• Lath@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      What, you mean like crushing orphans ourselves before anyone else has a chance to?

  • plz1@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Parent, forced to choose between poverty and caring for child with cancer, gets a helping hand from coworkers when their employer would just let them starve.

      • Marxism-Fennekinism@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I’m sure the top military generals have unlimited sick days though (the soldiers can go fuck themselves they should be dying for the empire anyways). Same for senators and congress people who get multi-week paid holidays every year while the country’s stack of pending bills and legislation get higher and higher. So it all balances out in the end!

        • Blackhole@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Yes. The people in the highest echelons of our society get more time off. Not sure if you’re aware of this or not, but they also get paid a lot more

  • lugal@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The concept of limited sick days is still so wild for me … if you’re sick, you’re sick.

    • oce 🐆@jlai.lu
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      1 year ago

      There has to be some limit for the company. Let’s forget a minute about big evil corporation and take a little local company that hire a new person that is needed to run the shop. If this person is absent unlimited and you don’t have the funds to hire a replacement, should you just close the shop? It doesn’t mean we can put an arbitrary limit on sickness but rather than at some point the company have the liberty to let you go if you can’t fulfil your part of the contract anymore in the forsable future. It doesn’t mean there shouldn’t be a system to help the sick person recover, but maybe that’s not the company’s job past a certain time, and rather the role of social/health insurance.

      • b0gl@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Here in Sweden your workplace will pay 80% of your salary for the first 7 days, and then if you are still sick, you need to get a doctor’s note and then the state will pay you instead.

        Also if your kid is sick you can be home with 80% salary paid by the state.

  • pascal@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    That’s what I don’t understand. Europe is capitalist like the US, never the less, such cruelty and greed from the employer are simply unheard of.

    • BringMeTheDiscoKing@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Europe didn’t buy the crap sold by ‘economist’ witch doctors like Milton Friedman and Alan Greedspan. At least, they didn’t buy it as much.

      The US treats capitalism as a religious absolute. The rest of the world regards the US as a fairly extreme example of laissez-faire capitalism.

      Lots of True Believers really thought that if you didn’t regulate anything and just let companies become more and more powerful, somehow the world would be a better place for it.

      Check out the Chicago School of Economics if you want to know what really has brought us to this point. Hugely influential and hugely misguided, but it made a lot of men very rich and powerful so it was seen as a good thing 🤦

      EDIT: Apologies to Witch Doctors everywhere.

  • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    What is terrifying is journalists who work at news agencies can’t tell the difference between a heartwarming altruism story and a slip through the cracks dystopian horror story.

    • robotopera@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Well you can’t do that cuz if you give one employee sick days for their dying child every employee with a dying child is going to want sick days and that might impact the shareholders.

  • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Anywhere I’ve taught, my email has been inundated with requests for sick leave sharing. Depending on where you teach, you have to pay for your sub if you run out of leave.

        • Skates@feddit.nl
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          1 year ago

          It’s very common in Romanian to

          1. Not know a lot of English and

          2. Use a Romanian word and make it sound kind of English to make a point

          Eg: “I gătated dinner” - ‘a găti’ = to cook -> I gateted dinner ~= I cooked dinner.

          This is a bad example because it’s not really used, most people know the ver “to cook”, but you hopefully get what I’m explaining.

          In this context, ‘a inunda’ is a verb in Romanian, it means “to flood (something)”. If you’re Romanian and you don’t know the word exists in English, ‘inundated’ sounds like one of those made-up “verb+ed” constructions.

          So while it’s a silly question for someone who doesn’t know Romanian, it’s also a valid question for someone who has heard these types of bad constructions before, and has never heard of the English verb “to inundate”.

          Hopefully the guy’s reply makes a bit more sense now, I don’t think it was actually meant as an insult tbh (☞゚ヮ゚)☞

          • Moghul@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Yeah but the other guy could’ve pasted that word in the nearest search bar, gotten their answer, and not looked dumb.

            Also maybe it’s a newer thing but I don’t think I’ve heard people put that suffix on the end of words outside of trying to be funny by sounding dumb.

            • stratosfear@lemmy.sdf.org
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              1 year ago

              They could have but there shouldn’t be anything wrong with asking a question, even on social media in the world of Internet search. Because we still have to interact with each other to be human.

            • Skates@feddit.nl
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              1 year ago

              Oh, I agree. I was just trying to add some context to the guy’s comment, because it seemed like the question (while avoidable with a quick search) was taken as malicious, whereas knowing the context makes me read it as jokey/curious at most.