practiced other religions,
and that Calvinist branches of Protestantism
frowned upon donating money to the poor or to charity
because it was seen as promoting beggary.
And you know what?
Fine.
If your religious worldview is that it's best to work hard
and never be a burden on anyone else
and prove you can be more productive than the next guy
and not give to charity, then sure, do that.
I mean, you'd be a nerd and wrong and kind of a dick,
whatever, but that shouldn't be the foundation
for an entire system.
It's not something we should expect everyone to do.
And it leads to the persistent and very untrue assumptions
that rich people are rich because they work harder
than poor people.
That the working class is lazy
and that your grandmother should be happy to die
so that the Dow can cross 40,000.
In fact, even Weber recognized that people
wouldn't have to share those values
in order to be forcefully integrated into the system.
And that would be shitty, but of course he was right.
And this leads us into the more modern version
of the Protestant work ethic.
Hustle culture, hashtag rise and grind,
get rich or die grinding,
the grind leading the grind,
grind hard with a vengeance.
Yes, in 2022, instead of toiling in the wheat field
for 10 hours and spying on your neighbor
who's taking a bit too long of a break,
we've got Instagram to prove we work longer
and harder than anyone else.
Of course, work in this sense is typically flexing,
flexing with your hands loosely rested on weights
or flexing while in the ocean
and arrows rained down on your wings.
What is that guy, some kind of angel?
Or like, did somebody fuck a seagull and birth him
and all the townsfolk are horrified
and trying to shoot him while he retreats into the ocean
only to be tragically rejected by his avian brethren
and be doomed to wander the earth without a home?
That's, that's terrible.
Why can't we accept this bird man for who he is?
We're sorry, air hunk.
What was I talking about?
Oh, right, hustle culture.
If you search on Twitter or
Instagram for things like hashtag hustle or hashtag Monday motivation, you'll see a mix of
imagery seemingly designed to blur the lines between work and leisure. And this is something
that ultra rich capitalists are only too happy to reinforce. Billionaire Richard Branson said
fun is one of the most important ingredients in any successful venture. JP Morgan CEO, Jamie Dimon said,
remote work does not work for young people
or those who want to hustle.
You got that?
Everyone under 45, you're young and fresh faced.
Maybe you have wings.
You work hard and you play hard
as long as that playing hard involves working hard.
The concept of a side hustle
is so commonplace in our discourse
that it's easy to forget that it's just like another job.
It's played off as a fun way to follow your dreams.
But the sad truth is that the number of Americans
having to take second jobs has been increasing
over the last two decades.
But this is a good thing, right?
Articles online, it is like clockwork.
Anytime something happens in the US economy
that looks like a detriment to American workers,
there will be an article somewhere
to make it seem like all additional work
is just a fun piece of the ultimate success puzzle.
And it's actually necessary, as billionaires will always say,
if you want to get to where they are.
Because of course, hard work equals success, right?
Not successful?
You must not have worked hard enough.
Kind of successful, but not as rich as you want to be?
You simply didn't work as hard as the billionaire
who clearly works harder than everyone else.
What's the evidence for that?
Well, him of course, the wise billionaire said so.
You just have to put in 80 to 100 hour weeks every week, Elon Musk says. If other people
are putting in 40 hour work weeks and you're putting in 100 hour work weeks, then even if
you're doing the same thing, you know that you will achieve in four months what it takes them
a year to achieve. That's right. People are just optimally productive no matter how much they work.
You know how you work just as hard in the 12th hour
of your shift as your third hour?
If you would just put in 100 hours a week at Sur La Table,
you definitely would have made shift man a J.
The thing about this though, is that it's totally not true.
A 2014 study from Stanford found that increased working
hours typically results in less productivity,
which drops sharply above 50 weekly hours.
What a big surprise.
Once people are working more than 55 hours in a week,
they're barely getting anything done
and might as well have not tried.
There's a great amount of value in rest.
And a number of studies have found
that taking regular breaks and literally
doing nothing helps improve our mood and makes us more productive when we are working. A 2015 study
from Australia found that the stress associated with working more than just 25 hours a week
caused cognitive decline in people over 40. A body of research suggests that we're most productive
in 90-minute work periods,
separated by breaks, with the most successful performers working in three 90-minute sessions a day.
Our brains simply didn't evolve to focus on work-related tasks for eight or more hours consecutively.
But what about those executives who say they work 100 hours a week?
Well, the thing about them is they're liars.
It's a lie by big, stupid, rich liars.
Well, what's Elon doing anyway?
Spending the night at the Tesla factory, tightening panels on his shitty cars,
slaving away on Twitter every day?
Those memes don't steal themselves.
What I'm getting at is that what these rich CEOs consider work
is not what you or I or most people would ever consider work.
Back when Quibi was a beautiful, soft, fleeting thing,
the media was desperate to frame CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg
as a really hard worker who wakes up at 2.30 a.m.
just to get all of his work done.
But of course, he didn't really have anything to do
other than approve or disapprove of what all of his employees, the But of course, he didn't really have anything to do other than approve or disapprove
of what all of his employees,
the people actually doing the work, were creating.
What he considered work was what the New York Times
described as three breakfast meetings,
three lunch meetings, and a working dinner.
So eating and talking,
not exactly the hardest job in the world,
especially since he's the boss
and everyone has to do what he tells them.
It might get a little tiresome,
greenlighting Chrissy Teigen court shows
over an egg white omelet in a fruit bowl,
but it's got to be a lot easier than like an actual job.
And when it comes to Elon,
don't forget that he's the CEO of four companies,
Tesla, SpaceX, Neuralink, and The Boring Company.
That's the one that does the traffic simulating death tunnel
so he can sell dirt to the poor,
even though he hasn't actually done that yet.
So even if he was telling the truth about 100 hour weeks,
that means he's working about 25 hours
as the CEO of each company.
He is just admitting to us that being a CEO
is not a full-time job.
Could it possibly be that taking meetings
and telling people what to do isn't all that hard? If you have a full-time job, could it possibly be that taking meetings and telling people what to do
isn't all that hard?
If you have a full-time job,
think about if you would be able to do even two of them,
let alone four, and still have time left over
to come up with absolutely killer content like this.
I think he's close to having a packet ready
for the Corden Show.
So at the end of the day, there's simply no shame
in not working 100 hours or 80
hours or 40 hours or even zero hours a week. People telling you otherwise are either misinformed
or liars or jerks. This Joe Biden work is dignity and corporate fantasy that is somehow in our
nature to sit in a box for eight hours a day is silly and wrong. And you could argue that it's a smokescreen
for the other main driver
of our current life work imbalance, which is economic.
Specifically, the need for constant growth
measured in an extremely fucked up way.
Now, this is gonna be a vast oversimplification
of hundreds of years of economic theory.
But the idea is that workers and companies
and manufacturers over time get more efficient
and are able to turn out more productivity
with fewer resources.
That results in more profit coming in,
which grows the organization
and provides more value to its workers
who make more money and thus ensure
that each generation is more prosperous than the last.
At least that's how it's supposed to work.
I don't know if you've noticed, but subsequent generations aren't making more money than the last. At least that's how it's supposed to work. I don't know if you've noticed,
but subsequent generations aren't making more money
than previous generations,
even though they have become more productive.
And yet this overwhelming goal of increased GDP growth
still takes precedence.
What is the GDP?
I am glad you asked,
even though I can't hear you
and was going to explain anyway.
Gross domestic product is estimated
by looking at the total value
of all of the goods and services produced
in an economy in a period of time.
Economists say that that number should go up every year.
If it goes down for two years in a row,
we're in a recession and that's bad.
It's bad for you, it's bad for your job,
bad for your little puppy or your kitty
and like your lizard, you absolute weirdo.
It's a measurement that came out of the Great Depression when governments were looking for
a single overarching statistic to examine when determining if an economy was healthy
or unhealthy.
GDP, however, is not the objective benchmark for which we should judge human well-being.
First of all, it leaves a lot of things out.
Unpaid home labor and child care
doesn't show up on any balance sheet and won't contribute to what economists consider a nation's
productivity. Neither do educational metrics or increasing diversity in the American workplace
or the health of a population. You know, things we really should be focusing on as a nation and
which won't be the priority of a federal government that is singularly focused on GDP and economic growth
as a measure of how the country is doing.
Imagine judging a child solely based
on their standardized test scores
and how that wouldn't even begin
to paint a true picture of that individual.
Yes, imagine that.
The GDP is such a poor measurement
that even things that are unquestionably bad
can have a positive impact on it.
For example, oil spills increased GDP.
The Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989
and the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010
were good for the US economy
since drilling for oil is economic productivity
as is the spending of resources cleaning it up.
Other things that raise GDP include spending on bombs
and fighter jets, increased police budgets, burning coal,
and the millions of pounds of food we purchase
and then throw out every year.
Anytime you have spent on hold
with a health insurance company
after a starving ferret bit off your big toe,
it was probably good for GDP
and also good for the starving ferret
who now has a full belly of toe.
Also, your work insurance doesn't cover ferret attacks,
I'm sorry to say.
Because of the need for constant growth,
companies are incentivized to think in the short term,
prioritizing quarterly revenue
over the long-term health of the company or anything else.
Why would corporations care about climate change,
eliminating vaccine patents
or treating their employees fairly
when all of their economic incentives
point in the opposite direction
and when there are basically no consequences
for being giant dicks?
If Chipotle's punishment
for running a Dickensian burrito factory
is 1 50th of 1% of their annual revenue,
they're gonna keep doing it.
I mean, those little child hands
can really roll the burritos nice and tight.
I get it.
I often force children to make my food.
It's still largely assumed that growth is necessary
for our economy to function,
even without seeing the expected benefits
to anyone who doesn't own equity in that economy.
It may just be so profitable that again,
the people making the most money
just don't want to admit that it isn't working.
But a growing number of economists
are starting to question the endless growth mindset.
They include pinko commie anarchists
like Nobel Prize winning economist, Michael Spence,
who argues that wealthy nations
should accept a less robust growth rate
and prioritize things like public health and social services.
Maybe that, things that would have long-term positive effects
beyond quarterly earnings.
That's interesting, weird.
There's also Peter Victor,
a hacky sack playing doobie noodling,
prize-winning economist,
who argues that emphasizing growth
necessarily leads to a disregard for the environment
and the wellbeing of workers.
He's written multiple books suggesting
that economies can stagnate
while still keeping unemployment low,
providing a high quality of life
for the people working in them
and decrease greenhouse gas emissions.
Victor says one of the big upsides to stagnating growth
or even decreasing our growth rate
is that we would all work a lot less
and it would be helpful across the board.
When technology improves enough
so that it takes less time to build the widget
that tightens the bolt that maintains the machine
at the banana slicer factory,
the current workers could simply share in the benefits
instead of half of the workers being laid off.
And for the first time in modern economic history,
the companies themselves wouldn't be incentivized
to cut corners because they don't need
to show consistent growth four times a year in order to justify their own existence.
Imagine a banana slicer factory
with a steady stream of banana slicer workers
not under constant pressure
to produce more banana slicers every shift.
Slicer solidarity!
And heck, on that subject of bananas,
imagine planting a banana tree right now.
You stick the seed in, you water it,
you pray to Satan for a bountiful harvest,
and then you watch it grow, right?
It grows and you nurture it, and then it stops.
It stops growing, and you then harvest those bananas.
They are the dick-shaped reward for all of that growth.
It would be weird if you just kept trying
to make that tree grow, never picking those
dick shaped rewards out of some weird dogmatic obsession
with the concept of growth.
And so that's really what I'm getting at here.
The same way we no longer have to build a fire
with a couple of sticks, perhaps we've evolved
to a point where we also don't have to work so much,
especially considering that thing I said earlier
about how our cave people ancestors didn't use to work so much, especially considering that thing I said earlier about how our cave people ancestors
didn't use to work so much and then invented language.
After all, isn't this the entire point of our efforts,
the Jetsons' future?
Now, you probably don't know this because you're not 90,
but in that 1960s show about the year 2062,
George Jetson only worked two hours a week.
And the wild part is that right now,
only 40 years before that deadline,
there's no reason we can't make that happen.
We are on the cusp of robotic workers, self-driving trucks,
and I don't see a reason we can't make
those stupid Elroy hats with like the rings on them,
you know, the ones.
But the only way to do that
is for everyone to collectively realize
that our current culture around work is false and bad.
Unfortunately, I'm not sure a lot of us would know what they do if they only worked a few hours a
week. And what I mean is that everyone in the workforce, from the humble barista to the
blowhardiest stockbroker to even me, we all likely have a similar problem where our job,
the thing we do to pay rent and buy food and subscribe to really cool online videos,
has become our identity.
This manifests itself in all sorts of ways.
There is a reason why Smith, Miller, and Taylor
are among the most popular last names in the United States.
But critically, using your job as the basis for your identity
focuses your intention on social status.
Your work is no doubt also your social life.
It's often our opener
subject with strangers. And some economists have even theorized that the greater the disparity
between rich and poor in a society, the more all of the participants in that society fixate on
status. And that, of course, creates a cycle. The people at the bottom see those at the top
as a work aspiration. The people at the top need to justify their status
and instead of crediting, you know,
their father's emerald mine or whatever,
attribute their position to hard work.
They even begin to believe their own lie.
And an entire society gets built around this idea
that having more money makes you a better person.
And therefore the goal of everyone is to gain wealth.
Laws get built upon it.
Lower wage workers are treated like objects
and sacrificed during a pandemic.
The ones that survive have to deal with a barrage
of entitled babyship behavior
from customers who feel as if their status is higher.
So much so that a lot of them are offended
by the idea of these people getting better wages
as if that invalidates their own positions.
And tragically, those service employees
have to just take it because rent is due.
The kids are hungry.
And perhaps they even believe
that the more shit they're forced to eat,
the closer they get to increasing their own status.
Keep working, keep hustling, keep climbing
until you also become rich
or like at least afford a comfortable life.
But, and this is very important,
the vast majority of us will never ever be rich.
I mean, I will because I play the ponies
and I have a system,
but most of us, like a staggering amount, won't be ever.
Like to put this in perspective,
right now we actually have more millionaires
than ever before.
Close to 22 million Americans have assets totaling over $1 million.
Except that's still about 6% of the country.
But more important to note, there are also more poor people than ever before
because the policies that created all of those millionaires also destroyed the middle class.
In other words, as it stands right now,
the pathway from minimum wage worker to dough rolling money bags is very much sealed shut.
They lock that door on their way out, you see.
And yet our culture continues to dangle that carrot
as if it's not a mirage.
It's, well, it's this.
Why are you cheering, Fry?
You're not rich.
True, but someday I might be rich
and then people like me better watch their step.
So glad that's coming back.
Perfect moment from a perfect show.
Anyway, while ending the pursuit of wealth
may seem like a bleak proposal in a time
when it seems like the only way to survive,
to own a home, to fucking retire,
realizing that we'll never actually get rich
forces everyone to consider how important it is
to have a system that caters to the working class,
that encourages everyone to push for a system
for people to realistically and comfortably exist in,
to deemphasize the cultural expectations,
to work long hours, and perhaps pivot
to the importance of family and friends and relaxation
and maybe even a fun new language we can all invent together
to actually get us to that future
our grandparents worked toward.
On the plus side, there's some evidence that this is already happening.
A recent Pew Research survey found that fewer Americans than ever see work as a major source
of meaning in their lives.
And recent union action, the wave of worker strikes, and the popularity of subreddits
like anti-work suggest that we're correctly starting to look at our jobs as a way to make
money, to pay for stuff, and not the thing that defines us or our
value as human beings. If we got one good thing from the pandemic, it's these strikes and the
realization that we are all owed a little bit of dignity in our-
You're pissy.
Come on!
You like it? I trained it to call you pissy because of your piss problem from earlier.
You know what, Katie?
What is it, my dumpling?
I'm done. I'm going on strike.
Oh, yeah? Pissy? Okay.
Okay, well,
here's a strike for you.
Lou, why didn't your head explode?
What?
At the last holiday party, I planted an explosive in your brain.
We didn't have a holiday party. Remember the pandemic?
Oof, what party was that?
Well, someone's head just exploded, and that's what's important.
I'm done. Officially on strike. See you never.
Just gotta tiptoe around these piss bottles.
God, there's so many.
Oh, God, I got some on me!
Better go through my contacts and see who just exploded. Tiptoe around these piss bottles. God, there's so many. Oh, God, I got some on me!
Better go through my contacts and see who just exploded.
To be continued. Oh.
Oh, that's fine.
Hey!
Thank you so much for watching that video.
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