People are cheapskates with poor people but spendthrift with billionaires.
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Maybe it just because it's the kind of thing that seems "smart" that's how most media frame it.
If I had a dime for every guy who has said to me "the largest expense for a business is payroll" like it was some kind of revelation maybe I'd be rich enough that I'd understand how they think about jobs.
Of course the largest expense is payroll! If it isn't what is your company even doing? Probably not anything of value.
@futurebird @billiglarper top three business expenses:
* payroll (yours)
* payroll (your suppliers')
* payroll (your suppliers', amortised) -
@baishen @futurebird This is all very "Protestant work ethics", classism, and trying to find ways to be a dick to others on the basis of some bullshit reason to feel superior to them.
It's just I thought that part of "work ethic" was valuing work. Saying "thank you" when someone cooks and brings you a meal. Understanding that if someone cleans up after you? You should have deep respect and thankfulness for them helping you in that way.
Nothing feels more like "spoiled brat" to me than someone who doesn't respect this kind of work.
They could have just left you sitting in your own trash and you would deserve it. (The way I see it anyway.)
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How have so many people been trained to think like they are private equity managers who just want to cut every job, anything that makes middle class people exist?
And this comment had a bunch of likes ... none of the people getting mad about this really are private equity managers. They won't get rich. But the sight of people with "cushy" (livable, decent) jobs just makes them mad?
It's so depressing.
@futurebird
and at the same time, when it comes to taxing businesses or making them be responsible or have consequences or any of that and they don't like it, it's like "but they create JOBS! Can't ask anything else of them, they make JOBS happen!"It's like... THEORETICALY creating jobs is good, a goal, an excuse for everything else whenever it suits the CEOs I guess.
But when people are actually getting paid for jobs that's bad???
Maybe I just don't understand economics or how people talk about them ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
(Btw I moved to Finland recently where workers are pretty well protected and there are enough ppl employed to do each job and like... everything is so much better. Everyone is more chill and things tend to actually get done and get done properly and way fewer people are grumpy or miserable, plus public spaces are nice to be in.)
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@baishen @futurebird I mean, did anybody pay attention to who were the critical workers six years ago? I believe that, contrary to what it may seem, yes, most people did, and that broke the brains of techbros and plutocrats, because their fucking charade about how they deserve to be overpaid fucks was there for everybody to see.
"Essential workers" really showed everyone WHO makes everything possible day to day.
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Maybe it just because it's the kind of thing that seems "smart" that's how most media frame it.
If I had a dime for every guy who has said to me "the largest expense for a business is payroll" like it was some kind of revelation maybe I'd be rich enough that I'd understand how they think about jobs.
Of course the largest expense is payroll! If it isn't what is your company even doing? Probably not anything of value.
@futurebird @billiglarper That last paragraph goes perfectly with this. :-D
Jensen Huang says he would be 'deeply alarmed' if his $500,000 engineer did not consume at least $250,000 of tokens
"If that $500,000 engineer did not consume at least $250,000 worth of tokens, I am going to be deeply alarmed," says Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang.
Business Insider (www.businessinsider.com)
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It's just I thought that part of "work ethic" was valuing work. Saying "thank you" when someone cooks and brings you a meal. Understanding that if someone cleans up after you? You should have deep respect and thankfulness for them helping you in that way.
Nothing feels more like "spoiled brat" to me than someone who doesn't respect this kind of work.
They could have just left you sitting in your own trash and you would deserve it. (The way I see it anyway.)
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@futurebird @billiglarper That last paragraph goes perfectly with this. :-D
Jensen Huang says he would be 'deeply alarmed' if his $500,000 engineer did not consume at least $250,000 of tokens
"If that $500,000 engineer did not consume at least $250,000 worth of tokens, I am going to be deeply alarmed," says Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang.
Business Insider (www.businessinsider.com)
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People are cheapskates with poor people but spendthrift with billionaires.
I just listened to someone complaining about how "the garbage union" has schemed so that there are always two people operating NYC garbage trucks to "waste my tax dollars" and I guess making too many wealthy sanitation workers... oh no the horror.
I like that there are two people on each truck. It's more efficient and safer. But, even if it was somehow a waste I promise you that's not who is wasting your money bud.
@futurebird That's so weird. In the UK I've never seen less than a small crew per truck and they get the job done fast. Why would anyone want that service but worse?
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People are cheapskates with poor people but spendthrift with billionaires.
I just listened to someone complaining about how "the garbage union" has schemed so that there are always two people operating NYC garbage trucks to "waste my tax dollars" and I guess making too many wealthy sanitation workers... oh no the horror.
I like that there are two people on each truck. It's more efficient and safer. But, even if it was somehow a waste I promise you that's not who is wasting your money bud.
@futurebird Guessing that the commenter's workplace is not unionized....
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"Essential workers" really showed everyone WHO makes everything possible day to day.
@futurebird @Illuminatus @baishen yup, if they are being paid a pittance, they are probably extremely important to keep everything running
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@futurebird @billiglarper That last paragraph goes perfectly with this. :-D
Jensen Huang says he would be 'deeply alarmed' if his $500,000 engineer did not consume at least $250,000 of tokens
"If that $500,000 engineer did not consume at least $250,000 worth of tokens, I am going to be deeply alarmed," says Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang.
Business Insider (www.businessinsider.com)
@baishen Perhaps I don’t understand how business works, but “my half-million dollar employee had better cost me three quarters of a million dollars or I’m gonna be pissed” is a hell of a take. @futurebird @billiglarper
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@futurebird @billiglarper That last paragraph goes perfectly with this. :-D
Jensen Huang says he would be 'deeply alarmed' if his $500,000 engineer did not consume at least $250,000 of tokens
"If that $500,000 engineer did not consume at least $250,000 worth of tokens, I am going to be deeply alarmed," says Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang.
Business Insider (www.businessinsider.com)
@baishen @futurebird @billiglarper Everything Huang said in this interview is a giant steaming pile of horseshit.
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R relay@relay.an.exchange shared this topic
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This whole thing where they are so excited to eliminate real honorable work, like taking care of old people and taking away the garbage at ANY COST transmits a kind of deep disrespect for real work that I just can't abide. It is so deeply anti-social.
I love high tech solutions and robots. These things can make this work faster, and more effective. It can make the work safer. DSNY die in the line of duty all the time.
We should talk about that more.
@futurebird @ehproque
We have some trucks that have one guy driving with a robotic arm to pickup the trash. They're cool but not faster than the trucks with two guys on the back grabbing bins from both sides of the street at once. I expect their maintenance and down time is more, though. It's possible we have fewer people here interested in the work and more distance to cover so maybe it's worth it. And our streets are way less crowded so one truck looping around multiple times is less ... -
@futurebird @ehproque
We have some trucks that have one guy driving with a robotic arm to pickup the trash. They're cool but not faster than the trucks with two guys on the back grabbing bins from both sides of the street at once. I expect their maintenance and down time is more, though. It's possible we have fewer people here interested in the work and more distance to cover so maybe it's worth it. And our streets are way less crowded so one truck looping around multiple times is less ...@futurebird @ehproque
...disruptive. But I like seeing all the guys on the trucks. I'd rather pay them than my health insurance CEO. -
@futurebird That's so weird. In the UK I've never seen less than a small crew per truck and they get the job done fast. Why would anyone want that service but worse?
We love making things worse in America. Like having one person trying to run an entire pharmacy. (here our "chemists" don't just fill prescriptions but there is a whole connivence store too kind of like Boots in there too. They want to just have one person do this whole thing.)
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People are cheapskates with poor people but spendthrift with billionaires.
I just listened to someone complaining about how "the garbage union" has schemed so that there are always two people operating NYC garbage trucks to "waste my tax dollars" and I guess making too many wealthy sanitation workers... oh no the horror.
I like that there are two people on each truck. It's more efficient and safer. But, even if it was somehow a waste I promise you that's not who is wasting your money bud.
@futurebird of all the public services, bins and sewage workers are surely the most incredibly under-recognised
Overall they probably improve society even more than doctors
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We love making things worse in America. Like having one person trying to run an entire pharmacy. (here our "chemists" don't just fill prescriptions but there is a whole connivence store too kind of like Boots in there too. They want to just have one person do this whole thing.)
@futurebird Seriously?? One person in a busy pharmacy is normal? That sucks.
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Maybe it just because it's the kind of thing that seems "smart" that's how most media frame it.
If I had a dime for every guy who has said to me "the largest expense for a business is payroll" like it was some kind of revelation maybe I'd be rich enough that I'd understand how they think about jobs.
Of course the largest expense is payroll! If it isn't what is your company even doing? Probably not anything of value.
@futurebird @billiglarper
They're thinking of people as overhead rather than coworkers. Like rent or office supplies. -
@futurebird Seriously?? One person in a busy pharmacy is normal? That sucks.
@thejessiekirk @futurebird even the abusive little crooks I worked for in a small pharm had two for the evening-midnight shift

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"I didn't know that garbage trucks with rear tippers aren't standard in NY, with trash often getting put out in trash bags.
"We live like primitive cavemen in this town. It's absurd.
But how can you back up to pick up a dumpster on a one way street? There is no "back of the building" in NYC. The back of the building is the front of another building.
Not sure I understand the question correctly.
Over here, the garbage gets picked up at the front side of the building. Folks generally roll their bins to the sidewalk the evening before, and roll the empty bins back afterwards.
(There's a compromise where the bins get placed on the property close to the street. Also comes with its own kind of architecture to hide the bins a bit. *)
* https://www.abfallberatung-unterfranken.de/bilddatenbank.html?image=2974
