cross-posted from: https://linux.community/post/1144192
you might be an introvert, passionate about your job, or simply old enough to disregard friendships at work because you already have enough friends and a family.
The coworkers I like the most are the ones that come to work, don’t like drama, do their job and go home. That’s what I try to do.
However, there are always some established cliques who know how to play the unit / supervisor and get away doing much less, even feeling entitled to order you around, even though they are not your supervisor.
To people who experience this. How do you tolerate it? Even after changing jobs, this can happen at your new workplace, maybe it happens in every workplace?
Omg you knocked it out of the park with this one. Everything is such a race to the bottom in this system.
It’s always about competitive undercutting, and what’s the most ruthless cold-blooded calculations one can get away with, and this Type A disease of being obsessed with zero-sum conflict to reveal who’s the absolute best of everything.
“Why can’t we just chill and it’ll get there when it gets there?”
“What?! Look at (for example) China! Do you see them chilling? No! They normalized 12 hour shift burnout before us, this will increase their production 3%, and then undercut us by 12% and steal all our business and we’re screwed! So we need to squeeze our people harder to beat them!”
“…And then they’ll squeeze their people harder…so…?”
“…”
“…”
“This might be a good time to inform you we expect you to train the new overseas team before we’ll surprise ambush-fire your entire department.”
…Repeat the above but for undocumented immigrant labor…then maybe child labor…then probably right back around to slavery again…
“Oh no we all agreed this would be so bad for humanity, but gee, the competition did it and we wanna stay competitive so…”
Man seriously why can’t we all just be doing our own thing lol…
God yeah, a hundred percent, great illustration of exactly what I was alluding to. It’s so short sighted. Even the benefits are nothing compared to the heights we could reach if we oriented our economics around coopération.
Cruelly, this system “works” (or at least is successful in perpetuating its existence) right up until the point of resource collapse (or revolution, if we’re looking at the good ending).
Thanks for your reply. I was pretty happy with this comment, so am chuffed to hear you appreciated it.