▲ | cardanome 8 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> 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. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | Teever 8 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I understand the concern about exploitation, but there’s a fine line between protection and paternalism. Just because some people overwork themselves doesn’t mean everyone else should be forbidden from choosing to work more and it isn't obvious that working 60 hours a week hurts your health. Raising kids is but one kind of life stressor and it's not the state’s job to "equalize" life paths by punishing those who don’t have children or want to pursue different goals. Instead, the state should ensure a strong safety net so people are free to find their own balance. Some pursuits genuinely take a monk-like dedication to see breakthroughs and we shouldn't hobble ambitious people who want to undertake them in the interest of fairness. You're describing a world where someone can't become a viruouso cellist, pioneer a life saving neurosurgery technique or revolutionize computer architecture because someone else decides to have kids. That doesn't sit right with me -- it's a little too Harrison Bergeron. People might want to throw themselves into intense work for a decade before changing direction and focusing on raising a family or giving back to their community. Or maybe they want to do that the other way, start a family first and then once their kids are adults they want to pursue dreams that they spent decades dreaming of. Flexibility and dynamism in life roles is part of a healthy society. The role of the state should be to ensure that no one has to 60 hours a week to survive and to ensure that everyone has real opportunities to live their best life that they choose -- not to make that choice for them. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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