maybe-later-kiddo

warning, brain damage imminent: link

  • Krem [he/him]
    ·
    2 months ago

    It's been 4 years man. If you don't want to spread it, wear a mask.

    amerikkka

    I'm a hospital worker and back in 2020 it was a big deal obviously. Now It's pretty much a non-issue. If you're worried about spreading it, just wear a mask, any type of simple mask will do and sanitize your hands regularly. They're really not being unreasonable.

    amerikkka

    I agree. Pop a Dayquil and come to work.

    amerikkka

    Once you feel fine and no symptoms you can return to work. In most places the govt scrapped the 5 day isolation period as once the symptoms are asymptomatic you can’t transfer germs to others as they first thought. If you feel fine and not coughing and spluttering then you go to go. No need even to keep those tests anymore they are not relevant anymore ppl now know that Covid has been around since the 90s so it’s just another cold and it usually passes after feeling crap on the first day af yet perhaps 3-4 days in total. Go back to work when you feel ok is the best idea. Boss is clearly not buying into the old Covid rules and nor should he as it was all an embellished reaction mostly driven by govt ppl - good luck

    pooh-wtf amerikkka

    As someone that had to work everyday during the pandemic, I don’t feel bad when people give employees a hard time for thinking it’s a free vacation. Work still needs to happen. People staying home trashed the economy. In the long run, people need to get over it and get back to work. Are you really going to sit in your bed for 5 days straight?

    "line needs to go up, no matter the cost" gulag amerikkka

    As someone with long covid, for most people it is indeed just a flu. If you feel sick stay at home, if you don't feel sick you can just go out. That's the rule in Netherlands. Even though I got COVID and am at home for 8 months and counting, it's a good rule.

    "i'm stuck at home with chronic health problems because no one took this seriously, but people taking it even less seriously is good actually." :netherlands-cool:

    • Edamamebean [she/her]
      ·
      2 months ago

      Regarding that second to last comment, how did the ruling class instill this frogs in the bucket mentality among the working class so effectively? It's one of the most potent ideological weapons of capitalism in my opinion. Upon experiencing injustice at work, 99% of western workers won't think "I deserve better", they'll just get angry thinking about some office worker with slightly better working conditions. It makes me so pessimistic whenever I hear it.

      • barrbaric [he/him]M
        ·
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        It's part of a pervasive attempt to make every american think they're a member of the petite-bourgeoisie. It is widely acknowledged that working sucks, but the "American Dream" is to simply become the exploiter rather than improve conditions.

        • Vilification (and racialization) of the poor makes everybody think they're "middle class". What does middle class mean? Nobody knows as it has no useful definition, other than "not working class".
        • Post WWII, suburbs were designed at least partly to get people "invested" into the "market" through owning their own homes (the other part was due to racism). Housing as a commodity means homeowners view themselves as a sort of solo investment firm manager, and therefore more likely to identify with business owners than with employees.
        • Similarly, the bourgeois concept of retirement is that eventually a smart and savvy person will be able to save up and live off of passive income, IE landlording and investments, which ties them to the market and means that they have a stake in "the economy". Again, this makes people identify with capitalists over other working people.
        • Just generally destroying the labor movement means that workers seeking to better their circumstances can see they only have one path to a better life, that of the used jetski dealer, because any chance of improving working conditions is seen (not inaccurately) as unlikely or impossible.
      • crusa187@lemmy.ml
        ·
        2 months ago

        I think a major contributing factor to this is American reliance on employers for healthcare. It’s a lot easier to quit and seek better working conditions elsewhere if you know major medical expenses won’t ruin you in the interim - this is about 10x as true in America due to the corruption and resulting additional costs endemic to the system.

        If America manages to somehow implement single payer, I believe the potency of this ideological weapon would diminish drastically.

        • came_apart_at_Kmart [he/him, comrade/them]
          ·
          2 months ago

          I changed jobs recently from one with "good" employer healthcare to one with "good+" employer healthcare. I was in a position to arrange it so that I would not only have no lapse in coverage, I would be double covered for a 2 week period. in fact, both insurance companies are under the same aegis / brand and honor each other's network agreements. I researched this all methodically.

          even with every advantage in the world, the transition has been a shit show with emails, phone calls, waiting, more phone calls, etc just to keep my extremely common, regular ass not-fun medication coming. not to mention, I still have to initiate healthcare with a completely new PCP anyway and delay my checkup by 2 months because of it, and NONE of this was communicated to me despite me telling everyone a month in advance.

          100% people are locked into shit by the wealthcare system making any minor changes into total shit shows.