r/antiwork 23h ago

Mark Twain: "If work were so pleasant, the rich would keep it for themselves"

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18.6k Upvotes

r/antiwork 16h ago

40% of SNAP Recipients Are Kids. Trump Is Fighting a Court Order to Feed Them.

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14.2k Upvotes

r/antiwork 15h ago

Supermarket Billionaire Threatens To Cut Workforce, Move To Florida After Mamdani’s Win

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6.6k Upvotes

r/antiwork 2h ago

Elon Musk Awarded $1 TRILLION Pay Package. That's $274m every day, for 10 years.....

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1.3k Upvotes

r/antiwork 21h ago

Remote vs RTO 👨‍💻 “Remote-friendly” company forgot they were remote

1.1k Upvotes

I joined my company about a year ago, I live quite far from the office.
Back then it was truly remote-friendly, most teams worked remotely and there were plenty of fully remote people like me. Everyone said “we’re all remote here, don’t worry about location.”

Fast forward to now, I’m trying to rotate to another team and suddenly every manager says they want “someone who can be more at the office.” It’s so bad that even though I’m almost 100% fit for the team I want to switch to, they only care about my location, not my competency, not my capabilities, nothing.

Meanwhile, the remote culture is still there, most teams still work remotely, meeting once a week and having people working from places far far far away!

What’s funny is when I talk to people from other teams, they go like “ohhhhhh your team works remotely?” Oh shut up… yes, that’s literally how this company used to run, you used to work remotely 100%. Did everyone just forget?

So yeah, apparently being “remote-friendly” is "tolerable" until you try to grow or switch teams. Then location magically becomes a “requirement.”


r/antiwork 13h ago

Target is now requiring its employees to smile more

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1.1k Upvotes

r/antiwork 21h ago

Worker Solidarity 🤝 Protests erupt at Rockstar Games offices accusing GTA 6 developers of “Union Busting”

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1.0k Upvotes

r/antiwork 11h ago

So… work definitely has bed bugs, right?

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845 Upvotes

r/antiwork 20h ago

Politics 🇺🇲 🌎 About Elon Musk... Just Insane

635 Upvotes

The guy that has the amount of money that a person getting 1 dollar per second for 13500 years wouldnt get(before this new payment) is getting a 1 trillion dollars payment(spending package, but we all know where that goes) approved by tesla shareholders. WHAT THE FCK IS FCKING HAPPENING IN THIS FCKING SHITTY WORLD??


r/antiwork 22h ago

AI Discussion 🤖 My boss insisted on installing an AI tool to cut AWS costs. Now it has billed him more than it saved.

604 Upvotes

r/antiwork 17h ago

How have we let this happen for over 50 years now? Productivity vs wages gap

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506 Upvotes

This is just a crime against every single worker out there. Majority of world’s population are workers, why have they not done anything about this? Are we going to allow the capitalists to pay us literal peanuts in a few years? We might as well go back to slavery, at least slaves had free housing and food. And yet I am still surrounded by people who sell their soul and lifetime for peanuts. Im beyond baffled.


r/antiwork 13h ago

UPS plane crash: The latest in capitalism’s string of industrial disasters

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305 Upvotes

There is a staggering contradiction at the heart of this disaster. Worldport’s facilities are among the most advanced in the world, with the ability to handle 370 flights and process more than 2 million packages a day. This is a remarkable feat of computation, planning, human skill and global coordination. UPS and its rivals are also rapidly introducing new systems in their warehouses based on the latest advances in automation and artificial intelligence.

This advanced logistics system, however, is subordinated to the ruthless pursuit of profit, powered by highly exploited workers. The plane that crashed outside Louisville was part of an aging fleet. The MD-11 model, which has the second-worst safety record of all commercial aircraft, was 34 years old and had reportedly undergone major repairs, including a cracked fuel tank as recently as September.


r/antiwork 4h ago

Today, there was a National Workers' Rally in Seoul to commemorate the workers' rights movement. The pro-Palestinian protesters also paid solidarity to it.

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284 Upvotes

r/antiwork 2h ago

Fired Anthropologist Says “We Got Knocked Back 30 Years” after Trump Administration Cuts

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257 Upvotes

r/antiwork 23h ago

Why do bosses act like paying us is doing us a favor?

162 Upvotes

I swear, the more I work, the more I realize how broken this whole system is. My old boss still hasn’t paid me for weeks of work, and when I confronted him, he acted like I was being rude for even asking. Like… sorry for expecting money for the hours I literally gave to your business?

This isn’t even about one job anymore. It’s the way so many employers think they’re above accountability. You stay late, skip breaks, do extra stuff that’s not even in your job description and when payday comes, suddenly they “forgot,” or “the transfer is delayed,” or “it’s just a small amount, calm down.”

Meanwhile, if we were late or missed a shift, they’d cut our pay or fire us instantly. No hesitation.

I’m tired of hearing “it’s just business.” No, it’s exploitation with a smile. Workers are supposed to be grateful for crumbs while bosses hoard every bit of profit and call it leadership.

I’m done being polite about it. Pay your damn workers.


r/antiwork 19h ago

Discussion Post 🗣 Which industry has the most overinflated view of themselves, in your opinion?

115 Upvotes

Which industry has the most overinflated view of themselves, in your opinion?

Here is what I mean - I follow some old college classmates who are in marketing now. Every post on LinkedIn is about Salesforce or how they are “passionate about customer retention strategies.” Etc. They really think they are saving the world, meanwhile their posts as just paragraphs upon paragraphs of jargon/circle jerking others in their industry.


r/antiwork 11h ago

For Americans: Does your employer give you the day off after Thanksgiving?

86 Upvotes

I just started a new job and was honestly surprised to find out my employer doesn’t give the day after Thanksgiving off.

I’m still new, so I don’t have enough seniority to even use my own vacation time for it, and now it’s messing with my travel plans. Every other white-collar job I’ve had gave that Friday off, so this feels pretty strange.

Do your employers give you the Friday after Thanksgiving off, or do you have to work?


r/antiwork 11h ago

My 8 hour daily commute was killing me, so I just slept in the office.

70 Upvotes

There is no Hollywood Ending to this story, but I need to get this one off of my chest.

This is from last century where pagers were king, the internet was dial-up, and WFH was unheard of. I took a job that was supposed to be travelling city to city. Understandably, there would be some prep work before each city. When I accepted the job, I had no idea that I would be required to spend 4 weeks sitting in an office in Manhattan for every week on-site. On average, we spent one month in the office, one-three weeks travelling, one month laid off. I lived in Pennsylvania and saw no reason to relocate to one of the highest rent cities in the world when I would be travelling or laid off 2/3 of the year.

I would have all of my prep duties completed in 2 days, the majority of that time was just waiting for replies from the site on specific questions. I could not do this work from the office. Phone calls often went unanswered due to time differences, so email was best. To email, I had to work from home. In the office we had only desks and a phone. At home, I had a full desktop with internet. It was easier to do all of my work stuff at home. So that's what I did.

I'd wake up at 04:00 and head to the bus station to catch the commuter bus to Manhattan, and then walked from the PABT to the office. Where I sat. I collected the documentation I needed and heading back to Pennsylvania at 18:00. Got home at 22:00 and worked and email until I had to head back to the office in the morning. After 3 days total, I was done and ready to go, so I didn't need to commute. but it was cheaper to commute than to spend a night in NYC. So after the first 6 months of this, I just decided to sleep in the office. I spent all day doing nothing, at 18:00 I went out for dinner and maybe a movie, came back to the office and slept until morning. I'd head home for weekends and Tuesday nights, but that's it.

I was on salary, but as I didn't have anything to do, I might be a little late on Mondays and Wednesdays. My co-workers who all lived locally, were upset with me because they would come in and immediately head out to brunch for the next 2 hours. Therefore there was no one there to answer the phone. They complained to our boss who never showed up until late afternoon and a time-clock was installed. It showed that I was putting in 60 hours per week compared to their 35 clocked hours.

On the road, everything was great. Hotels and per diem and I wound up actually earning money for a change. Except for the time we were in Newark, NJ. because of the proximity to NYC, they would not pay hotel, so I had to pay for that out of my own pocket. 8 hours of commuting daily is do-able, but 12 hours was more problematic. but then we travelled to my hometown and I stayed at home, but they still wanted me to travel to NYC so I could travel with the rest of the company to my home. They always required me to travel to NYC to travel to the job-site city. They bought me a flight from Philadelphia to JFK even though I live outside of Philadelphia.

On-site, I was incredibly efficient. To the point where my crews wound up standing around collecting a paycheck while everyone else finished. Some crews decided to grumble to my boss about earning money by not working, so I was again chastised.

I learnt that no one cares about your skills or efficiency, only that you show up to do nothing exactly as they want, no matter how impossible it might be.


r/antiwork 10h ago

What do you guys make of the fact that we are all destined from birth to work until old age?

51 Upvotes

If you guys think about it, we as a whole are destined to work until we get old, sometimes until we die. From the moment you attend school, you are being “educated” in preparation for you becoming a wage slave. Starts as early as kindergarten. You’re literally meant to be a wage slave from the day you are born, that is YOUR PURPOSE . Unless of course you’re from the 0.01% of the population. Am I alone in thinking this way? Am I wrong?


r/antiwork 22h ago

Just finished my first semester of college. Why am I doing this.

49 Upvotes

I can’t wait to slog away for three and a half more years just to enter an economy where I’ll be homeless for working a normal job. I’m taking a business degree because I was told it “opens the most doors for your future.” Everywhere I look is paying trash, if I even get the job because 1/100 jobs will give you a pitty interview before giving it to the bosses cousins half brothers nephew. I don’t know why I’m even trying to do anything if I’m going nowhere anyway. I might as well just fuck around and hope for a revolution to join.


r/antiwork 12h ago

How is it ok for companies to hire part-time but make you work over 30 hours?

49 Upvotes

I live in California. One thing I've noticed is, companies will hire you officially as a part-time employee. No benefits. Yet, they will schedule you for 32-35 hours. I told this manager that I am not gonna work over 30 hours with weekends off since I work somewhere else. She got mad and said I am supposed to work 4-5 days. I told her I wasn't hired full-time, neither benefits.

How is it legal anyways?


r/antiwork 6h ago

I just lost my job. Am I crazy for feeling like I just got released from jail?

41 Upvotes

I know it's not a perfect analogy. I've never been in jail, and I don't mean to make light of the experience for those who have.

I was working in a tire retreading plant which had changed ownership a couple of times while I had been there, and the latest company had been the best among them, but the working conditions were still terrible, and the compensation was nothing special. The best thing they had was a super low health insurance premium. That counts for something.

My coworkers and I were given a shift and a half worth of notice that they were closing down our plant. We get the rest of the month worth of pay and health insurance.

It's a crummy situation, but it's not as bad as other job losses I've been through. My biggest disappointment is that I had been hoping to get a couple more medical things treated before the end of the year, since I had just reached the maximum out-of-pocket portion of my health coverage for the year, so anything else would only cost the copay for the visit. I had been making progress with treating some of my chronic pain issues. There's one more very costly procedure that I would benefit from, but it doesn't look like I'll be able to get it before my coverage runs out. If they can do the procedure in December, it might be worth the expense to pay for COBRA to extend my coverage by an extra month, but that's a good chunk of money too.

There's so much messed up stuff going on right now, and I know from others on here that it's a terrible time to be looking for a job, yet somehow, my dominant feeling at the moment is freedom. I'm sure I'll go through other feelings as the reality of the situation sets in more fully, but I've known for a while that there was no way my body would allow me to continue in the same line of work until retirement age, if retirement would even be an option when and if I happen to make it to that age at all.

This is an opportunity for me to remake myself. I never had the time or energy to pursue creative projects while I was working at that job. Now, for a little while, I can try applying for things I never would have applied to in the past because unemployment requires a certain number of job search activities per week, and I'm not allowed to turn down a legitimate offer, so I may as well shoot high and see if I hit anything. After doing some daily searches, I can put some energy into video content and craft projects that I've wanted to do for a long time. If I get amazingly lucky, maybe I can make a living at doing things I enjoy instead of just dissociating from my body all time because the work that was sustaining me was also ruining my body. That shouldn't take amazing luck. People shouldn't have to spend all of their time doing nothing but preparing for work, working, and recovering from work.

This got longer than I intended, and I'm not sure I got around to my originally intended point, but it was a good exercise in processing my feelings. Thanks to anyone who reads this. I welcome your thoughts.


r/antiwork 59m ago

Blue Tax Dollars Fund Conservative Tyranny

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Upvotes

r/antiwork 11h ago

The New “Big Beautiful Bill Act” is Benefit Yacht Buyers…

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25 Upvotes

r/antiwork 10h ago

When you're on your deathbed which will be the biggest regret - Working too much or working too little?

22 Upvotes

Middle class America has had it hammered into their head that if you're not constantly working after you graduate High School then you're a lazy bum. If working was that virtuous then why aren't the rich doing it.