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theodewere , in Millennials didn't kill the 'organization man' after all. Federal data reveals it was the boomers all along
@theodewere@kbin.social avatar

the idea of "the company man" was really already gone by the time Gen X got to the professional workplace.. nobody expected to spend a career in one place, although there were still "career companies" around trying to create that atmosphere, and the promise of the older attitudes of being "part of a culture" and things like that.. any attempts by recruiters to peddle those ideas now has to be pure pantomime..

oakey66 ,

I saw Wells Fargo discard peers of mine because they were older. Despite, their ability to perform. And they were with the company for 20-25 years. This is my upbringing in the corporate world. They sure loved celebrating someone retiring after that time and would send out emails and throw parties but when the dust settled, you didn’t matter to them as an employee. People got to see that especially in the 2008 downturn.

theodewere ,
@theodewere@kbin.social avatar

the 90s saw a really hard erosion of labor bargaining power for blue and white collars, and that power and money moving up into the boardroom.. it seems to have just gone downhill since, although workers are more mobile than ever, especially in the white collar world.. but it just means less security in the end, especially when you have to consider health care in this country..

MicroWave OP , in Jimmy Buffett, legendary 'Margaritaville' singer, dies at 76
@MicroWave@lemmy.world avatar

Hah!

“Apparently The Late Jimmy Buffett Didn’t Even Drink Margaritas”

delish.com/…/jimmy-buffett-didnt-drink-margaritas…

Mamertine ,

The song Margaritaville is about an alcoholic. It’s for the best that he didn’t live that lifestyle. Yes, he stopped drinking then because of the sugar, but still health reasons.

That’s his most recognizable song. It makes sense he’s build his brand on that name.

FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

It wasn’t the only song he built a brand on. en.wikipedia.org/…/Cheeseburger_in_Paradise_(rest…

Mr_Buscemi , in ABC News: Delaware man who police blocked from warning of speed trap wins $50K judgment
@Mr_Buscemi@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

That title hides the worst part.

The cops arrested him and then said social services was coming to take his son who was with him at the time. Then the cop was told the charges wouldn’t stick and still did it.

Fucking disgusting to terrify a child like this.

Zehzin ,
@Zehzin@lemmy.world avatar

Let me guess, a month of paid vacation for the cop?

MonsiuerPatEBrown , in ABC News: Delaware man who police blocked from warning of speed trap wins $50K judgment

If the reason to have speed traps is to get people to reduce their speed then that guy was literally getting people to reduce their speed.

The police need reformed because they try to get people to do bad as a way of making money.

That makes society literally worse instead of better.

MonsiuerPatEBrown , (edited )

I mean if the police wanted to enjoy their job they each would get a day to park a cruiser up the street … and then change into civilian clothes and sit in a lawn chair up the street drinking a beer smoking a cigar holding a sign saying “speed trap ahead” and then calling in anyone that ignores it with it being tracked by the squad car’s camera.

that would be how you police if you want to have fun.

(this is my most brilliant idea ever. and i yield it freely to law enforcement)

Lemjukes ,

Pretty telling that they’re not really about safety when officers will speed after someone at 100+ cause they got their feefees hurt in the exact same area the speed trap is.

funkless_eck ,

People hate it, but as someone who leans towards fuck-cars, well sign-posted automated traffic cameras remove this problem. Stop cops from chasing people in cars like some dumb movie, and endanger both parties by parking on the freeway - just mail them a ticket.

44razorsedge ,
@44razorsedge@lemmy.world avatar

So an automated speed trap is the solution? That’s just a flat tax. And for the wealthy it’s not even an inconvenience, just the cost of driving as they please.

funkless_eck ,

it is, yes. I don’t think that’s an issue because a lot of countries that use it also couple it with a system that if you continuously break the law there are further sanctions

darthskull ,

It doesn’t have to be. Speeding tickets probably should scale with wealth.

CaptainAniki ,

deleted_by_author

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  • darthskull ,

    I kinda feel like speeding tickets don’t interfere with the goal of getting drivers off the road, probably even help a little.

    canni ,

    It’s not a flat tax you clown. Just don’t speed

    hark ,
    @hark@lemmy.world avatar

    “Just don’t speed”

    Meanwhile in reality they can craft these traps to maximize revenue by doing things like changing speed limits for specific sections of the same road for no apparent reason other than to charge people for speeding.

    canni ,

    What you’re describing may be an issue. I suspect it is a tiny minority of the speeding tickets written. The above poster is advocating for well advertised limits and automated ticketing. I think this is a very reasonable solution to an undeniable problem: driving is dangerous, speeding more so.

    The situation your describing a contrived edge case and is not a valuable contribution to the discussion at this stage.

    “Just don’t speed” is, by and large, a very reasonable thing to ask of drivers.

    hark ,
    @hark@lemmy.world avatar

    Just because you can’t see the obvious issue of deriving revenue (and thus eventually relying on it) from traffic violations, doesn’t mean it’s a contrived edge case. Here are a couple of articles to help you along: nytimes.com/…/police-ticket-quotas-money-funding.…

    digitaltrends.com/…/red-light-camera-controversy/

    canni ,

    I read the article second article, the first is paywalled. I still think cameras are a good solution. The argument in the article sounds a lot like “some police are bad, we shoud disband the police” or “some government officials are greedy, we should disband the government”.

    Frankly, it sounds like the real issue if that they have privitized the production and configuration of the traffic cameras. If there was legislation in place that ensured fair and consistent implementation of the devices much of the issues identified by the author would be moot.

    Any system that we put in place to enforce rules can be abused by those in power, but that doesn’t mean the system is bad or wrong. The reality again is that cars are dangerous, and I argue we should prioritize protecting the public.

    It’s easy to hop in a discussion and say “no that’s bad”, but a lot more productive to say “here’s an alternative”.

    hark ,
    @hark@lemmy.world avatar

    Privatization is an issue, but also cities or police departments that rely on such revenue will also push for systems that drive revenue since it is a significant portion of their budget. Here’s another piece that explains it: npr.org/…/paved-paradise-examines-how-parking-has…

    It’s a pretty long piece which covers other aspects of parking, but if you start reading from this excerpt: “GRABAR: I think so. Essentially, parking enforcement serves as a subset of what is now known as revenue-driven policing. And the idea here is that cities take advantage of these parking laws to try and get as much money out of people as possible, but not in the way that you would think, right?” and onward, it covers how underlying problems aren’t solved because the revenue derived from the existing situation is too convenient for the city. They even build around that by giving certain companies discounts on parking tickets because of how often they get them from just trying to do their job.

    averagedrunk ,

    In addition to your point, there are certain places (I’m looking at you, Houston) where a whole lot of people just have paper tags. They’re all faked. So where are we sending those tickets?

    There are also a load of unregistered motorcycles with plates from three owners ago. It’s not their fault that no one bothered to register after that.

    TXTag tried sending me bills for someone who bought my car after I traded it in. I proved it was no longer mine. They dropped those charges. Then it started over the next time whoever owns the car drove on their tollway. Went on for two years.

    canni ,

    I’m sure long-term they will improve the system and things like this will happen less and less. I’m sorry that happened to you, but it doesn’t mean the idea as a whole is bad.

    CaptainAniki ,

    deleted_by_author

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  • canni ,

    I’m literally arguing against privatization in the adjacent post. Again, this is not productive discourse. “Burn everything down” isn’t a realistic or helpful suggestion.

    lingh0e ,

    Lol. Let me introduce you to Lindale, OH.

    funkless_eck ,

    the residents and the police are both happy with this solution and it exactly describes my proposal, but it seems like you’re using this as proof it’s a bad idea?

    the only criticism is someone saying “it’s a bit of a money grab,” which - yeah, isn’t that the point of capitalism? So is selling bread, water, electricity, internet, books…

    but why I’m proposing it is because it decreases confrontation - in the context of someone being extra judiciously killed by police, so - which would you rather lose, $100? or your life?

    lingh0e ,

    It does nothing to increase safety. Mailing someone a citation after the fact does nothing to stop the crime as it is being done. And, as is the case in Lindale, it doesn’t even make any money as a large majority of the recipients just throw them away.

    funkless_eck ,

    which study are you referring to?

    this one claims it increases safety www.rospa.com/…/speed-cameras-factsheet.pdf

    i dont mean to be rude but are you absolutely sure you’re speaking from a place of “I want to increase road safety in general with methods that actually work” and not from a place of “I don’t want to pay a $100 fine?”

    lingh0e ,

    I’m speaking from a place of “I drive through Lindale and see this with my own eyes”.

    funkless_eck ,

    so we agree its a good thing?

    from your source:

    Last year, 17,300 speeding camera tickets were issued in Linndale — 3,319 fewer than in 2021, according to reports from the Parma Municipal Court.

    or are you arguing speeding in a 25mph zone is a good thing?

    lingh0e ,

    Are you not reading what I said? It doesn’t make the area safer. Receiving a ticket WEEKS after the fact does nothing to prevent or curtail the dangerous behavior WHEN IT IS OCCURRING. And it doesn’t make the actual street any safer because people slow down for that 100yd stretch then speed back up. Never mind the fact that a huge number of the tickets go straight into the trash.

    funkless_eck ,

    wouldn’t a decrease in tickets imply it is having an effect though?

    and isn’t slowing down in a dangerous area to speed a provable effect of its success?

    isn’t someone modifying their behavior after the fact better than not modifying it at all?

    lingh0e ,

    Or maybe the decrease in tickets is because of the giant billboard a local smoke shop erected saying “there’s a speed trap here.”

    Dude, just admit that this speed camera is a blatant cash grab.

    funkless_eck ,

    Ive admitted it three or four times. So for clarity, again, yes it is predicated on money. Yes, it is a cash grab. Yes it is a tax. It is a tax grab, it is a cash tax. It is a cash grab. I personally feel the term “cash grab” is a little loaded emotionally and isn’t necessarily the best and most accurate way to describe it. But it seems you care a great deal about me saying the words, so I have said them. it is a cash grab.

    All transactions are a cash grab. Name something that isn’t. I have said from the start that the “cash grab” “tax” etc is part of the deterrent, but, to me, at least, that is better than death.

    Furthermore - cops issuing tickets is a cash grab. Cops arresting people and them going to court and getting fined is a cash grab. Forfeiting your car is a cash grab. Paying to attend remedial driving school is a cash grab. We live in a capitalist society, everything is a cash grab.

    I have from the start said that prevention (the cash grab) is part of the desired outcome, it is in my original comment. It is good to fine people who do bad things because it makes them do it less- as evinced by the sources I have provided - and it helps repay the cost of their antisocial behavior back to society.

    Now that we are very clear that we both agree

    1. it is a cash grab
    2. why I think that cash grab is a good thing
    3. that the good thing is the decrease in speeding

    I am curious to hear why you think the cash grab - or to use my preferred nomenclature - a deterrent - is a fate worse than death?

    lingh0e ,

    Have you read anything I’ve been writing? It is does not deter speeding. Outside of the 100 yards the camera it’s business as usual. People receive tickets AFTER THE FACT. It would be more effective to have actual police enforcing limits ON THE SPOT. They do not care about safety, they are literally just trying to generate money for themselves and their cronies.

    funkless_eck ,

    “it does not deterrent speeding”

    according to the facts I sourced above, it does.

    according to your unsourced opinion with nothing to back it up except that you “live near there” - it doesn’t. I’ll change my opinion when you can provide some facts like I did. (although I retain the right to scrutinize and offer my opinion on those facts).

    it would be more effective… to enforce… on the spot

    I disagree. You can enforce for every car with a camera, you can enforce 1 car with a person in another car - so by what metrics of efficacy are you holding this to? It seems like you’re saying it’s better to stop one person now than it is to stop thousands of people regularly.

    If they don’t care about safety, why is the person who doesn’t care about safety better in person, with a gun, giving chase in a dangerous location?

    lingh0e ,

    If a person is speeding and unknowingly gets tagged by a speed camera, it doesn’t stop their speeding at the time. Hence it is not about safety.

    If someone is speeding then slows down just long enough to avoid getting tagged by the speed camera, then resumes speeding, it is not about safety.

    If the tickets can be literally thrown in the garbage without a second thought and the issuing party can’t do a thing about it, it is not about safety.

    There are better ways to make people aware of their driving habits. A shitty unmanned speed camera is not one of those ways.

    funkless_eck ,

    a) only true if not signposted, and I specifically said it should be. isn’t cops stopping you also only a deterrent if you get caught at that time? if a camera is there permanently you know not to speed after getting caught, if a cop is there on Monday they might not be on Tuesday

    b) we disagree, that’s exactly what safety is to me. I don’t wear a condom if I’m not having sex, and you don’t need to slow down if you’re in an area where you can go fast — are you assuming I mean to make people slow down on the freeway? i am not, i am talking about accident prone areas where slowing down would save lives

    c) so don’t make the tickets be able to be thrown in the garbage?

    d) what are they, then?

    lingh0e ,

    You can just admit that you want intrusive observation that skips due process because it fits the narrative you want to force on everyone else.

    It’s okay.

    I personally think it’s a terrible idea.

    funkless_eck ,

    this is what’s known as a “straw man” — you used words I didn’t to make a point I hadn’t and then criticize the point you made up.

    It’s considered impolite.

    lingh0e ,

    A government agency is using a flimsy excuse to extort money from it’s citizens, accusing people of a crime without due process… and you’ve made it clear that you think it’s a worthy trade off for the illusion of safer roads.

    funkless_eck ,

    I think you’re drastically blowing speeding fines out of proportion and severely underestimating the cost and impact of bad driving.

    CaptainAniki ,

    deleted_by_author

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  • funkless_eck ,

    I don’t see why you can’t do both.

    FlightyPenguin ,
    @FlightyPenguin@lemmy.world avatar

    Speeding tickets are a regressive tax. And they won’t get people to hate cars, they’ll get people to hate government.

    funkless_eck ,

    they are a tax on speeding and that’s a good thing because speeding causes greater strain on infrastructure.

    also, everyone saying “but rich people won’t be as affected” — but rich people aren’t the majority and this issue occurs with the majority.

    bob_wiley , in Bodycam: Pregnant woman accused of shoplifting shot by police
    @bob_wiley@lemmy.world avatar

    deleted_by_author

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  • AstridWipenaugh ,

    Normal people don’t step in front of moving vehicles in order to create a situation where you can justify murdering someone. The cop should have taken one step to the side, or simply not put himself in harm’s way to begin with. Even a normal person knows you don’t jump in front of a moving vehicle. Cops are trained to keep themselves out of harm’s way, but this idiot skipped “don’t play in traffic” day at the academy. Cops are also trained not to shoot into moving vehicles because that creates a totally uncontrollable danger to bystanders. He skipped that day too.

    ManosTheHandsOfFate ,
    @ManosTheHandsOfFate@lemmy.world avatar

    They could just let her go. They know what she looks like and they know the car she’s in. Unless she goes on the lam for a few bottles of booze it seems easier and safer to follow up with her a day or two later for what is presumably a misdemeanor.

    adibis ,

    Yeah and risk her crashing into others and potentially kill more people while dying herself?

    CSharp ,

    Fallacious

    Rambi ,

    Thank God the brave officer decided to stand in front of the car and shoot her to death, otherwise she may have escaped with the $30 of alcohol. Also she might have drank the alcohol, so it doesn’t really matter that her and her child are dead.

    CaptPretentious ,

    Have you not kept up with American news. Chips be killing people and then getting away with it. Be asleep in your bed, dead. Answer your door, dead. Cops only shot first and make excuses why it’s your fault later.

    In that situation and really most involving cops, the have guns you aren’t.

    The cops are generally cool when the the people are

    This is a lie. I wish we lived in a world where cops were good and could be trusted but that’s not the world Americans live in.

    yuriy ,

    I don’t understand why the cops couldn’t just arrest her at home. They would’ve had positive identification, AND footage of her committing another crime by fleeing the scene. This was escalated into a life or death situation, and I can’t honestly say that’s entirely her fault.

    bob_wiley ,
    @bob_wiley@lemmy.world avatar

    deleted_by_author

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  • yuriy ,

    oh don’t get me wrong, she’s certainly not blameless. she did all those things while pregnant as well, putting both her and her unborn child at risk.

    i just feel like the cops could’ve recognized it was escalating and not allowed it to become a life or death situation. and i don’t think it’s unrealistic to expect something like that from a keeper of the peace.

    edit: fetus is probably better in place of unborn child, i’m not trying to make a lowkey pro life statement

    bob_wiley ,
    @bob_wiley@lemmy.world avatar

    deleted_by_author

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  • yuriy ,

    bottom line, sober or not, evasion is not reason enough to kill someone.

    i don’t think anyone should run from the police, provided the system is working the way it should. but i also don’t think police should put themselves in front of an evading vehicle either. that’s needless danger, and any force used with that danger as justification is needless force.

    in this case, unless she’s in a stolen car there’s no way the cops couldn’t find her basically immediately after this crime. obviously for violent/dangerous criminals the approach should be different, but for shoplifting? are we serious here?

    this many officers being dispatched for fucking shoplifting is already a waste of resources, are we gonna die on the hill that it’s totally fine for police to facilitate the escalation of that into death? there’s so many ways this coulda gone that aren’t death, and if cops can’t figure that out then they need more training at the very least.

    i mean no disrespect by the way, you’re making your points very well and i appreciate the discourse.

    RememberTheApollo_ ,

    Police step in front of cars quite a bit. There’s a lot of footage out there showing incidents of vehicles trying to flee for whatever reason and an officer deliberately positioning themselves in front of the vehicle.

    The vehicle heading towards the officer or striking the officer opens the door to escalated action on the part of the officers and that includes shooting and killing occupants.

    It’s straight up bullshit justifying the use of deadly force.

    This woman shoplifted. They have the car license plate, her on video conducting the theft with witnesses to the fact…she’s not going to get away with it. Yet the solution is to position oneself in front of the car, where any fool knows you might get struck, to kill someone over booze?

    You can blame the thief for being a dumbass, but fuck cops for escalating something like this to deadly force when they could’ve stepped out of the way and picked her up later. Fucking drop a couple rounds into the engine, it won’t make it more than a couple blocks after it dumps the oil and coolant out…

    bob_wiley ,
    @bob_wiley@lemmy.world avatar

    deleted_by_author

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  • RememberTheApollo_ ,

    No. I work on cars. They don’t live long without fluids. Nice try though.

    You’re still justifying placing an officer in harm’s way knowing escalation results in dead people. Your priorities are clear.

    Edit: and this is shoplifting. Not trying to stop a murderer or violent criminal. It doesn’t deserve setting someone up for a death sentence.

    stringere ,

    Wow, you’re really bending over backwards to defend a murder. The cops started with guns. They had her on video and had her license plate. They didn’t even have to stop here then and there. They shot her and her child dead when the only thing they had to do to secure their safety was back down, but they are incapable of anything but escalation so instead of any one of the infinite possible peaceful reasonable paths to resolution…murder.

    And you’re defending that? Wow.

    kitonthenet , in Millennials didn't kill the 'organization man' after all. Federal data reveals it was the boomers all along

    Worker mobility—the ability to find and take another job—is at the core of worker power

    Worker power is great and all but goddamn you for robbing us of the pensions

    grte ,

    What they said is a lie, anyways. Collective action is the core of worker power. “Mobility” is a feature of a low worker power environment where we aren’t able to extract our demands from our work places. Who would want to spend time looking for new jobs if we could just get good raises, advancement, and work life balance out of the jobs we’ve already got?

    Don’t trust fortune.com to talk about worker issues honestly, it’s a rag for the other side of the equation.

    jonne ,

    Yeah, you can probably plot a graph that shows union membership declining at the same pace as ‘company loyalty’ or whatever. The job hopping phenomenon is largely caused by corporations themselves, who stopped giving raises and promotions and started doing regular layoffs.

    xuxebiko , in APNews: Parenting advice YouTuber Ruby Franke charged with aggravated child abuse of 2 of her 6 children

    She was taken into custody at the home of Jodi Hildebrandt, who owns a counseling business that she says teaches people to improve their lives by being honest, responsible and humble.

    2 statsments down

    Prosecutors allege Franke and Hildebrandt either caused or allowed someone to torture Franke’s 12-year-old son and injure her 10-year-old daughter. Both children were starved and harmed emotionally, prosecutors said.

    Umm...

    Semi-Hemi-Demigod , in Newly discovered comet might be visible soon
    @Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social avatar

    I would like to preemptively thank every who wakes up early to photograph this so I can sleep in.

    FoundTheVegan , (edited ) in ‘Heartbreaking’: Anti-Trans Healthcare Law Takes Effect in Texas
    @FoundTheVegan@kbin.social avatar

    Brought to you by the "don't tread on me" folks who eagerly tread over anyone they don't like.

    In this case, children with loving families. No one is forcing. left hands transness on kids you absolute ghouls. Let go of those perals, stop shouting "save the children" and stop telling kids they are wrong for writing (or living) that way.

    Sharkwellington ,

    I should share this with my mother who “feels like there are a lot more autistic people these days.”

    FoundTheVegan ,
    @FoundTheVegan@kbin.social avatar

    You should! I mean, yeah, of course it has! As things become less stigmatized and especially in the case of autism, more ways are used to detect/diagnose then... Why wouldn't it?

    Sharkwellington ,

    Pretty much what I said. There are more diagnosed autistic people. Important distinction.

    vzq ,

    Honestly, I still think we are under-diagnosing. I routinely run into people that I’m 100% sure would be diagnosed if evaluated.

    Now, they are free not to seek a diagnosis for whatever reason, but the diagnosis rate is nowhere near the autism rate for the population.

    derfaust ,

    “Transgender children” is evidence enough that trans culture is a cancer of society. Absolutely disgusting.

    FoundTheVegan ,
    @FoundTheVegan@kbin.social avatar

    People know themselves better than you know them.

    derfaust ,

    The entire professions of psychology and psychiatry enters the chat.

    stopthatgirl7 OP ,
    @stopthatgirl7@kbin.social avatar

    Yes, let’s go with what the fields of psychiatry and psychology say on the subject of letting kids transition!

    The consensus being that transitioning is very good for trans kids and the best standard of care.

    derfaust ,

    Oh what bullshit. The consensus is that it is mental illness you fucking retard.

    stopthatgirl7 OP ,
    @stopthatgirl7@kbin.social avatar

    You seem nice.

    derfaust ,

    Let kids decide when theyre ready to drink and drive. They know themselves better than you know them.

    FoundTheVegan , (edited )
    @FoundTheVegan@kbin.social avatar

    The difference is that if ANYONE drinks and drives, there is a high chance of harming another. No one else is harmed, or even affected atll by someone transitioning. And the regret/detransition rate is astonishingly low. Never mind thr fact that puberty blockers and all options available to minors is reveraable.

    You are simply just trying to regulate what people do with their own body.

    derfaust ,

    My god you are a fucking smoothbrain. If we dont let kids drink or drive we sure as fuck shouldnt let them try and physically alter their sex organs or their hormones. And the regret rate and suicide rate is notoriously high what the fuck are you even saying.

    FoundTheVegan ,
    @FoundTheVegan@kbin.social avatar

    And the regret rate and suicide rate is notoriously high what the fuck are you even saying.

    You are falling for clickbait outrage headlines instead of the actual data. 1% of people that get gender surgery experince regret.

    Have you ever stopped to consider social stigma and the things you are saying why people experince regret? Societal pressure is immense for trans folk.

    Honestly, if you really are considered about people's mental health. Then listen to psychology and let them transition in peace. It's clinically proven to have the best outcomes.

    You can't have it both ways. Do you want people's mental health to improve, or do you want to ignore what psychiatrists suggest?

    stopthatgirl7 OP ,
    @stopthatgirl7@kbin.social avatar

    Ok, I’ll bite.

    What, exactly, is “trans culture”?

    derfaust ,

    “Man legally changed gender to gain custody of his kids. Trans groups are concerned.”

    fne8w2ah , in Fatal shooting of University of South Carolina student who tried to enter wrong home 'justifiable,' police say

    No wonder Americans are so infatuated with the second amendment!

    dipshit , in Bodycam: Pregnant woman accused of shoplifting shot by police

    Cowards love guns.

    dezmd , in Millennials didn't kill the 'organization man' after all. Federal data reveals it was the boomers all along
    @dezmd@lemmy.world avatar

    Once again lazy writers arbitrarily wedge 1980-84 up into the millenial category so it can muddle details just enough to reinforce a narrative.

    78ish to 85ish is a Xennial, a uniquely defined generation between X and Millennial. We took part in the last vestiges of an analog lifestyle period as our early lives steadily evolved into a computing connected and defined digital era that Millenials were further born into.

    Fondots ,

    Xennial is a relatively new classification, and while I don’t disagree that there are very important differences between the world that older and younger millennials grew up in, and probably moreso than the difference between the older and younger segments of previous generations, but I think it’s still fair to lump us all in as millennials as a broader category, with xennials and zennials and whatever you want to call those in the middle as sub-categories/micro-generations/etc.

    dezmd ,
    @dezmd@lemmy.world avatar

    The use of the term Xennial itself is more recent, but the classification definitely isn’t. I’ve seen Gen X classed as late as 1982, so there’s always some muddling.

    utopianfiat , in ABC News: Delaware man who police blocked from warning of speed trap wins $50K judgment

    Big win for vehicular manslaughter fans

    greater_potater ,

    It can be hard to support the first amendment when you disagree with what’s being said, but that’s why it’s so important.

    utopianfiat ,

    This isn’t speaking truth to power, though. More cars driving faster and more dangerously is the establishment. You fail to see that free speech is for protecting the voices already in power, and this is just another example.

    ieatpillowtags ,

    How does that boot taste?

    utopianfiat ,

    Car-centric society is the boot, friend.

    Dkarma ,

    That’s such a shit take ur half mushroom

    ReluctantMuskrat ,

    If the cops won’t uphold the law, why should the citizens?

    utopianfiat ,

    Because driving too fast kills our children

    CaptainAniki ,

    deleted_by_author

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  • utopianfiat ,

    I have worked in an industry that served people involved in car accidents and I can tell you right now that is probably the least true thing in the world.

    sylver_dragon , in Millennials didn't kill the 'organization man' after all. Federal data reveals it was the boomers all along

    It wasn’t the employees who killed the “Company Man”. It was the companies themselves. Corporations value short term profit above all else, including long term stability. This means that the older, higher paid employees are a liability, not a benefit. So, they get shown the door the first time the line doesn’t go up. Loyalty is a two way street. If the company isn’t loyal to it’s employees, the employees won’t be loyal to the company. Once people woke up to the fact that the corporations are fully mercenary about employment, it was a natural reaction for the employees to become mercenary as well.

    This is also why every company pushes bullshit about “we’re a family”. It’s a bald faced lie to sucker gullible employees into thinking that the company wouldn’t gut them and sell their organs at the first sign of that making a quick buck.

    Every worker should watch this video at least once. It was speaking to designers, but is applicable everywhere.

    Chetzemoka ,

    Seriously. I watched both of my parents get their "good jobs" sold right out from under them to private equity firms that laid off all the older, more expensive workers immediately. I, myself, was laid off twice before I turned 28 years old.

    I have zero incentive to be "loyal" to any company when they so clearly will never be loyal to me. What a load of horseshit.

    sab ,

    This is literally the definition of a liberal market economy. Bust unions and make it easy to hire and fire, and what you'll get is a highly mobile and vibrant but unspecialised workforce. Great for quick innovation like silicon valley, less great for traditional manufacturing that requires specialized talents.

    It's all wanted politics - maybe more than anything, this is what they busted the unions for.

    dhork ,

    Corporations value short term profit above all else, including long term stability.

    It didn’t used to be this way. I mean, all Corporations need to be profitable, of course, and the successful ones are more profitable. But using Shareholder Value as the main (perhaps only) metric for decisions didn’t really come around until the 80’s and Jack Welch at GE started talking about it extensively.

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shareholder_value

    This focus on shareholder value exclusively also implies that Corporations do not have any responsibility to anyone except its shareholders. You can see the effects of this philosophy even today, where Republicans attack corporate ESG initiatives because they feel that they undermine this commitment to increasing shareholder value. It even extends to the Twitter mess: Twitter’s board felt they had to force the sale to Musk at the inflated price he offered because it was so much higher than the company was objectively worth, and would be the best return for its shareholders, even though they probably knew he would end up wrecking the company (and screwing over employees). They felt they could only make decisions for the benefit of shareholders, and not employees or users.

    theodewere ,
    @theodewere@kbin.social avatar

    for the benefit of shareholders, and not employees or users.

    there used to be much more focus on building a long term relationship with customers, at all levels of business

    snooggums ,
    @snooggums@kbin.social avatar

    all Corporations need to be profitable, of course

    This is not even true. In fact, the fastest growing companies are the ones that have the potential to be profitable in the future. The established ones that are run into the ground are often profitable, but it makes more money in the short term for vultures to dismantle and sell off the parts.

    The real issue is that the tax structure incentivizes terrible business practices that rapidly funnel money into the wealthy instead of rewarding ownership of businesses for that are successful in the long term.

    SCB ,

    Republicans attack ESG initiatives because their constituents are hot garbage. Shareholders are the ones demanding ESG principles.

    Capital shifts have been the largest impacts on both ESG and DEI as well as green initiatives

    dhork ,

    Republicans attack ESG initiatives because their constituents are hot garbage. Shareholders are the ones demanding ESG principles.

    You’re correct, of course. But they view that a public corporation’s sole responsibility is to increase shareholder value, not do what the shareholders say. There can be no other priority.

    Count0 , (edited ) in ABC News: Delaware man who police blocked from warning of speed trap wins $50K judgment
    @Count0@lemmy.villa-straylight.social avatar

    I don’t understand why he didn’t go after Box himself. The recording demonstrated that he was violating his civil rights, and knew it wouldn’t be upheld. That should have gotten rid of his qualified immunity.

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