That comment also sucks when working holidays, particularly Thanksgiving. "They should let you be with your families!" Ok thanks, get out!
Microblog Memes
A place to share screenshots of Microblog posts, whether from Mastodon, tumblr, ~~Twitter~~ X, KBin, Threads or elsewhere.
Created as an evolution of White People Twitter and other tweet-capture subreddits.
RULES:
- Your post must be a screen capture of a microblog-type post that includes the UI of the site it came from, preferably also including the avatar and username of the original poster. Including relevant comments made to the original post is encouraged.
- Your post, included comments, or your title/comment should include some kind of commentary or remark on the subject of the screen capture. Your title must include at least one word relevant to your post.
- You are encouraged to provide a link back to the source of your screen capture in the body of your post.
- Current politics and news are allowed, but discouraged. There MUST be some kind of human commentary/reaction included (either by the original poster or you). Just news articles or headlines will be deleted.
- Doctored posts/images and AI are allowed, but discouraged. You MUST indicate this in your post (even if you didn't originally know). If an image is found to be fabricated or edited in any way and it is not properly labeled, it will be deleted.
- Absolutely no NSFL content.
- Be nice. Don't take anything personally. Take political debates to the appropriate communities. Take personal disagreements & arguments to private messages.
- No advertising, brand promotion, or guerrilla marketing.
RELATED COMMUNITIES:
If that person wasn't there, you'd still be open though. From what I have seen of people going in during a holiday, they are all overworked with no time off and cannot get what they need beforehand, leading to them being essentially forced to.
Not to mention that many places take volunteers to work holidays since not everyone celebrates. And it's not uncommon to get a bit more per hour from it.
Depends on the store. I worked at a big box hardware store and every public holiday you’d have old geezers just milling about wanting to strike up a 30 minute conversation with you about some esoteric project they’ve been working on for the last six months while you’re frantically mixing four different customer’s custom paint colours and trying to point other customers in the direction of things that have huge signs already directing customers to.
yeah but then if nobody comes in the first year, they might close for next year
I've gone to places on holidays only because I knew they were open. It wouldn't have been a big deal at all if they weren't open.
At least some places like New Zealand have a surcharge on public holidays.
Most of the time, it's the store being open that causes customers to come in. People expect places to be closed on holidays, so they check online. If the store's listing on Google Maps or whatever confirms it is indeed closed, most people will just say "oh dang, too bad". If it actually ends up being open then they go, buy their stuff, and then make a sympathetic comment to the employees.
I agree and that's how i operate. However the counter argument to this is, if a store is open and no one shows up at all then next year they will not open because there was not a single sale. Not sure how acurate that is in terms of corporate BS but that is the general counter argument i hear.
The catch 22 is that the companies are opening on these days to catch the customers that come out. People go because the store is open, the store is open because people go. If people consistently, collectively didn't go in, the stores would close.
Exactly.
"Stfu, I need my stat pay"
Yeah that's why, if I say anything, I just thank them for being there.
The entire economy can't just shut down because of some snow. Realisitically the most dangerous part about that weather is the driving, if we just built public transit, their commute wouldn't even be that different from a sunny day. If you dress for the weather you'll be fine.
But why can't the economy shut down for a few days?
In the past the economy had to shut down because of bad weather regularly, now we have all those machines and produce much more efficiently.
The economy is tired. It needs to shut down sometimes. :(
Have you hugged your economy today? ;_;
That's one way of saying you haven't commuted by bus, train, or subway in your entire life, I guess.
Yeah, public transit is great for many reasons, but reliability in bad weather is not one of them.
Maybe you've just never got to use good, high quality public transit.
It's a region dependant luxury. Where I live, transit has tons of tweakers and unstable people. Especially during winter. The city doesn't bother cleaning blood off the walls for weeks after a stabbing.
I'd love some proper investment into transit and security on said transit, but I'm not holding my breath
Probably not the best in the world, but I would consider my city's public transit network way above the average for what I know. It's lovely most of the time, just not at rush hours when millions of people have to be moved at the same time, and specially in bad weather. I'm not sure what your standard for high quality is but I'd bet that even the best one gets overwhelmed in these situations and it's an absolute hell to ride as well.
Edit: even though I think it is still good, It just came to mind that trains have been crashing as of lately in my country. So the quality could fall due to corruption and capitalism at any moment really...
In Hong Kong, after a Category 5-equivalent typhoon hit, the metro system was back up again within two days with apologetic announcements that some trains were slightly delayed due to debris on the track.
if we built public transit
It's almost like they're implying it needs expansion and improvements. Maybe if you read past the first sentence without waiting to be immediately outraged, you'd have caught that.
Public transit suffers in bad weather just as much as car traffic.
Trains just end up moving slower, trees fall down on tracks. Busses are just big cars and need to drive on the same roads as the cars do.
Tell that to the danish public transit system shitting itself because we're getting a bit of snow tonight. In reality, there's a better chance of you being able to drive your car to work, than the train being able to go. Because your car isn't bound by minimum speeds, but if the train can only go 10 mph because of snow and ice on the track, it's just not feasible to run it.
That sounds like an infrastructure specific problem. Many countries have trains that work reliably in snowy conditions or have train cars designed to clear tracks for other trains.
If no one plowed or maintained the roads, your car would struggle too.
When there was some ice and snow in my country, the cars and busses didn't work. Trains were still going, so more reliable indeed.
If a job doesn’t pay well enough for snow tires it must not be that important
Snow tires make roads safer in winter but certainly aren't nearly as safe as a train or tram on rails would be. You having snow tires also has no effect on the other motorists, whom may choose not to use snow tires.
"They make you work on a holiday?" says the reason they make you work on a holiday.
It isn't like they can send you home. I know, I know, no raindrop feels responsible for the storm, but the people who give half a shit aren't nearly numerous enough to get companies to stop this, even if all of them stopped going.
I remember on 9/11/01 people coming into my job like that: "so crazy huh? Can't believe you guys are working. Anyway, let me get a half pound of potato salad."
Also on something like blisteringly humid 40°C days, where you're only doing inside service but tables insist on eating outside
Like bro, I'm a person too
I don't mind as long as it's said gratefully. Like they hoped for a miracle and you're it.
I don't have much guilt over using a grocery store or gas station on a holiday. Retail or restaurants, on the other hand, I'll try to avoid. Not all businesses are equal in daily necessity.
Just make law forbidding people to work some days. Capatilatist will keep their shop open when they burn if they can get away with it.
My first self realization moment was a black Thursday. I said pretty much the same, reflected on it later as most neurodivergents do. And haven't gone to a black Friday/Thursday since. One I didn't need the shit, two if I really want it then I can wait a day.
Me when there's blizzard conditions outside and three people have died but Taco Bell is still open