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Workers at Microsoft Japan enjoyed an enviable perk this summer: working four days a week, enjoying a three-day weekend — and getting their normal, five-day paycheck. The result, the company says, was a productivity boost of 40%.
Microsoft Japan says it became more efficient in several areas, including lower electricity costs, which fell by 23%. And as its workers took five Fridays off in August, they printed nearly 60 percent fewer pages.
All of the employees who took Fridays off were given special paid leave, the company says. Encouraged by the results, it plans to hold a similar trial in the winter.
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Preach

“I’m pretty sure life is going to start sucking around 15 or 16 because that’s when I have to get my first job. After that everything looks pretty scary. Adults don’t have an actual life. You can’t go outside. You don’t get to hang out with friends very much. Maybe text a little, but that’s it. You just wake up, get ready for work, then work, then maybe watch a little TV, then go to bed. All of it seems depressing. But apparently everyone has to do it.” (Hong Kong)
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working full time is terrible why do we just accept that having 8 days off a month is normal and okay........ being alive could be cool but we waste it at our JOBS.... sorry i’m just heated about capitalism again i’ll be fine
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To say the present era is one of crisis borders on cliché. It differs from the dystopias of George Orwell or Aldous Huxley, or hell in the paintings of Hieronymus Bosch. It is unlike Europe during the Black Death or Central Asia as it faced the galloping Golden Horde. And yet it is true: Ours is an age of crisis. We inhabit a world of low growth, low productivity and low wages, of climate breakdown and the collapse of democratic politics. A world where billions, mostly in the global south, live in poverty. A world defined by inequality.
But the most pressing crisis of all, arguably, is an absence of collective imagination. It is as if humanity has been afflicted by a psychological complex, in which we believe the present world is stronger than our capacity to remake it — as if it were not our ancestors who created what stands before us now. As if the very essence of humanity, if there is such a thing, is not to constantly build new worlds.
If we can move beyond such a failure, we will be able to see something wonderful. The plummeting cost of information and advances in technology are providing the ground for a collective future of freedom and luxury for all
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I remember there being an Ad like video for FALC a while back. It had a guy in a suite being driven by an auto-matic car to a house and it was super classy and aesthetic. Was this real or Mandela effect ? Thanks
You might be thinking of this classic
vimeo
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Work is by nature unfree, inhuman, unsocial, activity which is both controlled by private property and which creates it. The abolition of private property, therefore, only becomes reality when it is seen as the abolition of work.
Karl Marx, 1845
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According to US researcher Alex Soojung-Kim Pang, most modern employees are productive for about four hours a day: the rest is padding and huge amounts of worry. Pang argues that the workday could easily be scaled back without undermining standards of living or prosperity.
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Almost every UK office worker is unhappy in their job, with many suffering from “vocation frustration”, according to new statistics.
The research, comprised of on an online survey of 2,000 UK office workers, conducted by independent research agency Arlington Research in October, found that a whopping 97% of office-based employees feel frustrated with work, with 89% admitting that they frequently think about changing jobs, and nearly a quarter routinely browsing LinkedIn job ads for something better.
However, a third of those who did switch jobs said that they became equally as frustrated in their new office in under six months.
It’s not the job, it’s work itself.
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Is this really an ideology, or just a laugh? How and where do I learn more? What comes first; mass automation (leading to communism) or communism first then automation?
It’s not so much an ideology as an alternative vision of the future.
This blog is obviously (and unbiasedly) the number one resource but also Aaron Bastani has a book about FALC coming out soon and I made this reading list https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/21S204BBYO942?&sort=default
As for the order of things; ideally yes communism-that is the common ownership of productive property- would come first but I’m not opposed to state interventionist way of building up safety nets(UBI, UBS) and taking things like housing, transport and utilities out of commodity circulation and investing in automation R&D to create space for the working class to build the future.
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If workers controlled the means of production in a for-need system, automation would mean vacations, not widespread loss of livelihood.
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The New Zealand company behind a landmark trial of a four-day working week has concluded it an unmitigated success, with 78% of employees feeling they were able to successfully manage their work-life balance, an increase of 24 percentage points.
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