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Community-sourced megapost on the main media sources to radicalize libs and chuds with
Main Source for Feminism for Babies
Maintaining OpSec / Data Spring Cleaning guide
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i mean, you wanna see some deeply unproductive time? try the days between Xmas and NYE. lmao. if it's not logistics/transport, people are fuckin' phoning it in big time.
the phenomenon of people quietly blowing off holiday weeks when their employer only grants them the specific day is not new. bosses "work from home" and that filters down: among those forced to be in the office, long lunches are taken. bare minimums are met. there is a general discouraging of scheduling meetings among colleagues, usually by making the assumption that someone critical will be out for the week anyway, so "let's table this until after the holiday/short week." sounds like the most reasonable and professional way to say, "that week isn't real so who cares"
just because this country is a shithole without worker protections doesn't mean those of us recognizing the adversarial nature of the workplace don't resist at each moment we can.
the biggest obstacles are rise-and-grind morons who run around at a frenetic pace trying to demonstrate how committed they are. or axe-grinders who look for opportunities to expose others slacking off, believing it will elevate their career. and sometimes it does, but many times it only makes silent, patient enemies by the truckload.
Back when I worked in a university I never took off the days between xmas and nye even though they would have approved it
Everyone else was on holiday, so I "worked" from home (mostly just monitoring my email in case students needed help with coursework)
Tbh I did it mostly because I worked part time during the semesters and full time during the summer, so taking my holidays in the summer was better value
In my industry its not weird for bigger companies to basically close down for 2 weeks in December for Christmas and New Years
After I left the service industry, I noticed that basically nothing happens anywhere in the US in December, except in the service industry. At best, every company is just kind of coasting until the first full week after the new year, and even then it takes a week or two to get back on track.