• @[email protected]
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    926 months ago

    Look I feel bad for him and his family but MY FRIENDS grow a goddamn spine. Look I get it if you’re a little whatever about 60hr work weeks, that’s a boundary issue gor sure but I get it. But 120hrs for several weeks straight is just…are you fucking serious? Just tell whoever your manager is to go fuck themselves and report them to every possible organization that might listen.

    • @[email protected]
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      426 months ago

      Yeah, at that point the moral option is to resign and, if you can’t find other work, turn to burglarizing the company’s executives’ houses.

    • @[email protected]
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      176 months ago

      There’s a 0% chance they were actually told to work that many hours. They certainly weren’t discouraged from it, but you’re right, at a certain point you need to simply walk away.

      • @[email protected]
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        76 months ago

        Probably the ol’ “Ya know sometimes it gets busy and we gotta put our nose to the grindstone…” crap. My last company would say that and then tried to say “well that’s per project so we don’t really look to have it carry over into others.” but of course projects are always heavier near the end where excess time wouldn’t matter so I ignored that immediately.

        It’s wild the kinda crap that gets pulled on people. And it never even really works, either, which is the insane part to me. You could literally show someone that working 9-4 would guarantee a doubling in productivity(a bit extreme as an example I know) and they would fight tooth and nail against it.

  • misery mansion
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    666 months ago

    Would love to see a mainstream news source for this. I don’t really understand how it is possible. In the best case that is 17h per day everyday of the week for weeks.

    The quality of the work being done in these circumstances would be 100% garbage, I would expect, it makes no sense to do it.

  • @[email protected]
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    646 months ago

    Union tradesman here, heavy industrial. The most I ever pulled in one week was 102 hours. It was for a time sensitive, round the clock, “once we start this we can’t stop until it’s done” kind of affair. Imagine two 12 hour shifts, but when you’d normally leave, you’d stay as long as you could to help get the night shift guys up and running.

    It only lasted the one week, and we all made an obscene amount of money, but any longer than that and I would have had to tell them I had to go back to my usual 60 hours. I had to force myself to stay sharp because there was dangerous shit that needed to be done, I couldn’t imagine 4 weeks of it. No one should be forced into it, even commuting home after work like that is dangerous.

    • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥
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      306 months ago

      That’s a unique case tbh. I don’t think that’s applicable in case of banking or any other desk jobs. That’s just employers trying to squeeze the employees instead of hiring more.

    • @RamblingPanda
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      216 months ago

      I don’t think he went home after working that long. He’d probably just collapse to the floor and sleep until it was time to ruin himself for the company’s profit.

      I get that some jobs require certain attention (like you said, heavy industry. You don’t cool down that chimney once it reaches temperature), but in his case? What on earth could justify that?

      And even in your case, that’s a failure of planning. If one person has to work THAT MANY hours it’s obviously not a one person job.

      • @[email protected]
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        166 months ago

        You’re not wrong, but in the commercial/industrial building trades, we welcome it from time to time. I made about $3500usd that week. After taxes. The contractors count on the fact that we want some crazy overtime here and there, it’s the reason most people in my line of work have boats and shit.

        In banking? You’re right, there’s no justification. You’re not going to flood an entire suburb or have a steel plant go kaboom if you stop crunching the numbers at the bank.

        • @RamblingPanda
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          6 months ago

          You’re not wrong, but in the commercial/industrial building trades, we welcome it from time to time. I made about $3500usd that week.

          Yeah, I’ve been there as well. But the older I get the more I hate companies counting on their staff to pull them out of their failed strategy. It’s great if it’s a once every few months event, but bosses tend to get too comfy with it, at least it was like that for me. And in my first job they didn’t even pay that much.

          • @[email protected]
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            166 months ago

            Yeah. I hear you. But, when you’re already making $40+ an hour, time and half makes it $60+, and Sunday double time makes it $80+.

            I’m sure you can see the allure. You can make a lot of problems go away with that kind of money.

            And that’s really the key. It should cost them a lot to put us in those scenarios. That’s why you need a good strong union.

            • @RamblingPanda
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              106 months ago

              That’s why you need a good strong union

              100% agree.

    • @[email protected]
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      136 months ago

      After 84 I felt like was on razors edge trying to keep up. Chores and errands were hard to keep up with and food always had to be quick (I was broke to that ment ordering food wasn’t an option).

      I luckily had a boss that told me to quit the other job and not to worry I was secure at that one. I would have kept working both careers if he hadn’t though :/

      • @[email protected]
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        46 months ago

        Yeah. It’s awful. We should never have to do it. But, I like getting the chance when I can. Nice to pay all the bills in one fell swoop off a single week of work.

        • @[email protected]
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          36 months ago

          I had no other real opportunity to stay out of the rental housing trap. I would have been paying an extra couple hundred a month and putting zero dollars to equity.

    • femtech
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      46 months ago

      Even deployment overseas that’s rare, like snipers going to the bathroom while maintaining position is one thing but you can’t work someone that long and maintain composer.

  • DessertStorms
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    586 months ago

    The fact that there are people here victim blaming instead of losing their shit that it wasn’t just made possible for him to work so long, but probably encouraged (if not directly by his employer, then by the desperate need for money for survival, or even the artificial and external pressures of capitalist “aspiration”) is fucking scary, and it’s the people doing it, thinking they’re above being impacted by these external pressures that are the most susceptible to them (literally participating in it now - blaming the victim exclusively serves the system that killed him and those who uphold it for their personal gain).

    • @[email protected]
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      66 months ago

      And if he had practically no commute between home and work, at best he got maybe 6 hours of sleep per night. Then immediately back to work. I wonder when he had a chance to eat or use the restroom. I suppose he ate & used the restroom while he was stuck at work.

  • @[email protected]
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    196 months ago

    Don’t let my parents see this or they’d start bragging about how they work 240 hour weeks back in the day

  • @[email protected]
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    156 months ago

    120 hours? My mind just can’t comprehend that and I can barely concentrate through 35.

    That guy got no sense of work-life balance.

    • Tar_Alcaran
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      176 months ago

      that’s 7 x 17, leaving just enough time to collapse on the office floor.

      • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥
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        106 months ago

        Honestly I can’t even think of something to do for 17 hours a day for a whole month. Was this guy the whole department by himself?

        • @[email protected]
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          36 months ago

          My job is very behind on the workload right now that working 120 hour weeks as an individual would maybe get us caught up but no way in hell would I do that. Im surprised this person’s manager even let them do it, my manager would have told somebody that it isn’t worth it and to find a balance.

        • @[email protected]
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          36 months ago

          Probably, yeah. I worked at a bank during staffing issues and was scheduled for 65 hour weeks, but even that wasn’t enough time. I usually hit 75. No overtime pay. I spent an hour every night applying for jobs and took the first offer out of there.

      • @[email protected]
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        66 months ago

        It’s just impossible to stay focused that long.

        Did they need just a warm body to be present?

  • PSoul•Memes
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    76 months ago

    What in the late stage capitalist hell?

    This is the only other source I could find: link

    Wondering if this is real or not.