▲ | Teever 8 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> Working that much is very unhealthy so the state needs to protect people from being exploited. I get that the state needs to protect people from being exploited but I'm not sure this is the right way to go about it. It seems to me that it would be better if the state had policies in place to ensure that one full-time job (or less even) provided sufficient income to enable a person to live self-sufficiently and raise a family. Working a full-time job and raising a family is often a more stressful thing than a single person working a job that requires over-time. I don't see why the state should regulate how someone without kids spends their free time if that person wants to work. Some people are just naturally inclined to be active, whether it's some combination of work, family, volunteering, and sports activities while others are not. I have a friend who is constantly working and constantly going to concerts and playing on several sports teams. His life seems stressful to me and far beyond how I want to spend my life but he enjoys it. The state shouldn't restrict people from choosing how to spend their time, but instead should strive to create a society where people aren't forced to spend too much of their time working to meet their basic needs, with the ultimate goal of gradually reducing the time needed to do so over time. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | cardanome 8 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> I don't see why the state should regulate how someone without kids spends their free time if that person wants to work. So single people that can work 60 hours a day would get all the careers options while the person raising children is left in the dust? Does not sound fair. > Some people are just naturally inclined to be active, whether it's some combination of work, family, volunteering, and sports activities while others are not. That sounds like a healthy mix of activities. On the other hand working 60 hours a week is not. > The state shouldn't restrict people from choosing how to spend their time, It does not. You can create your own business and work yourself to death if you wish to. Again, the protection is for those that are employed by others. Or in other words: You are allowed to hurt your own health as an entrepreneur but you are not allowed to employ people in such a way that it excessively hurts their health, even if they "consent" to it. Thing is, they can't consent because there is a power imbalance. Even if you make laws that people working less hours should not be discriminated, you can't really stop it. Not to mention someone who is a workaholic needs psychological help not the "freedom" to work more. > but instead should strive to create a society where people aren't forced to spend too much of their time working to meet their basic needs, with the ultimate goal of gradually reducing the time needed to do so over time. We already could already be working significantly less. I always like to link https://www.epi.org/productivity-pay-gap/ That is just not how capitalism works. Yes, you can fight for wage increases. You can fight for limits of working hours. But those gains will have to be paid in blood. You idea would only work under socialism which had the Subbotnik which was volunteer unpaid labor on the weekends for the betterment of society. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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