(1) Countries' legal systems should be able to punish those responsible for working conditions that provably and significantly impede health. — fdrake
The fact that the job market was tight indicates that France is overpopulated and some portion of the workers need to move to where there are jobs. By forcing French companies to maintain happy work environments, they're effectively making the problem worse. French people will stay in France and produce more French people into an overloaded system. Companies will struggle to maintain the happiness quotient until they finally go out of business and the crowds of hungry French people will start executing people by guillotine. — frank
Are you arguing that it is necessary for people to be harassed into suicide in every workplace because if it doesn't happen civilisation will collapse quicker? — fdrake
There is no depth of depravity to which the economy will not descend with enthusiasm if a profit can be made. — unenlightened
Isnt it each person's responsibility to maintain his or her own sanity? — frank
The rightist argues that survival of the fittest generates healthy entities — frank
Sure, and for being abuse of power jerks they can take responsibility for their santiy and experiences in prison for a short time, and then likely go back to priviledged lives, where they perhaps will just be bad bosses but not sadistic ones.Isnt it each person's responsibility to maintain his or her own sanity? — frank
No, I'm not. The rightist argues that survival of the fittest generates healthy entities in human industry in very much the same way it does in the evolution of organisms. — frank
Moral responsibility works both ways -- offense and defense. A better cure than small fines and short jail sentences (which are under appeal and might be dismissed) is strong united worker power. — Bitter Crank
The rightist argues that survival of the fittest generates healthy entities
— frank
Who survives in these scenarios? The callous and psychopathic? I would not classify them as "healthy." — Artemis
Can you spell out for me how that relates to workplace conditions that lead to unhealthy workers - exposed to conditions that are not necessary for the good functioning of an office? — fdrake
Why didn't they just lay them off? — frank
It's better to work with nature and allow small adjustments (which might include 35 suicides), rather than prop up an artificial system that will eventually fail in a larger bloody adjustment. — frank
Intellectually, it's hard to pinpoint it, but it's very clear emotionally. We're supposed to help each other. — frank
If you need a structural argument for why workplace safety should have laws attached, consider that sickness has huge social costs; it decreases workplace productivity and requires the use of social safety nets to care for those that are sick. — fdrake
It makes sense to punish workplace harassment and unsafe working environments to impede the social and financial costs of this negligence from being offloaded onto the public and the state. — fdrake
It's better to work with nature and allow small adjustments (which might include 35 suicides), rather than prop up an artificial system that will eventually fail in a larger bloody adjustment.
— frank
That is an exceedingly callous thing to say.
You shouldn’t underestimate how hard it is to leave a salaried position in a large company. — Wayfarer
And that argument is pretty easy to understand if we're talking about chemical exposure or the absence of safety equipment on machinery. — frank
Some people thrive on an emotionally charged environment that includes permission to be abusive (which is provided by an abusive executive.) — frank
With moral harassment, it will be hard to quantify that cost. Less hard to quantify will be the revenues the government will lose for lack of companies like Uber in the economy, a company known for both ruthlessness and profitability. — frank
Whatever causes the sickness and death doesn't really matter, does it? — fdrake
Widespread workplace harassment and mental illness inducing work environments give business globally 1 trillion dollars in losses from productivity decrease alone — fdrake
The case with Orange wilfully stopped good management practices for the sole purpose of driving out employees they did not want to pay any more or provide a severance package for. — fdrake
Edit: An unstated assumption in what you're saying is that such abuses actually produce efficiency gains or mitigate efficiency losses, which remains unargued for, — fdrake
Some people thrive on an emotionally charged environment that includes permission to be abusive
— frank
You mean like sadistic serial killers might?
A person's enjoyment of being a bully does not make a right. — Artemis
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.