CNBC has gotten nauseatingly terrible

  • pelespirit@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    I mean, she makes enough money to say that. Most everyone under her, not so much. The self-centeredness of these CEOs is staggering.

    “I’ve never believed in the term work-life balance,” says Morris, who oversees the experience of over 2.1 million employees. “I call it work-life integration. There are times that your life requires a lot more, and there are times that your work requires a lot more. … I don’t think that’s a bad thing.”

    “You might be [at your kid’s] soccer game, but you happen to look at a few emails,” Morris says. Maybe you’re chatting with your boss via text while waiting for an appointment, or tying up a few loose ends at work before you put the kids to bed. That doesn’t necessarily mean you’re a workaholic who lacks boundaries — rather, you find ways to combine your personal and professional duties that work for you, instead of being strict and inflexible with your time.

    • Sanctus@anarchist.nexus
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      2 months ago

      This still sounds awful. Never unplugged, never tuning down. What the fuck kind of life is that?

      • ThisSeriesIsFalse@lemmy.ca
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        2 months ago

        It’s the life that all these corporations want their workers to be forced to live. In their eyes, if you’re not producing value for the one on top, you should either be sleeping or dead. Oh, and they’ll only be paying you for 8 of those 18 hours you’ll be working, at the lowest possible rate they can, if you get the luxury of payment at all. If you’re a prisoner, tough luck.

        • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Prisoners get paid. It’s like $0.08 an hour or some shit, but they get paid. And the funds are used exclusively to buy temporary products like toothpaste, and deodorant.

        • ferrule@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          i had an HR person who kept saying their “wages are competative” as if that was something to brag about. you are saying you pay the lowest possible pay that still brings in employee. loved leaving that job after a decade, told that HR person to go fuck herself when she tried to talk to me my last day.

      • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Here’s the thing though, 90% of her life IS tuned down. Every time she’s not worrying about how to pay the bills. How to get to work. How many presents there will be for Christmahannukwanzakkuh. Hell even how much this week’s groceries are going to cost from her own store thst she almost certainly doesn’t get most of her groceries from.

        She just doesn’t realize it, because that’s not a life she’s experienced. She has absolutely no way to empathize because it’s as foreign to her as a guinea pig flying an airplane.

            • MajorasTerribleFate@lemmy.zip
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              2 months ago

              Gonna call mine Round-Trip Airlines. You might not need a round trip, but we want to emphasize that our planes actually work, so you’ll get to your destination safe and could still return someday.

    • grte@lemmy.ca
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      2 months ago

      I notice none of the examples involve taking care of life stuff while on the job. Only the one direction.

      • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        That’s because as an executive she has no issue being able to just “work remotely” or leave “early” on a random day to go to a doctor’s appointment, or parent teacher meeting mid-afternoon. She’s only accountable to (maybe) the other executives who do the same shit. She doesn;t even realize she’s doing it. That’s just how life works.

        Meanwhile Maria and Bobby are getting written up for coming back from break 2 minutes late.

    • Miles O'Brien
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      2 months ago

      Executives should be forced work their lowest paid company position, and be dumped in an apartment with absolutely nothing.

      See how long they survive.

      You can talk to me about my work-life balance when I’m not putting the healthy option back because it’s more expensive than the cheap unhealthy ultra processed bullshit and I can’t justify the expense.

    • Foreigner@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I once heard the following which struck a chord for me and I always keep it in mind when it comes to work:

      “20 years from now, the only people who will remember you stayed late at work are your kids”

      Obviously this doesn’t apply if you have to work late to survive. If you have the choice though, don’t give these companies more time than they really deserve. You won’t be remembered or rewarded for it.

    • renegadespork@lemmy.jelliefrontier.net
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      2 months ago

      Being able to even afford having children is privilege these days. No way I would squander it by prioritizing a company that would fire me at the wrong gust of wind.

    • Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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      2 months ago

      Yeah it’s a lot easier to say that when your work doesn’t require you to be on-site, or consists of lunch meetings and answering e-mails.

  • robocall@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    “You might be [at your kid’s] soccer game, but you happen to look at a few emails,” Morris says. Maybe you’re chatting with your boss via text while waiting for an appointment, or tying up a few loose ends at work before you put the kids to bed. That doesn’t necessarily mean you’re a workaholic who lacks boundaries — rather, you find ways to combine your personal and professional duties that work for you, instead of being strict and inflexible with your time.

    OK but Walmart retail staffers clock in and clock out with a time card, and require to be on site to fulfill their duties.

    “If I never take a holiday, the tone that I set for everybody is, don’t take a holiday — you can’t do that. And I don’t think that that’s right,” says Morris. “As leaders, we have a responsibility to role model what we expect of others.”

    Oh how generous of this person to take a vacation. Do they pay their Walmart retail staff to take a vacation too?

    • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Oh is she ok with her employees texting their loved ones between tasks or is it only work that’s supposed to encroach on everything else?

      • khepri@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Yeah, it was telling that all her examples are of work “integrating” itself into your home life, and 0 examples of things working the other way around. If you want me answering emails during my kid’s sporting event (jfk) then how about we make this a two-way street and I go home to do my laundry and watch some netflix if it’s a slow day at the office lol. These fucking people.

  • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    People with a money addiction will insist that you don’t deserve a comfortable life because you insist on balancing work and life

    • MyMindIsLikeAnOcean@piefed.world
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      2 months ago

      I grew up in a very poor neighbourhood, then moved to a very rich one for high school, then back to a different poor one for young adulthood. I feel I can speak on this.

      All the rich people I know are lazy and are constantly on vacation and play golf/whatever exclusive sport they prefer. Doesn’t matter if they’re 15 or 50…they basically all have the same life style. They will lose their minds if a peer stays at work at work or works in their home office for an extra hour or two a day as if they deserve a medal - provided the work is white collar work. They will completely disregard all the random days off and vacations they take on a whim as if they didn’t happen.

      The hardest working people I know are immigrant dishwashers, hands down (just because I spent a lot of time in the restaurant industry - I’m sure there are equivalent jobs in other sectors). 6-7 days a week 10-12 hours a day, sometimes less than minimum wage, no overtime. Thankless, soul sucking, and difficult work. They will never ever complain, never ask for a raise and beg for more hours even tho additional hours have to be “off the books” and paid out of petty cash. Don’t even get tipped out like cooks. Never buy a luxury. They raise families and put kids through university. Biggest unsung sector in labour, as far as I’m concerned. Also the most exploited that allow the rich people to pretend what they do is work. If you try to advocate for them they tell you shut up and not rock the boat.

  • DaddleDew@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    New suggested title for the article:

    “Billionaire executive can’t understand why their minimum salary employees don’t want to sacrifice their personal lives to make her even more money”.

  • frustrated_phagocytosis@fedia.io
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    2 months ago

    This bitch wanna volunteer to clean my house and pay off my massive debt? Because my scale is tipped so far into work that I can’t keep up with the life parts on my own, but I can’t stop work because I need to eat.

  • slothrop@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    No one on their death bed says, “I wish I’d done better at work-life integration.”

  • hark@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    It’s always “do a ‘little more’ here and there” for work, but if you ask to be paid a little more for that work then they lose their minds. These parasites are the most entitled pieces of shit ever.

  • Archangel1313@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    “You might be [at your kid’s] soccer game, but you happen to look at a few emails,” Morris says. Maybe you’re chatting with your boss via text while waiting for an appointment, or tying up a few loose ends at work before you put the kids to bed.

    That literally just sounds like she’s always working, even when she’s supposed to be focused on family.

    That doesn’t necessarily mean you’re a workaholic who lacks boundaries — rather, you find ways to combine your personal and professional duties that work for you, instead of being strict and inflexible with your time.

    Ummm, yeah…that’s actually the definition of being a workaholic who lacks boundaries. She may as well be saying, “I don’t think sipping from a bottle of vodka in my purse while I’m picking my kids up from school, makes me an alcoholic…I think of it more like multitasking.”

  • EndOfLine@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    sigh Another narcissist CEO who cannot grasp the idea that “life”, in this context, is just an employees working for themselves and pursuing their own interests instead of working for others to pursue corporate interests.

  • MyMindIsLikeAnOcean@piefed.world
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    2 months ago

    The people are just myth making: Musk and this woman first stretch the definition of work to mean everything they ever do…expensive business lunches or exotic vacations (that include a zoom meeting!) are considered work. But then difficult or stressful work gets discounted by association because the surfs only do it for 12 hours a day.

  • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Its always the executives that say this shit.

    You know

    the ones with tons of money, that pawn children off on teams of live in nannies, who can “work” (ie, check an email once a day) from their yachts, etc etc.

    If they had to work like the ground level people, for the ground level pay, they would be screaming for unions and regulations.