Getting off of work and watching this hits different
@HistoriaCivilis Жыл бұрын
💪
@KaladinVegapunk Жыл бұрын
One of the most impressive feats in the US is mega corps convincing people to worship capitalism as if it's somehow intrinsic to our country, that unions are bad for them and that they should fanboy for it while the giant companies dont pay tax , use PACS to influence law and policy, its almost dystopian levels of BS Obviously the USSR was way more cruel and brutal, they weren't Communist just totalitarianism but there's definitely better methods that don't absolutely gut and demolish lower and middle classes while CEOs make billions for doing nothing
@70rn Жыл бұрын
(^3 weeks ago^) I'm watching the premier now, my life is a lie...
@cerealpeer Жыл бұрын
i used to be a baker where i would clock in around 9pm, and by sunrise i could spend my morning watching stuff like this. i love working a lot of hours, and i spend my off time working at home.
@57575756 Жыл бұрын
Don't watch this before work. debating should I call in. I'm convinced going to work would be un-natural today.
@beretperson Жыл бұрын
Boss makes a dollar, I make a dime, That's why I watch Historia Civilis On company time
@TheMelvinMan Жыл бұрын
Literally doing this right now.
@DavidJamesHenry Жыл бұрын
Doing this right now lmao
@mayamayhemmusic Жыл бұрын
Boss makes a dollar I make a dime those were the words of a different time Boss makes a million I make a cent that's why I bring his life to an end
@DavidJamesHenry Жыл бұрын
@@mayamayhemmusic Boss makes a dollar I don't make shit That's why we march In a crowd of raised fists
@Dude0000 Жыл бұрын
@@mayamayhemmusic that escalated quickly lol
@chelloho Жыл бұрын
I implored my boss to reduce my daily labour time to 6 hours. He was apprehensive at first, but conceded after taking my pocket watch. I was overjoyed!
@manmanman2000 Жыл бұрын
Watch out!
@Felled-angel Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@jonesaffrou6014 Жыл бұрын
no capitalist can resist a good clock
@MysteriousFuture Жыл бұрын
Lol pocket watches are soooo last century, smart watches are in
@azlanadil3646 Жыл бұрын
It’s fine guys, he has a phone.
@Helfinator Жыл бұрын
When I was an intern working in the maintenance department of a chemical factory, I was always told by the old foremen that you can only expect to reasonably get 4-6 hours out of someone during a day’s work. Seems like those old hands knew what they were talking about
@DaHuntsman1 Жыл бұрын
This has been my experience in any kind of environment where you're expecting manual labor out of people. Once you hit 6 hours you see a drastic slowdown in how fast everyone works.
@commisaryarreck3974 Жыл бұрын
Dangerous work, better not to risk tired workers since they'd be prone to mistakes
@stratospheric37 Жыл бұрын
@@commisaryarreck3974 Risk is outweighed by the amount of work put in and capital accumulated. 100% efficient work or not it's still labour
@danicic87 Жыл бұрын
Same is for developers / coders in IT industry ..
@DreamVikings Жыл бұрын
@@danicic87throw different timezones teams in there and you have a nightmare.
@amygodward447211 ай бұрын
I work in agriculture in southern France. Unless we are avoiding the heat at the height of summer, we arrive at 7:30, have a café and patisserie with everyone, complimented from the boss, start at 8, short coffee break at 10, then for 12 midday, we go home and have lunch with our families and have a sieste (nap), before restarting at 2pm and finishing up the day's jobs for 5pm. If you finish early, you leave early. It sounds too good to be true because it sadly is. While a rich harvest means lots of work, a ruined harvest from bad weather can mean that your peachy 3 month contract can be swindled down to only 10 hours a week, making the poverty line look pretty. So any time you earn a decent amount of money, it all goes to saving, quite literally, for a rainy day!
@barryosullivan622510 ай бұрын
Beautiful perspective, thanks for sharing that
@NosMeditations9 ай бұрын
@armygodward4427 Je viens du Québec et étant donné mon jeune âge, j'ai toujours fait des besognes manuelle ou du service à la clientèle pour gagner ma vie. L'an dernier j'ai fait du wwoofing en France (travailler pour gîte et couvert dans des fermes) Je ne pensais pas que la vie pouvait être si belle et simple. Durant deux mois, au rythme de la nature, et ponctué du son de la cloche du village, nois travaillions 6h maximum dans une chaleur a crever, mais avec de si belles conditions de travail tel que vous l'avez décrite. Je pense a chaque jour a ce soleil jaune et ce ciel si bleu Français. Magnifique pays et bon peuple de mes aïeux. Force à vous! Salutations du Québec. ❤
@The_ZeroLine8 ай бұрын
And you’re still striking daily! 😉
@METALFREAK037 ай бұрын
This is why the French complaining about their retirement age going up by 2 years is laughable. I work 12 to 14 hours per day for 14 days straight. I then do FA because I can but many of them cannot. They have to work elsewhere doing back bending jobs. Althewhilst, having this to age 69 (and by the time many get there it will be well into the 70s).
@ianriley58937 ай бұрын
@@METALFREAK03 instead of shitting on people for wanting to better their own lives at the very marginal expense of the ruling class, you should realize you’re also being taken advantage of
@MEyck97 Жыл бұрын
When my father lead a contruction departmen in Germany he always provided free food and beer to all the employees and workers. Nevertheless his department was always the most productive and always in the green. He still received complaints from leading manager because of ''high hospitality costs"...
@C0lon0 Жыл бұрын
In the cooperative that i work, a fucking cooperative, they want that you work 10 to 12 hours everyday and just want to pay 9 hours of work.
@MEyck97 Жыл бұрын
@col0no315 that's quite common in the trades even here in Germany, they demand you to work extra without paying extra hours
@TheVoiceOfReason93 Жыл бұрын
@@C0lon0 That's outrageous! But given it's a cooperative (businesses owned and managed by the people who work there) employees like you should be able to vote against that whether immediately or eventually. Or is it a 'Cooperative-in-name-only' thing?
@MEyck97 Жыл бұрын
No, they are consriderably small companies and when workers complain about extra hours they won't be paid for, they just replace them with illegal immigrants and refugees who work for nothing@@TheVoiceOfReason93
@patrickhill5630 Жыл бұрын
In the Yeungling factory in Pottsville is a bar in the factory that was for employees. It was open until the government shut that idea down, but that was in the 70s iirc. They still have the bar tho, you see it on the tour.
@SirAdrian87 Жыл бұрын
Here in Romania, if you hire day laborers, you are still required to provide food and alcohol on top of the pay. Not feeding your workers is seen as uncivilized and will have people avoid working for you.
@WaterShowsProd Жыл бұрын
I worked with a Romanian puppet troupe at a world puppet festival and it was the first time I'd met Romanians and I loved their spirit and outlook on things. When they went home they gave me some of that wonderful Romanian chocolate infused with brandy.
@erdemc59 Жыл бұрын
Time to move to Romania
@richmcgee434 Жыл бұрын
I don't know about the booze, but the rest of it sounds good to me.
@eduard4939 Жыл бұрын
Forgot to say that isn't everywhere and depends big on the company, when I worked at media galaxy my meal time was 15 minutes and at Neversea i had food provided and a hours time of eating
@jonathanwilliams1065 Жыл бұрын
Food is one thing but alcohol on the job? Which drunk commissar made that a law?
@nullifidian2228 Жыл бұрын
I was working contract out of town making really good money. I remember when I told them I was going to take a month off for my wedding. They shamed me, they acted shocked and judged me. I took my new wife to Italy and we had the best time ever. That’s what I remember! F those people! You got one life. Live it!
@ChaoticNeutralMatt Жыл бұрын
Good on you!
@DylanDkoh Жыл бұрын
Where’s that?
@Roboticpycotic Жыл бұрын
I work 90hrs a week and I ❤ it!
@graccusbro2061 Жыл бұрын
Amazing! Well done! One love
@truestopguardatruestop164 Жыл бұрын
Italy is amazing!
@emperorvader2839 ай бұрын
The Factory I work in used to have 6 people per large line, and 4 per small line. That was 15 years ago, now there is 2 people per small line, and 3 people per large line. Yet we are expected to do double the work. Working used to be painless, relaxed and enjoyable. Now it is incredibly painful; if you do the job right you’ll experience pains in your chest, hands, and feet. If you don’t do it the right way it’s your spine instead of your chest.
@sakelaine29539 ай бұрын
Unionize and make them dial back their goals so they aren't physically destroying you
@emperorvader2839 ай бұрын
@@sakelaine2953More than half of the workforce are Immigrants working for a recruitment agency.
@paulisaperson05169 ай бұрын
In the factory I used to work at they had one of the machines set aside for punishment. Most machines barely managed pace with 4 people, but this one was only staffed with two. A day on that machine felt like hell.
@williamschwan2079 ай бұрын
Write down what causes the pain, what movements you would change, and ideas on how to make the process better. Talk to your supervisor or whenever you see one of the dudes walking around with collared shirts about your suggestions. Any factory manager worth its salt will listen to people working on the line that have ideas for improvement. If they don’t, go somewhere that does. You don’t deserve to be in a place that doesn’t listen.
@paulisaperson05169 ай бұрын
@@williamschwan207 having actually worked in a factory the first thing you learn is that the managers and supervisors are NOT your friends. If you complain about something you are asking to be punished. What you are suggesting is a great way to get shafted. And they are like this universally. There is no “somewhere that isn’t like that”
@taka2721 Жыл бұрын
Before: "Wow, new HC video, wonder what interesting thing about Rome I learn today" After: "I must destroy every clock I stumble upon"
@Trancymind8 ай бұрын
Sundials and digital clocks have entered the chatroom.
@bendonatier Жыл бұрын
I feel like a history on peasant revolts might make an interesting follow up.
@beerson9474 Жыл бұрын
100% yes.
@cilcae Жыл бұрын
agreed
@Jomchen Жыл бұрын
need my fix of narodnism
@armyofninjas9055 Жыл бұрын
This
@cogspace Жыл бұрын
+
@graham1034 Жыл бұрын
I've worked a corporate job that was soul-sucking, working 12hr days, 6 days a week on salary. After that I went to a company that didn't track hours at all, working 30hrs/week most of the time with unlimited vacation (I generally took ~6-7 weeks a year) and it is shocking how much of a difference it made to my mental health and overall quality of life. The interesting part is that I was far more productive in the latter role despite working probably half the hours. You hear these kinds of stories commonly in my industry yet somehow most companies are still closer to the slave-driving model than one where they treat their employees well so they can perform their best. It's way more stick than carrot out there.
@alecshockowitz8385 Жыл бұрын
It's simple. A good leader and manager can figure out how to get the most out of people in the long term. Fools and idiots look at their workers as a candle to burn out as quickly as possible to extract everything out of them. These people are the worst because they think by listening to 'common knowledge' this would be the best route. I worked with a variety of companies in many different roles, along with several business to business roles. Without a doubt the leaders who were happiest, most capable and did the best weren't interested in working anyone to the bone. The idea that working harder gets you more out of it is a lie, and it always has been. You have to work to the level that needed, not in excess.
@graham1034 Жыл бұрын
@@alecshockowitz8385 one problem is that working someone harder pays off in the short term while treating employees well and working to motivate them pays off in the long term
@filiecs3 Жыл бұрын
Especially when it comes to mental labor, forcing someone to work extra hours when they are exhausted and their brain isn't working at full capacity is just a waste of everyone's time. Workers should be encouraged to work more efficiently, as opposed to more often. This doesn't necessarily mean working less overall per-se, but instead allowing for things like nap time for a worker to regain their stamina or mental clarity.
@owenb8636 Жыл бұрын
I feel like part of it is managers needing to justify their existence
@HarrDarr Жыл бұрын
@@mrECisME i'm a plumber, everyone gets weeks paid vacation here in Sweden. I can also accumulate vacation days and take even longer or more vacations throughout a year.
@127Kronos9 ай бұрын
Me in college: 4-6 hours class days, 4.5 months of total vacation, mostly free weekends, big lunch break. That was paired by 3 hours of train rides every weekday that gave me time to read or listen to music. That was the life.
@alejandroz11988 ай бұрын
Me in highschool: 6 Hours Class study, 4 hours Home study. Hell.
@nothanks95038 ай бұрын
Must have been nice I’ve been working since I was 14 every weekend and holiday and I’m still broke somehow
@127Kronos8 ай бұрын
@@nothanks9503 It was good indeed. I hope you situation resolves itself. Good Luck.
@nothanks95038 ай бұрын
@@127Kronos oh yeah I’ll die eventually no worries
@tomchch7 ай бұрын
I had 8 hour school day 2 hour homework and 2.5 hour buss ride each way in which i could listen to other people scream or bump into me. During weekend i enjoyed work to support my studies.
@CloudLadder-c7e Жыл бұрын
To throw a personal story out there: I once worked in a factory that used a 24 hour operation 4 shift system where a crew would work 12 hours then hand off to the next crew who would work the next 12. You would work 4 days in a row, then get the next 4 off. By some modern labor miracle the factory owners for the most part allowed the workers to self organize, and the result of that was pretty strikingly similar to what you describe here, we would generally work for about 2 hours, then break for 1 with the exception of the few hours right before and after handoff just to get everything in order. On average we only spent about 8 of those 12 hours working. Despite it being a pretty physically demanding job in a less than pleasant environment (production floor was ~100 degrees all day) it rarely ever felt like much stress built up since a reasonably significant break was generally not far away. and as a side note, this didn't at all make people lazy, when things got tough we ourselves canceled breaks and would go pedal to the metal for the full 12 hours without any interaction with management. I've also done work for small construction contractors where the owner of the business was actually working along side us, and there we also tended towards this same general pace. Turns out when work is organized by the people actually doing it effort is scaled to necessity
@Kaiquintos Жыл бұрын
I've heard similar stories about this from various industries and from all age groups. The only places that don't seem to understand that a healthy production line with happy workers tends to be from groups self regulating their work flow. And very often some new hot shot enters a workplace with an established and functional work system like you mentioned. See's the "laziness" and decides to fix it. Within a month the first increase in sick leaves comes in. Within the first 6 months the first quitters hand over the papers. Within a year the workplace is in shambles. And the hot shot of course blames the lazy worker and not seeing how their actions messed it all up.
@victor.guilherme1995 Жыл бұрын
Bosses are not as necessary as they say they are.
@acctsys Жыл бұрын
Management then moves the goal post. Until workers value healthy work environments in exchange of lower pay and a lot of DIY at home, psychopaths and sociopaths will keep manipulating workers. It's a capitalist system. The workers should value their labor properly and look for alternatives to keep their employers competing for their labor. Cronyism is not capitalism. Instead of giving government a hand in the economy, it should be kept out of it.
@ReverendNillerz Жыл бұрын
Most people in America don't work factories. It's less than 10 percent of the population. Most people in America work an office job, many of them are working from home while sitting in a comfy chair.
@OrjonZ Жыл бұрын
@@ReverendNillerz Depends on the "office" job. Not many people even after COVID WFH, most are back to their office. Also while some job are physically draining, office jobs are mentally draining.
@MichaelOosting Жыл бұрын
Some insight from more modern history: In the late 1990s, the government of France reduced the working week from 40 to 35 hours. The government of the time did this not for everyone's wellbeing or out of the goodness of their hearts, but because France at the time had really high unemployment. It was thought that by reducing the workweek by ~12%, employers would be forced to hire about 12% more workers, solving the unemployment crisis. Simple, right? Instead what happened surprised everyone. Labour productivity immediately skyrocketed across the economy, meaning workers were doing the same amount of work in 5 less hours a week. Employment rates and labour market participation barely budged, in general extra jobs weren't created. People didn't generally seek out extra jobs with their extra time either. Instead, workers collectively simply took the extra 5 hours off a week and worked harder during the rest of the week to compensate.
@volvok7749 Жыл бұрын
It is worth mentioning that the 35h week doesn't mean French people only work for that amount of time, the average full-time worker does about 38h a week. Extra hours above 35 are just paid extra (+25%, then +50% if you're doing more than 43h), the so-called "heures supplémentaires". The shift to the 35h work week mostly made most people a bit wealthier, the goal being that people would spend that money and curb the slowing economic growth.
@Nettara117 Жыл бұрын
Hey, I'm sorry to be that guy (but I'm genuinely interested in knowing more about this) ; source ?
@stevencooper4422 Жыл бұрын
@@Nettara117Any links that would be posted in the comments get shadow b@nned by KZbin for spam
@upgradeplans777 Жыл бұрын
@@Nettara117 Hey! If you're not that guy, why then do you ask it with so much white-space? Anyway, Wikipedia mostly confirms OP their story and lists multiple sources that you may be interested in.
@volvok7749 Жыл бұрын
@@Nettara117 You can find a fairly short summary on CAIRN : "Les 35 heures : le bilan" by Denis Clerc. The INSEE has the very exhaustive : "La réduction du temps de travail 1997-2003 : dynamique de construction des lois « Aubry » et premières évaluations" in Économie et Statistique n° 376-377 - 2004. Both are available for free. IFDR (in French, didn't read); It's complicated, while the reform somewhat reached its short term goals, it also had unforeseen consequences, mainly in the public sector. The assumption was that employers would (1) hire more people, (2) keep things the same but those in post would earn more. But in some cases, workers were expected to do 40 hours worth of work in just 35, leading to increased stress for the same pay. In the end, it's always hard to tell whether economic tendencies can be pinned to a single law being passed, and while the 35h workweek comes up again and again in political discourse, it's more as a symbol than as an effective piece of legislation.
@viktorkolaric518810 ай бұрын
The most tragic part is that most of that work is unnecessary. Planned obsolescence and consumerism mean that vast majority of stuff produced is thrown away. We are killing ourselves for nothing but some billionaire's obsession with ticking up his high score.
@therealdgh139 ай бұрын
This is the stupidest fucking comment I’ve ever read
@GruntKF9 ай бұрын
Fr. We know and understand that addressing the climate crisis and the degrowth which that entails is what is necessary right now yet what do those at the reigns do? We must fight for ourselves, friends, families, neighbors, communities, and environment
@ihatesnickersTSD9 ай бұрын
@@GruntKFsince you are not a scientist, image of the climate change is not real. If you even consider the idea, it becomes the elite removing freedoms from the general population. Regardless of all climate change measures, they are still taking private jets, buying multiple cars and houses, the only rules climate change matter for is you! Only your life will be restricted, while the elite have even more, they already got 99% of the money and now they want 99% of the stuff. Or if it's real absolutely nothing meaningful is being done for it, pedestrians can still shut down entire intersections with a button lol, please realize you are being lied too
@GruntKF9 ай бұрын
@@ihatesnickersTSD oh boy where to even begin. Have you studied hurricane Otis? I don't need to be a scientist to identify that warmer oceans mean more severe storms that are unlike any we've had before. I don't need to be a scientist to understand the rich have turned our communities into sacrifice zones just so they can continue to amass wealth. Besides the "elite" would be seeking to remove our freedoms regardless because that's how they operate. Please study some more. Dialectical and historical materialism are neat frameworks to help understand the relationship between classes
@ihatesnickersTSD9 ай бұрын
@@GruntKF you literally have to be a scientist, you don't have any graphs, charts, or data. You googling stuff to find information to suit your bias IS NOT SCIENTIFIC. You are NOT a scientist, so you have NO IDEA what is happening, the only thing you have is rhetoric fed to you from media organizations.
@MattBalamaci Жыл бұрын
You see, we’re not ALWAYS thinking about Rome…
@Politicallyhomeless957 Жыл бұрын
Some of us are though….
@renatlottiepilled Жыл бұрын
Because we have to think about work! And it sucks!!!
@Nae_Ayy Жыл бұрын
Sometimes we think about the plight of the proletariat!
@universauniversisveritas Жыл бұрын
@@Nae_Ayy✊🏽 😉
@alphasword5541 Жыл бұрын
im thinking that Rome sucked
@hsjshdhsjshsh958 Жыл бұрын
I learned from my grandmother that many of my ancestors were farm workers in a village in Bedfordshire, and were forced to leave due to enclosure of farmland. Two of my great-great grandparents and their children moved to Hendon in London. The details of their lives are murky, but my grandmother still has the death certificate of my great-great grandfather, which says he died aged thirty-six, from "exhaustion" and "malnutrition".
@puddleglum9179 Жыл бұрын
Jesus Christ
@tree4104 Жыл бұрын
good ol' industrial revolution
@trustytrest Жыл бұрын
"People left the farmlands for the factories bc it was objectively better" The real reason people left the farmlands:
@viperfanaccount688 Жыл бұрын
@@hsjshdhsjshsh958Yeah that’s why Unions get such a bad wrap in the press. They benefit the workers and not the elite that have the money and influence over mainstream media which influences the narrative of “unions = communism” and “communism = evil dictatorships”
@MarktheRude Жыл бұрын
The wonderful normalcy where worker expends more calories working than he or she gets paid.
@inferno_slayer Жыл бұрын
Yesterday I just looked at your channel and thought, "I miss Historia Civilis, I hope he returns soon"
@TheBlazingMonkey Жыл бұрын
LITERALLY SAME
@retrolinkx Жыл бұрын
Same here too. Was incredibly bored and checked KZbin channels for anything new and wondered if I missed something here. Glad to see this pop up on the feed a day later.
@BlitzerXYZ Жыл бұрын
On his website he has a progress tracker
@jacksonrudolph7644 Жыл бұрын
Same
@twbillionare9568 Жыл бұрын
On average he uploads every 3 months look at his website
@127Kronos9 ай бұрын
Fun fact: until like 50 years ago, rural and construction workers were also treated just like the middle ages in rural Portugal. My grandparents aldo did nap time after lunch. Our national dish was a stew made for workers to provide them with strength.
@cassielee1114 Жыл бұрын
The best job I ever had was making sandwiches as fast as possible from 8 am to 12 noon. I’d go shopping, do some errands, go home for lunch and the rest of the day was mine. I made the huge mistake of working my way up to management.
@bartsanders1553 Жыл бұрын
Never go full salary exempt.
@jonnyd935111 ай бұрын
You also contributed to society around 1/10th a typical laborer.
@cassielee111411 ай бұрын
@@jonnyd9351 Exactly
@ButtlordExtraman10 ай бұрын
and thats a good thing @@jonnyd9351 did you watch the video?
@arizonagreenbee9 ай бұрын
@@jonnyd9351 yes, it's great
@jte7438 Жыл бұрын
As someone who grew up spending a lot of weekends working in the woods with family, just to provide firewood to an old house, I find myself recognizing the medieval work pattern on those days - bursts of work when you have the energy, with a lot of breaks, snacking, meals and smoking (if you were my dad and uncles) in between.
@santiagogarza8121 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I´m a volunteer in Guerrero (southern, rural mexico) and was recognizing the same thing
@natedlc854 Жыл бұрын
Im sure once tobacco was on the scene any serfs who had access to tobacco also incorporated smoking into their breaks!
@luisfilipe2023 Жыл бұрын
@@santiagogarza8121that’s probably the natural result of rural labor
@mrbillsix Жыл бұрын
It was far more back breaking labor than snacks and breaks.
@hapybratt8640 Жыл бұрын
@@mrbillsix That is true, however (and I realize you aren't explicitly disagreeing with this) modern work is so much more efficient than medieval work that society could easily afford to work less than we do now.
@TotallyRossome Жыл бұрын
Can't help but notice that while a lot of video essays can get bloated, one of the things that got me to sit down and watch this intently was that it was in a nice, easily digestible 30 minute chunk.
@jonathanrich9281 Жыл бұрын
Definitely by design and something to praise HC for.
@ZahraJoy Жыл бұрын
Seriously. KZbin videos are overly long a lot of the time. The 15 to 20 minute video while I eat is like a lost art form.
@lukasausen Жыл бұрын
@@ZahraJoy theres few channels that can actually do it, CGP grey, historia civilis and Lemino are the best because they favor quality and efficiency in their videos instead of quantity.
@lecho0175 Жыл бұрын
Dan Olson 👀
@jordyn-d7y Жыл бұрын
@@lukasausenthe topics are a little more varied, but if you wanna give it a chance Jacob Geller has some great medium length video essays too, the video on the fear of depths is the one i would probably start with
@didokell7 ай бұрын
Ive never hated a blue square so much in my life
@vincentmatthis6 ай бұрын
THAT!!!! did you copy that from somewhere? Genius!
@Colon-D...3 ай бұрын
Wasn't cato blue? i hate that guy.
@KevinLindstromMedia Жыл бұрын
That intro was so unsettling for me. I just wrapped up a long “fast” day at work and was listening to this video on my drive home. Being hyper aware of time passing just makes me super anxious. It’s really emblematic of how the institutions and inventions that we make have profound psychological effects. Excellent creative choice on your part! Thank you for the lovely content as always. Excited for whenever the next video drops-don’t forget to take your slow days, cheers!
@fitterextraordinaire3723 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been helping my dad build a house in the mountains. we work at a comfortable pace, our schedule lines up almost perfectly with your description of the Stone Age and medieval work day. It feels lazy compared to my regular job, but without realizing it we simply adopted the schedule humans evolved to live by.
@branislavcunta7763 Жыл бұрын
I've been working at construction site w/ my dad for a short while. Turns out, I really enjoy working in construction, since it's a nice exercise filled with comradery and surprising amount of creativity. But work hours were INSANE. 11 hours per day, 7 days a week for a month with 1 week breaks in-between. Human body is not built to handle this kind of load. No wonder dads whole body hurts when he lies down. That's probably why he essentially forced me to get higher education. Even if I absolutely despise coding (he prefered something well paid)
@vonhumboldt1985 Жыл бұрын
Don't let anyone convince you that you're lazy ! You're doing a hell of a job. Fuck this modern system ... I hate it so much. Everything must be sacrificed on the altar of productivity.. Fuck that. We're human beings not machines... And who cares about all this productivity anyway. Life is ment to be enjoyed. This is easily obtainable if we would just change our system...
@jedispartan55 Жыл бұрын
As a mason laborer, i slammed in three 12 hour days in a row working on a house in the hills. 10 working, hour lunch. Thirty minute drive there and another thirty coming back.
@kongbanana8947 Жыл бұрын
@@jedispartan55you trying to move down to 8 hrs
@xZerplinxProduction Жыл бұрын
I also think it has a lot to do with working in an office vs manual labour where you're also limited by your body
@danidejaneiro8378 Жыл бұрын
Here in Brazil there are some jobs where people are paid daily. It’s common that one of your colleagues just stops coming for a week or two and upon their return, they are taunted with _“ahhh your money has run out, no money! Back to work”._ This claim is rarely denied but rather met with sheepish looks of concealed embarrassment.
@thepatriarchy819 Жыл бұрын
This is exactly the same here in Sicily.
@Rand0mGypsy Жыл бұрын
Dude, just very low-end jobs have these characteristics (they're literally called "under work"). The thing is, inside the Brazilian society, the number of jobs that now give nothing to the workers (talking about stability, at least) are increasing abruptly due to one of the worst incompetence/corruption-induced crisis that happened at the last government, one of the worst in many categories, but the very worst speaking about job security, employment and work ethics. Tl;dr: Yes, there are such jobs, but it's not a cultural thing, but a crisis induced pattern.
@danidejaneiro8378 Жыл бұрын
@@Rand0mGypsy - ok dude lol
@guilhermehx7159 Жыл бұрын
I live in Brazil and I have never heard of this (daily payments)
@danidejaneiro8378 Жыл бұрын
@@guilhermehx7159 - you learn something new every day. Happy to help you in your education 😉
@bedheadzen Жыл бұрын
The constant ticking in the backgroud really HITS when you get to the portion about clocks. Amazing work.
@smackattack97 Жыл бұрын
Straight out of high school I got a minimum wage job at a factory. I was lucky I got the day shift. Can't imagine night shift. Day/night both operated 12 hr shifts and work weeks were structured work 3 days, then 2 days off. Work 2 days, then 3 days off. Weekends basically didn't exist, which to my surprise I didn't hate too much. Until a thing called "mandatory overtime" came along. When my boss first told me about it I laughed and thought he was joking. That made him hate me for sure! Mandatory Overtime means: work 3 days, work 2 days, then work 3 days again. No 2 day break. I was so naive back then but thankfully somehow I managed to get myself fired. Best decision ever made. I have very graphic and violent words to say to the people that support or made that system up. MANDATORY. OVERTIME. Yeah boss whatever it is mandatory for you to go eff yourself.
@Serioussux Жыл бұрын
May i ask in What country that happened?
@smackattack97 Жыл бұрын
USA, baby @@Serioussux
@sheeps4485 Жыл бұрын
Insane, where did this happen?
@smackattack97 Жыл бұрын
Small town in MO. To clarify this was 8 years ago and I was a naive fool straight out of HS and just wanted a job. There's a chance they warned me about Man. O.T. prior and I was probably too dumb to care/listen.. but I swear the first time I heard about the O.T. was midway through a day shift a few days into my new job. I think there was a rule where you didn't "HAVE" to do it, but if you skipped enough Man. O.T. slots then they would deduct your pay or something like that. Still B.S. IMO @@sheeps4485
@JericaJeffrey-o4k11 ай бұрын
@@Serioussuxits common in the US when you have health benefits. companies would rather spend less so they dont have to pay for as many workers to have those benefits. theyd rather pay mandatory overtime, time and a half because its cheaper. it also drives overturn and some companies deny the benefit packages to the new employees until theyve put in like a year or have been through some sort of probation period or something like that with the company.
@shingshongshamalama Жыл бұрын
Labour went from "this is how much work I need doing, please get it done" to "this is how much time I'm getting out of you, do as much work as possible." Which just intrinsically incentivizes employers to squeeze as much work as possible out of employees at an unsustainable rate.
@azatmingalimov Жыл бұрын
Producing more and more unneeded stuff, and drowning the world in consumerism. While hundreds of millions don't have what they need for living.
@Usammityduzntafraidofanythin Жыл бұрын
In the middle ages, there wasn't much competition (re: not much to buy). But in industrial times, it's really easy to enter into all kinds of businesses, because people want all kinds of things. So there's also competition against how much productivity a business can do - so may as well squeeze the employee for work.
@The_ZeroLine Жыл бұрын
Seems like a flawed concept, but productivity has expanded massively. However, the share of that output has not expanded correspondingly.
@aslanlovett4059 Жыл бұрын
Also it's missed in this video how much time and "work" it took for people in the "working class" to just survive. Everything took more time and was harder to do than in the modern age. Just heating your home or preparing food took so much effort compared to now, nearly everyone had a small amount of livestock, no refrigerators no supermarkets. I'm not saying our "free time" hasn't been exploited, but it's not as simple as " they worked less in the past. It just more like they worked less for other people. Also this doesn't factor in the obligatory work for the church or a lord.
@Uthedudeful Жыл бұрын
To be fair the second one is how labour under capitalism always worked - Karl Marx wrote about it extensively in volume 1 of Capital.
@adscranton96 Жыл бұрын
I remember during quarantine, when i was working my customer service job from home in my apartment (mostly just answering emails), I'd always get a lot of work done every other day and not pay it much attention on other days. It just kind of felt better having more to do, then less to do, then more to do, then less to do, etc. Those couple months were definitely the best I'd ever felt working that job
@simplypodly Жыл бұрын
FAST SLOW type beat
@bilbobaggins9451 Жыл бұрын
The best parts of quarantine disappeared in a snap and we're back to the "nose to the grindstone" bullsh!t work paradigm.
@TheZombieButler7 ай бұрын
After watching this essay, I think I know why they want Americans working back in the office rather than at home (even though it's better for the environment, saves precious oil, saves wear and tear on infrastructure, is a big hit with their workers , . I mean it's just a guess.
@8bitprogramming2169 ай бұрын
Man I like my boss. One of those guys who says here's what I need done today. Start whenever, break whenever, end whenever. As long as I get it done and the customer's happy. On an awesome day can start at 7 and be done by 11
@aroundten9 ай бұрын
what is your job bro
@Someone_s_nick29 ай бұрын
Yeah ,it sounds too good to be real @@aroundten
@8bitprogramming2168 ай бұрын
@@aroundten Swimming pool service and repair. Once you get the hang of it you can do a pool in under 20 minutes.
@danielpaez17248 ай бұрын
If your boss wasn’t good to you, you could just start your own business. You have a lot more bargaining power with your boss than most people due to your industry. My job has similarities to yours
@cooldud70718 ай бұрын
@@Someone_s_nick2 It isn't. Most white collar jobs are exactly like this. The moment you break from blue collar delusion, you realize that almost all labor is total bullshit.
@Agaporis12 Жыл бұрын
“The ancients thought their machines would set them free, but what they really did was allow other men with machines to enslave them.” - Dune by Frank Herbert.
@grantwillis8542 Жыл бұрын
Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind
@ssach7 Жыл бұрын
I am so concerned about AI and automation in today's capitalist world. Hell, even space exploration just sounds like an opportunity to create horrible slave colonies
@bilkishchowdhury8318 Жыл бұрын
@@ssach7Bigger Gulag
@nasonguy Жыл бұрын
Goddammit Frank! Why did he have to be so devastatingly on point with SO MANY problems in our modern society?
@hughgrection7246 Жыл бұрын
@@bilkishchowdhury8318 Why build Gulag when space one big Gulag comrade?
@mri127 Жыл бұрын
Wtf, i’ve always felt 4-6 hours felt wayy better and my mind much more active and clear, but the dread of that 7th to 8 hour and the long drive home, you’re right, 4-6 is perfect work day.
@tinyturtle18989 ай бұрын
I hate commutes. even 30min to get to work means 10hours a week of driving. I left a higher paying job to work close to home and it was worth it
@duckduck71899 ай бұрын
@@tinyturtle189830m commute would be 5 hours of driving, right?
@proggz399 ай бұрын
@@tinyturtle1898imagine driving 3 hours a day and working 8 to 10 hour shifts for months on end (it’s not fun)
@advenco3448 ай бұрын
6 hours should be the absolute maximum for a work day. Workers are usually only productive for that amount of time anyways. Anything more is just diminishing returns.
@magnusgranskau74877 ай бұрын
@@proggz39get into audio books. it will change that time into something interesting and you will learn so much new stuff and angles on stuff
@Senriam Жыл бұрын
It’s a rare treat when anthropology becomes the primary method of analysis featured in a Historia Civilis video.
@Crowborn10 ай бұрын
8 hours a day today was already bad but its insane now. young people are expected to work at the very least 9.5 hours here, with one day weekends, for minimum wage that is shit. rents are skyrocketing and work hours are beyond abusive. Its unsustainable right now.
@Weweta10 ай бұрын
Still better than serfdom and starvation, did I mention the child mortality rates?
@Denkmaldrubernacht10 ай бұрын
@@Wewetasure but those are quite unrelated issues
@Weweta10 ай бұрын
@@Denkmaldrubernacht no they are not. Working 8 hours a day is better than the bubonic plague, facing the death of a son or daughter, suffering domestic violence, starvation, being unable to move and etc
@Denkmaldrubernacht9 ай бұрын
@@Weweta yeah obviously but I don't see how one effects the other
@Weweta9 ай бұрын
@@Denkmaldrubernacht the video kinda implies this, it’s just doomposting and bs. As much as I agree with his final point the entire argument here is completely desonest
@Thaddeus_Howe Жыл бұрын
I think it’s very interesting that the academic/university calendar still looks quite similar to medieval work schedules. A Christmas, spring, and summer break; inconsistent work patterns with classes only some days of the week and cramming for finals; generally lax rules on attendance and punctuality; being friends with your peers and forming identity through work relationships; the list goes on. And we wonder why so many people find college/university to be some of the best years of their life…
@mrrodriguezHLP Жыл бұрын
Sports, clubs, independent study, pep rallies, no wonder modern academia is demonized by the working class and the managerial class. It behaves as the complete opposite of what is expected in modern capitalism.
@tpower1912 Жыл бұрын
It's even better in kindergarten
@MsLukinhas29 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting indeed! A shame that in the last decades "productivity" has been a facade to end with this. Today, there is a increase in mental health problems and fraud in academic research that it is proof of this process occuring also in academia. No place is safe anymore
@DJ_POOP_IT_OUT_FEAT_LIL_WiiWii Жыл бұрын
It's all based on farmers schedule.
@lukasksaris5055 Жыл бұрын
That's a very smart Statement and I like it. Never thought of this before.
@10puppyluv Жыл бұрын
I worked as a quality assurance scientist for a few months, 8 hr work day 30 min lunch and two 15 min breaks. We had a mandatory 1hr of overtime everyday and mandatory half day of overtime on Saturday. This was during the winter so I'd go in before the sun came up and left as the sun was going down there was barely any windows. Being fired from that job was the best thing that ever happened to me.
@bayamoth Жыл бұрын
It's sickening to know just how overworked people in QA/labs are.
@vimaladevishanmugam5943 Жыл бұрын
Bruh that's exactly my school time and the worst part is I am still in there
@3of12 Жыл бұрын
You got mandatory overtime? Can I have your job?
@falseprofit9801 Жыл бұрын
It’s eerie to me the degree to which is exactly mirrors my experience working for that one Danish-owned industrial company in the American midwest. 9-hour days mandatory, Spartan break schedule, invasive monitoring of how much you used the bathroom, and volun-told to come in on Saturdays for more overtime.
@thomaslove6494 Жыл бұрын
As in ironworker we worked 7 days a week 12 hours a day for a month at a time...then we'd get a week off
@thaaShree Жыл бұрын
My dad was an agricultural worker on the family farm in rural South India during the 1970-80’s, where the only evidence of the Industrial Revolution were the imported tractors. After watching this video, I asked him how is work day was back then, and what he told me was precisely like how you described pre-Industrial workdays (including the siestas and meals under a nearby tree 😴 🌳 , but minus the Sunday’s being off because no church) He is now an international supply chain and manufacturing manager at a Fortune 500 company whose clientele include TSMC, Intel, and Samsung. We are significantly wealthier than compared to his younger days, but he is significantly more overworked and underpaid, now basically living paycheck-to-paycheck despite our high quality of life. He basically went through the last 300 years of human technological and social development described in this video in half a lifetime.
@robbyjohnson9684 Жыл бұрын
I know an Indian man who lived around the same time period, and his experience is similar to that. Thanks for sharing, that's quite interesting.
@quetzalcube Жыл бұрын
Yet... your father chose to leave the family farm and sticked to the corporate job. 🙄
@nettleness Жыл бұрын
@@quetzalcubei’m sure it was entirely his choice, not motivated by any other factors than “i want to be more miserable”. do u hear urself lmfao
@thaaShree Жыл бұрын
@@quetzalcube … yeah, he was promised a better life, and now he lives paycheck-to-paycheck with no way out due to the fact that he is underpaid and overworked. He isn’t “sticking” to his job, he’s *stuck* to it
@h.inusitatus Жыл бұрын
If it's so bad now and it was so good then, why doesn't he go back? Why did he switch in the first place? Maybe it has to do with the fact that not working doesn't allow you to buy the stuff that other people have made through their work. In the video he says medieval peasants didn't save money because there was nothing to buy with it. He paints it as a good thing, but to me it sounds miserable.
@nacelnikprosiak12609 ай бұрын
I live on a farm with my parents in eastern poland, everytime we need construction workers for like building new garage or fixing barn roof or digging new well we also buy them crate of beer and my mother invites them for dinner. Well fed and happy workers work way faster and don't leave any "mistakes" because they don't feel like they are slaves in gulag
@aca3474 ай бұрын
Also decent people are more likely to work better if they are treated better. Though that decency probably doesn’t exist in like 80 percent of the humankind. I’ll be honest, if I got the chance to fuck over someone for a career advantage (or just money) I will take it. Life is tough.
@jeffmorin58673 ай бұрын
@@aca347 Great job. You just admitted that you're a shit person and have zero quality in character. Life is tough, sure...get a fucking helmet.
@spaceface124 Жыл бұрын
Holy cow. I remember getting called to the principal's office in middle school. My offense: I was skipping lunches because the lunch lines were so long, I'd hardly have any time to eat. I was told to my face that socializing during lunch was wasting time and I just had to eat. I never thought too much about it until now.
@Kyryyn_Lyyh Жыл бұрын
The advanced version of this is “you should have gone to the bathroom during break” which oddly has been said to me both at school AND at (former) job.
@sirrebelpaulc3439 Жыл бұрын
Just wait until you find out that a straight A student is not someone who is smart, but someone who is really good at doing what they're told even if they don't like it.
@Richard_Nickerson Жыл бұрын
@@sirrebelpaulc3439 Yeah, too many people on honor roll were objectively less intelligent than many of the rest of us. I was a solid B+ student, but I probably retained more than those kids and had more fun while doing it. Not like my plan was to be a chemist, engineer, or doctor anyway.
@JoachimIsalaDun Жыл бұрын
“The life given us, by nature is short; but the memory of a well-spent life is eternal.” ― Marcus Tullius Cicero
@Vienic2 Жыл бұрын
"Like I Said before you know, I'm the one that can see John Cena. Yeah, I'm the one that knows Victoria's Secret. I'm the one that knows what the dog is doing. You know, I'm that guy. I'm him. I'm him. When I go into a gym... treadmills do push ups. That's how it is bro, I'm that guy." --- KSI the 1st of the chicken-eaters.
@Cannedbeef11 ай бұрын
@@Vienic2That quote sounds extremely narcissistic, and if you actually think about it, it’s a nonsensical rant.
@Vienic211 ай бұрын
yeah i know, its something that KSI said for some reason lol@@Cannedbeef
@Mrbluefire9511 ай бұрын
Smart guy, that green square
@gaylelee199910 ай бұрын
Thank you for that!
@huebeyduebey3493 Жыл бұрын
Watching this video after work today hits different. I work on wind turbines and today we couldn’t climb because of lightning. We worked around the shop and looking back I noticed that we were naturally working hard for about 30 minutes then relaxing and goofing off for 30 minutes. Our manager took us out for a nice long lunch and at the end of the day we had a good hard 30 minute sprint cleaning and organizing the shop before sitting around and chatting the last 30 minutes of the day. Definitely the best day on the job so far. Typically we have an 8.5 hour day with about 5 hour up tower of hard fast work, an hour or so of prep and and clean up and another hour and a half of of hanging around the shop chatting and doing paperwork. Sometimes we have long days with way more time up tower fixing issues to get the tower running. It’s hard work but still the best job I’ve ever had. Great pay and benefits, great environment, lots of time off and satisfying work.
@nomms Жыл бұрын
@@sparklesparklesparkle6318 >complaining about things you can't hear Lol
@hieronymus143211 ай бұрын
I just quit my job. 10 hour shifts and the kind of gig that makes you sit to pee because otherwise you just don't get to sit. Watching this after that is whiplash.
@aaronlockley920710 ай бұрын
i quit a job back in the summer, 13 hour shifts. did it for 2 years but could'nt do it anymore
@nothanks95038 ай бұрын
I’m job hunting currently just worked 120 hours in 3 weeks just to get paid 500 dollars 130 without pulling teeth to get the 500 somehow that’s legal here
@nileshkumaraswamy2711 Жыл бұрын
I'm always surprised about the level of production quality that can be achieved in videos in which people are depicted as squares!
@PianoMelodicaDark Жыл бұрын
we're all squares
@bondthefifth Жыл бұрын
Yeah, look at them medieval chickens, such level of details
@fhujf Жыл бұрын
It's hip to be square. Don't knock it.
@ejw7247 Жыл бұрын
As someone who works from home 100% for the last year and a half this is basically what my schedule has morphed into. It was odd at first having punched a clock for the previous ten years, but I’m able to get my work completed working roughly 6 hours a day and I’m exponentially more happy having the extra time in my day. Work life balance is now the top thing I’ll look for in jobs going forward
@ShinSuperSaiyajin Жыл бұрын
Same here! How HC described the rhythm of work is how pretty much my work sched became since I started working from home. And I get a lot of work done while being less stressed
@richmcgee434 Жыл бұрын
Same boat here.
@cgriff1489 Жыл бұрын
Same here! I barely work 6 hours now in an 8 hour work day working at home. It doesn’t effect the quality of my work, and yet I get done faster and get paid for the same work I’d be drawing out counting the minutes in an office. Modern Management is just a scam employed by business owners to squeeze as much productivity out of workers.
@EmeraldEyesBibleSecrets Жыл бұрын
He is wrong about the origin of the two day weekend. It came about because of the Sabbath and Sunday was for church. Also Christians believed the Sabbath was Sunday.
@Quwertyn007 Жыл бұрын
When you mentioned 3.5 months of vacation time it sounded crazy, but then I realized that's almost exactly what students and professors get
@ShummaAwilum Жыл бұрын
I can guarantee you professors don't get that. When they aren't teaching they have to be researching/writing or teaching summer courses or teaching at other schools, etc. Only the most senior professors have the possibility of that much time off. Everyone else has to continually justify their existence at the school.
@Quwertyn007 Жыл бұрын
@@ShummaAwilum That entirely depends on the university/country. I'm colleagues with a few professors from mine and they definitely don't need to continuously justify their existence. Saying their summer is entirely free may be an overstatement, but those 3 months are definitely not very intensive.
@darienodette Жыл бұрын
Though many professors and students have jobs over the summer too
@scubleviet Жыл бұрын
Depending on the education system, students may end up working more hours per day than actual workers due to time spent studying, working on homework, or just working on unfinished classwork, so that reduces the total amount of leisure time gained from having longer vacation times.
@mattcritchley5670 Жыл бұрын
Marking. Curriculum planning. Events. Believe me, teachers do not get it that easy.
@hyunsungjung494111 ай бұрын
This hits. Man, this hits and hurts on a deep, spiritual level. Love from Korea, the most overworked country on the planet.
@Trancymind8 ай бұрын
North Korea have it worse. Be very grateful you live in South Korea.
@dyfrigshandy7 ай бұрын
Get out from the rat race buddy
@und3rcut535 Жыл бұрын
I work in a global pharma company and I swear to god this is the reason that keeps me in this company. I could go somewhere make two times the amount I am currently making but the work life balance is just amazing I come at 9 and leave at 3 with a hour of break in between. as long as you have done your job nobody bats an eye. OK since this comment got a lot of questions I have to give some context. First I live in Europe. Germany to be exact. I studied pharmacy which took 5 years in Turkey then I have done my PhD in Germany. I did COVID research mostly because of the Pandemic (my thesis was about nanopharmaceuticals but because of COVID I worked on the formulation side of the Pfizer/BIONTECH vaccine.) Now I work in the clinical trials department where I look at the medical insights and my team decides to whether the company should conduct clinical trials about the insight and also where it should be done. I earn about 90K dollars a year. I am also an albino with 60 percent vision loss.
@nicholaspanos1559 Жыл бұрын
Consider that we even call it "work/life balance" instead of just "life"
@dickartist Жыл бұрын
what company? im interested in a career in that industry
@eligoldman9200 Жыл бұрын
Damn, what company. I am trying to have that.
@1993Redemption Жыл бұрын
Good for you, really. I wish I had a job like that. But remember that global pharma company makes outrageous profits most likely, so they finally feel like letting some people have some balance in their lives. If they were a thin margin business like retail, you would have one 15 minute break for that six hour shift and you would be required to stay the entire time every day, with maybe 1 week of vacation. It's just terrible out there.
@1993Redemption Жыл бұрын
@acmhfmggru "they took money to do tasks for the community" so its a community goal to get woken up at 4am every day against their will? Who in that community besides that business owner wanted to have a community alarm clock go off when it's still dark out every day? That's a really weird way to describe what the churches did in that particular case
@scottdurbin9841 Жыл бұрын
I’m a union electrician, we get 1 or 2 half hour breaks per day depending on the length of the workday plus an hour lunch. We chill and talk pretty much at will, we take a week off with zero notice to go hunting or fishing, you might take a couple months off in between jobs just because you can and you feel like it. We’re all just peasants at heart!
@CaeserZak Жыл бұрын
Where ?
@ReverendNillerz Жыл бұрын
this is why I don't do business with union companies. lazy fucks.
@muttipi Жыл бұрын
you deserve it for all the labor you put in and it's the least they could offer when your labor generates the wealth that lines their pockets while you take home dimes in comparison, god i wish i could get a half an hour break but we get two ten minutes and a half an hour lunch, or an hour if you're lucky/have a medical condition that requires preparation before eating like diabetes. I also only get two paid actual vacations per year, and they give you shit if you take any time off or use your earned sick leave to cover days you missed. My job is definitely incomparable in difficulty to yours though, I've only been a retail worker for five years and I never had to fight for my union status so I shouldn't be complaining.
@briscoethompson475 Жыл бұрын
What local? I’m from 26
@scottdurbin9841 Жыл бұрын
@@CaeserZak I’m in Richmond VA but it’s like this in most IBEW locals in the US
@xianblackk Жыл бұрын
I work 12 hours as a night shift nurse. We're allotted a single 30 minute break. I don't officially take my break to eat. I eat, fraternize, and watch KZbin at the nurses station through the night, all against company policy. I then use my my 30 minute break to exercise in the hospital gym. 😎
@jerrystusrapworkshop5483 Жыл бұрын
What do you feel about the conservative dudes who bashed medical workers during the height of COVID for posting tiktok dances?
@xianblackk Жыл бұрын
@@jerrystusrapworkshop5483 Nurse Tik Tok dances are cringe af but even after everything I just said I still don't think nurses make enough for the work they do (especially nursing home staff}
@SkyGlitchGalaxy Жыл бұрын
Yeah, my sister does a similar shift in London. She does 4 nights in a row 3 times a month. Pretty sweet. 18 days off most months 😂
@MrToddino Жыл бұрын
@@jerrystusrapworkshop5483what a weird, leading question
@xianblackk Жыл бұрын
@@SkyGlitchGalaxy yeah I'm doing 3 night 12s in a row every week until I switch jobs, retire, or die.
@skyguy198810 ай бұрын
i always knew there was some reason why my whole life i always felt that doing BURSTS of work or studying or something. and then massively cutting back the next day to "recharge" always felt more natural. i always thought i was crazy. but now i know it's not! ty for this video ;D this is why society and humanity is slowly breaking down before us in real time. the industrial revolution completely messed up everything about this world
@giuseppeagresta142510 ай бұрын
I'm sorry but that's so totally false it's disrespectful towards those who lived centuries before, living decades less than us with close to none social mobility, without affordable food, seeing their children dying at birth... (and I could go on) That the world is "breaking down before us" is your perception of it, and if you gave a look at some data and threw aside this horrible video you might become a fair bit more optimistic about it all Our World in Data is an awesome site, for example
@Yayahmari9 ай бұрын
@@giuseppeagresta1425 Just because people before us had it harder doesn’t mean that we have it easy. We only have it better compared to them, but in general it’s still hard.
@richyrich60999 ай бұрын
@@giuseppeagresta1425This video literally uses multiple sets of data but go off and act like it doesn't exist I guess.
@beamshooter9 ай бұрын
its a pendulum, industrial revolution swung it one way, but we are reaching the apex and will swing back. watch, once automation optimizes supply and labor, there will be far less strain on workers. workers will be able to work far less to pay for life necessiities
@kazmark_gl86529 ай бұрын
@@beamshooterThat will only occur if the current economic model is replaced or changed dramatically. automation without protection for the workers will destroy everyone but the upper class.
@fierylightning3422 Жыл бұрын
I live in the city, Work is always insanely stressful, but when I went to live in the farm for a short while my work was exactly like medieval times with lots of breaks and food.
@arseface2k934 Жыл бұрын
I've had people ask me why I only work 6 hours a day and have had some even insinuate that I'm lazy, and it wasn't until this video that I realised how we've all been collectively gaslighted into believing that 8 hour work days are natural and if you don't work for 8 hours a day then there's something wrong with you. When I worked 8 hours a day I was tired and miserable, I don't believe the money I'd get from 2 extra hours a day is worth my health and happiness.
@purlp9483 Жыл бұрын
But the normal 8hr workday IS the same as working 4-6hrs. Lunch break is 1-2 hrs plus all the random 10 minute breaks we take in between (I take one every 1.5 hrs to go stretch my legs). I also presume that farmhands had a lot more commuting time compared than us.
@rtredz Жыл бұрын
@@purlp9483we don’t all live in Spain or Greece where we get a 1-2 hour lunch break lmfao
@arseface2k934 Жыл бұрын
@@rtredz Exactly, I get a 30 minute one. Wait...
@Toasty2478 Жыл бұрын
wait,@@purlp9483 you get 1-2 hour lunch breaks? I get a 30 unpaid lunch break, which means my job is not 9-5, it's 9-5:30
@vonhumboldt1985 Жыл бұрын
Hear hear!
@keckerkek2005 Жыл бұрын
also chipping in a personal experience from my last year: As a male Swiss citizen, I had the duty to serve in compulsory military service right after highschool and went on to complete boot camp and 3-4 weeks of repetition courses p.a. during the consecutive years. Getting fed up with these military repetition courses interrupting my studies and young adult working life every year, I decided to execute my right to switch to civil service. I found a civil service spot on a farm near Zurich and went on to do two months of agricultural aid there. I had just come out of 3 years doing project management in a hypergrowth startup in Berlin and the change to this purely physical labour was severe - and pure bliss. The work day started with a communal breakfast at 7am, moving on to everyday tasks around the stables (cleaning, feeding, leading the cattle out to the fields) and with the first coffee break of 30min at 9/9:30am. Then, more intensive labour until 12:00 followed by a freshly cooked lunch meal. After lunch, we all had another 30-60min off for a napping/relaxing until we had to be back at work around 2:00pm. The workday ended around 5pm with exception if we had a big harvest day or we had to get something done before the weather turned bad the next day or so. If this was the case there was another 30min-break around 4:30pm. So the workday was structured pretty much the same as explained in the video. When I asked the farmer in charge why this was the case, he told me: "It's pretty simple. If you do this kind of physical labour for 8h straight, even with a lunch break in between I guarantee you won't last a week without fatigue or injury." Bottom line: I've never felt so wholesome and fulfilled at the end of the these working days, falling into bed physically strained in the best of ways, sleeping like a baby. Working outdoors under the sun and with animals every day just added more joy to it all. Comes to show that there are still workplaces where they get it and workdays are structured in a similar way as they were in medieval Europe. And I guarantee you, they lead to a more balanced and fulfilled life. I am back in Berlin now working for startup lol
@RidleyMMA Жыл бұрын
"I am back in Berlin now working for startup lol" hahaha! if only you could make the big bucks on the farm! thanks for your lovely write up. it was a great read. best of luck to you.
@xianblackk Жыл бұрын
I'm not reading all that but I'm glad for you or sorry for your loss.
@hermanndercheruskerfurst909510 ай бұрын
This is why kids are made to sit and do busy work in school to break them mentally and prepare them for factory work
@ericsandage64239 ай бұрын
Not just factory work anymore. We are conditioned from a young age to accept these things in all work
@erf23248 ай бұрын
yeah poor kids, forced to stimulate their brains with practical knowledge? What do kids do in their free time? When I was younger, I simply played video games whenever I could and then wondered why the f I was bored all the time. At school, I was forced to stimulate my brain, at least. You can choose whatever you want to do with your life after high school.
@fishsticklord51478 ай бұрын
you couldn’t choose better than poor stimulation for yourself? I mean we all did some stupid stuff as kids. If you want to be forced stimulation, do you really want to be free after high school? Sure you can do whatever you want after school, just don’t starve in the meantime. Let’s see where bare minimum “practical knowledge” can take a citizen, at least in America, you’re kinda fucked. I don’t know where you are. Most practical thing is trade school if you don’t wanna be a college slave
@TruthAndReconciliation8 ай бұрын
Farmers in agrarian societies literally have children specifically to have farmhands. It is a better system now lol
@alpacalover08 ай бұрын
@@erf2324 School is valuable and provides a lot of information and the mental training we need to learn. However, much of the curriculum for children in less sophisticated (non-advanced) classes is nothing but busy work that fails to actually teach anything at all, and is usually conducted by apathetic or misanthropic educators who don't really wish to do anything at all.
@elscruffomcscruffy8371 Жыл бұрын
I worked a steel production job, 12hr shifts, that werent consistent. Always tired, always bored, and the job just sucked. The other workers were bluffed into thinking this was the greatest job in the world, promised a healthy work/lifestyle balance. Nope. You were always tired, stressed, and seemingly never able to enjoy your downtime. I lasted 6 months and got out, immediately went on a road trip and it was awesome. Ive never looked back
@HontounoShiramizu Жыл бұрын
How can you be always bored and always stressed at the same time?
@ThatOneMan830 Жыл бұрын
@@HontounoShiramizu Steel production is a very dangerous job from what I know. You could, as an example, be showered with molten metal if something goes wrong. That constant possibility of painful death is gonna be stressful.
@thomascromwell6840 Жыл бұрын
@@HontounoShiramizuIt's repetitive work but requires a high level of care and attention. There can also be wait times where you're literally standing for the next job ( like machining a piece of metal, not employment) but you have to be very quick and also make sure the machine doesn't take your arm off.
@thepatriarchy819 Жыл бұрын
I literally wipe the oil of around 600 steel ingots a day, all day, everyday.
@FatfighterXD1 Жыл бұрын
@@HontounoShiramizu go do the job and find out pleb
@masondicroce917 Жыл бұрын
Learning that people used to get several half hour to hour long breaks for eating while meanwhile trying to eat my dinner on my 15 minute break is certainly an experience
@hollerboys6667 Жыл бұрын
Wait until you learn about how managers and the higher ups are allowed to have 1-2 hour lunch breaks after sitting in a heated/AC office all day while the peasants, I mean slaves, I mean indentured servants, I mean middle class break their backs for a fraction of their pay.
@boiboiboi1419 Жыл бұрын
American?
@jimbology7617 Жыл бұрын
One of the absolute glories of working from home was that I could just type "back" into slack to appear to return from my 15 minute dinner break while in reality I just kept eating and then started working again when I was done Nowadays though I do gig work, which is like, absolutely everything wrong with capitalist work with not a single perk.
@hillbillypowpow Жыл бұрын
Dinner that you paid for
@masondicroce917 Жыл бұрын
@@boiboiboi1419 Yep, although I'll clarify that this was just a regular break, our actual lunch breaks are 45 minutes. I just had to eat during that little in between break since it was late you know
@mattandwill248 Жыл бұрын
I like that the video is roughly 30 minutes long… a very natural length indeed
@ericc68209 ай бұрын
“it isn’t about profits, it’s about pure power”
@ianrastoski3346 Жыл бұрын
Historia Civilis is never late. Nor is he early. He uploads precisely when he means to.
@taka2721 Жыл бұрын
He embodies philosophy of "getting work done, when it needs to be done"
@ShotThyh Жыл бұрын
Never hated a blue capitalist square this much. Amazing video, Im sharing it everywhere
@menriquez89 Жыл бұрын
Yeah this shit ignited my latent rage at capitalism. I’m pretty much always have an anti-capitalist rant bubbling away, just under the surface…
@jeremiahduran7238 Жыл бұрын
@@menriquez89we need the free market. It is a good alternative to war.
@puddleglum9179 Жыл бұрын
@@jeremiahduran7238 What is the free market? Every society in the history of the world had a market. What you want is not a free market, it's capitalism and we don't need that pile of shit.
@derpphil5400 Жыл бұрын
@@jeremiahduran7238 I'm confused. In what way do you think the free market stops war or presents an alternative to war?
@510tuber Жыл бұрын
@annoyingcommentator1582 The only reason people live under medieval conditions when they don't work much is because of the capitalist. The capitalist is the one stopping people from working less and still living awesome lives.
@takecourage92 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, most workers in my office work about 4-6 hours a day of productive labour. The rest is spent in pointless meetings, pretend work and procrastination.
@userjay4 Жыл бұрын
yea, so they should be at home enjoying their leisure rather than work where its still very limited by the clock
@takecourage92 Жыл бұрын
@@userjay4 I agree. I just think it's interesting
@lukasausen Жыл бұрын
@@userjay4 for office work its fine, but not all jobs are created equally, for example a road work, the guys work about 3-5 hours of active labor, and the rest is resting or waiting for more materials to work on their stuff, so basically yeah they work in short bursts, but have to stay since its not affordable to drive 45 minutes back home for a 5 minutes rest, also in europe and USA manual labor is VASTLY well paid compared to the rest of the world, my family comes from brazil and a plumber there cant make living wage while in canada they pay you A LOT like in brazil being a plumber would be the same as earning like 5 dolars an hour, its not like you guys from developed countries can have such leisured lives without someone somewhere having to do the dirt work for penies on the dolar, like yeah you can work 4-6 hours but when you want to buy that iphone or that samsumg, a person in a near slave situation will have to build it for you since you wont have money to buy it if it was properly made with decency and etc, just my 2 cents being from a first world country is easy when your biggest problem is working 8 hours a day, while where im from 10-12 hour work is the norm, cant imagine what people in asia are going trough considering their situation is absurdly worse than in brasil, more power to you i guess if i could id work 4 hours a day too.
@gabenewel73836 ай бұрын
you still lose your time tho
@warrend98435 ай бұрын
That's worse
@drppenev6 ай бұрын
The recounting of a western medieval agricultural days work is very similar to what my grandparents in Bulgaria were doing 60-80 years ago. You wake up with the 🐓 roosters call(sunrise) have breakfast. Go to the field work untill 11-12. Large lunch and naptime. Work resumed around 15:00-16:00 work until the sky starts turning pinkish go home.
@pyrothrope Жыл бұрын
At my last job the management min-maxed the absolute shit out of every moment workers spent there. An alarm to signal the starts and end of work time, and break times. The amount of products we were expected to produce in a day was worked out mathematically and precisely down to the second. A whole team of staff were there specifically to keep the production staff supplied with materials, so they wouldn't have to stop producing to resupply themselves. Idle conversation between workers was frowned on as it would prevent us from meeting those targets. Hell I was once told off for getting ready to leave two minutes before the end-of-day alarm. I was exhausted the whole time and felt like the whole culture was incredibly dehumanising. I lost that job the other week. Despite my best efforts - as I really did need that job - I made too many mistakes that needed to be repaired in-house, and was deemed to be too costly to keep as a result. Capitalism doesn't see workers as people.
@googlexd7294 Жыл бұрын
No fucking shit you made mistakes in that environment. Turns out that human beings are not lemons, and so you get more juice out of us if you squeeze less.
@sheeps4485 Жыл бұрын
Sucks that shit like this isn’t even uncommon
@Usammityduzntafraidofanythin Жыл бұрын
Automatic resupply of materials sounds very efficient. It's actually really annoying when I have to look for a tool at work, or I run out of supplies and am forced to be a third wheel at some other job. I prefer consistency, but my job just isn't that way.
@lukecash3500 Жыл бұрын
Capitalism doesn't see workers as anything. It only really sees the product and the owner.
@andrewwhelan966411 ай бұрын
If you didn't know this was work under a capitalist system, you would expect conditions like that in some sort of Stalinist dystopia.
@Dankleberrrrg Жыл бұрын
Congrats everyone! After all these years, we clawed back... *checks notes* our ability to wear watches at work.
@richmcgee434 Жыл бұрын
Who even owns a watch in 2023? And many places ban personal cell phones (the modern timekeeping tool of choice for most) on the work floor. We've clawed back nothing.
@saxonisrael8398 Жыл бұрын
@deletereddit1102Thank you for teaching me what CalArts means. Every single cartoon and indy video game has this kind of disgusting effeminate art style and I wasn't sure what it was.
@isaiahdebuck4097 Жыл бұрын
@deletereddit1102 -
@noname-wo9yy Жыл бұрын
@deletereddit1102found the capitalist
@BlyatimirPootin Жыл бұрын
@deletereddit1102ok incel
@Professorkek Жыл бұрын
I always learnt in history class how horrible working conditions were for chimney sweep, factory workers, coal miners, prostitutes, etc. It made you feel comfortable with what we have today. They never tought us what it was like before the clock.
@AngriestPeanut Жыл бұрын
Bro threw prostitutes in there lmao your liberalism is showing
@kingbeauregard Жыл бұрын
I'm sitting in a house with running water and a comfortable temperature all year round. There are convenience stores where I can get essentially any snack I want any time of the day or night, and when I go there it'll be in a motor vehicle. Or maybe I'll just get a pizza delivered while I binge-watch "Farscape". Either way, I need not fear smallpox, and my underwear is not made out of burlap. Comparing today to pre-industrial times really is apples to oranges. Except, to the pre-industrial types, apples would be unavailable until the autumn, and oranges would be completely unheard-of. Our current system is an unenviable hellscape in a lot of ways, but it's also made things better in countless ways.
@gadellomagnollo1810 Жыл бұрын
@@kingbeauregardtrue true very cool
@gadellomagnollo1810 Жыл бұрын
Conditions are still pretty rough for miners and prostitutes. Mining has gotten safer and prostitution has become mostly obsolete via pornography, thank goodness.
@alphasword5541 Жыл бұрын
@@kingbeauregard Think about how working hours relates to production and maintenance of those things as a whole. Is it a binary divide between more work and less work?
@Terszel7 ай бұрын
In tech, its heavily understood most people can only do good valuable thinking for 4 hrs a day tops. Sadly it took 2020 for remote work IN TECH to become commonplace. Tech still has a problem of unnecessary middle management, a holdover from when the focus was on managing people, not managing projects.
@HotDogLaws Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. I work a remote job where my time is not accounted for so long as I complete all my weekly tasks, and this is remarkably similar to the schedule ive ended up practicing
@joseaguilar3323 Жыл бұрын
Same. I used to work exactly like that for years and now have to get used to an 8 hour work day and it's surprisingly hard. Up until this video I thought I was the weird one.
@MellonVegan Жыл бұрын
Same here. Technically had to work enough hours but in practise, no one checked as long as I did my work. I made a point (is that English? Been awake since yesterday, can't think straight) of always getting one more thing done than anyone else (we had lists, so it was easy to monitor). When I got good sleep in and managed to stay focussed, I'd finish my weekly quota in 20h. I'm fairly certain a lot of jobs are like that.
@HotDogLaws Жыл бұрын
@@joseaguilar3323 yeah when I went from restaurant work to my silly nerd job I was blown away at how pretty much every office job could be reduced to like 50% or less hours if you removed the fluff and bs lol
@trustytrest Жыл бұрын
It's just as productive and half as time consuming. This is why I wonder why businesses keep trying to drag everyone back to the offices, especially for low sec jobs.
@joseaguilar3323 Жыл бұрын
@@trustytrest Right? Henry Ford supported the two day weekend because it would give workers more leisure time to buy shit. He could see the logic in that and he was legit insane. Bosses today are worse than insane
@PAPO9609 Жыл бұрын
Dude! I´m a construction contractor here in México and the workdays for construction workers are just like in medieval and ancient times lol. Even the payday is still on saturday and everybody works a lot that day just like you said. On monday a lot of workers don´t show up but we are prepared for it. People also take various breaks and siestas because of the heat. The only thing that we don´t do is feed the workers, unless it´s a special day, such as independence day, the day of a certain saint or when we hit thresholds with the construction. Interesting!
@feiquer8868 Жыл бұрын
and tell this guy how México is doing cause he seems to believe medieval europe was Heaven on earth
@michelletheia9853 Жыл бұрын
@@feiquer8868sure, because liking one aspect of it means you think it was *all* great, amiright?! Who needs nuance when you have a moronic “point” to parrot out?
@greenburg2276 Жыл бұрын
lmfao what bro that's not the point.. development is on a steady track. and weve reached a point of development and production where we shouldn't be exploited the way that we are. @@feiquer8868
@jonathonromero8409 Жыл бұрын
He isn't defending medieval europe, he is criticizing modern labor@@feiquer8868
@likaon3662 Жыл бұрын
I mean not everywhere, go up to Godinez (salary man) places, call centers or the tertiary sector in general and see the despair of 12 to 16 hours in a row, like "ponerse la camiseta (pull yourself up by your bootstrap)" is the common command for robbing the worker from their rights
@moredac2881 Жыл бұрын
What I learned: George Woodcock was a 20th century Canadian socialist.
@jbrown8601 Жыл бұрын
Hehe
@DangerRussDayZ6533 Жыл бұрын
I was hoping he would be smarter than this. Typical lefty.. whining about capitalism while swooning over socialism which has failed every single time, and not offering a better solution. I bet he orders from Amazon too.
@RetroWizard_ Жыл бұрын
Anarchist actually, but yes still a socialist as well
@f__kyoudegenerates8 ай бұрын
@@RetroWizard_ Impossible. It's one or the other.
@dafuqisdis60089 ай бұрын
Part of this issue seems pretty obvious to me: Supply and demand for jobs. When there is high demand for jobs, the power is with the employer. They can exploit you as much as they want because they know if you leave, they can fill your position easily. When demand is low, the power is with the employed. The employer is now in a position where they must keep their employees happy or risk losing their workforce. I have seen this occur first-hand when I worked on a remote construction job. The day labourers were not very reliable and only showed up to work half the time. But the company was not in a position to punish or fire these employees due to nobody else wanting to work in this location. So they just let it continue and worked with the situation.
@progamer1110 Жыл бұрын
I just quit my factory job today, and God does this feel relevant to my life.
@MALITH666 Жыл бұрын
Same here, got laid off. Oddly the stars are aligned.
@tanatswamaenda6724 Жыл бұрын
Don't worry soon all the factory jobs Will go to China or Vietnam
@fionafiona1146 Жыл бұрын
@@tanatswamaenda6724Chinese labour is getting more expensive with no singe of slowing down. Chinese people might not respect one another but that puts them ahead of US citizen who don't even respect them selfs
@MALITH666 Жыл бұрын
@@levako05d Good for you. Dont let workaholic no lifers take you for granted. Know your worth man. A lot of people have this weird Stockholm syndrome about work places. They dont leave for another when they get treated shit. They think they are not worth. or afraid to.
@lolgeertlol Жыл бұрын
That's a progamer move
@DaKdawg Жыл бұрын
This reminds me of Charles Dickens and a Christmas Story. In literature class we had a huge discussion break out about whether or not Scrooge was a villain before his redemption. Ultimately in this discussion I fell on the side of Scrooge Sympathizers in that the story is supposed to represent a reminder to all people that life is precious, which is rediscovered after Scrooge's redemption. That unlike most modern presentations he was not just being a jerk or mean or rude, but trapped in the times where success was measured in the soullessness that is productivity. You can even see from Scrooge's life that he was successful, but what did it mean? He didn't spend leisure or any time that wasn't dedicated to work, he hounded his underling, Bob Cratchit, to exemplify this. In Scrooge's lense of perspective, this is what makes success, but to most people we recognize the inhumanity of his interpretations. That's in essence the moral of the story, to be good to your fellow man, to not down trodden them with labor, to love community and family. The goal of Dickens' classic wasn't just to celebrate a holiday, but to be a kind of Morality story against productivity and the oppression of industrialization and pure capitalism. Personally, I think one of the best presentations of Scrooge is done by George C. Scott, in a 1984 production. His demeanor is not rude, disrespectful, nor spiteful save for a couple key occasions. He presents his point of view matter of factly and even though it's cold, it is a sort of Maxim that he follows shaped by his life experience. It is flawed and that is the point the pure capitalist all production mentality is flawed.
@roblach- Жыл бұрын
Should mention that Bob Cratchit made 15 shillings a week. Adjusted for inflation, that's $13.50/hr for a 40 hour work week.
@Whatsuppbuddies Жыл бұрын
he might not be a beligerent, abusive asshole of a boss but he still maintains a healthy contempt for all things that don't contribute to some ideal of success he strives to follow. The problem is that these qualities are much more accepted today than they were of Dicken's time.
@DaKdawg Жыл бұрын
@@roblach- Not to mention he was supporting his family on that income. Which means wages haven't increased to meet expenditure demands for over 150 years...perhaps this could be the problem?
@aleksandriakirkland4506 Жыл бұрын
I never thought I'd see a youtuber who originally made videos on the Roman Empire make a video that's essentially saying "workers, u have nothing to lose but only having 30% of the year free from work" Incredibly based
@siecheil9 ай бұрын
the work never ends now. theres no goal. no finish line. no reward. no point.
@f__kyoudegenerates8 ай бұрын
It's called a paycheck.
@TheMytenmetz Жыл бұрын
I fell like a relevant part of the discussion is not only the expansion of labor time, but also the commodification of leisure. You mentioned that workers were paid by the day and when their basic needs were met, they basically stopped working. Capitalism saw a possibility to turn leisure time into profit time, thus creating more insentive for workers to work. Hence we are in a situation in which our leisure time is the company time of other companies. Relaxing means watching three hours of netflix, for example.
@jess8189 Жыл бұрын
Yep. There is a lot more to work towards, not just surviving.
@hedgehog3180 Жыл бұрын
And that goes together with how our cities are built and how common places have been eliminated making it so the only way we can spend our free time is by spending money. Cars have been an important part of that as they keep you separated from everyone else as you shuttle back and forth from work.
@OrangeRising Жыл бұрын
You are still free to watch the sun set, or walk through the trees. No one is forcing you to buy a tv and watch netflix, people want to.
@jasonhaven7170 Жыл бұрын
Then stop being racist and support progressives. @@hedgehog3180
@acooliohenderson4777 Жыл бұрын
@@OrangeRising You're absolutely right, and we need to make sure people continue to have easy access to nature so that they have those options beyond tv, internet, gaming, etc (all of which are also valid). Unfortunately some cities are not designed with such access in mind
@axelstevens3383 Жыл бұрын
As a nurse, we generally work 3x12hr shifts each week. Being able to bunch 3 days of hard hard work then take 4 days off to rest and go places is among the best work life balances I've had. Now i wish we could get safe patient ratios and better coverage for lunches and breaks, but that's another story.
@elimcfly350 Жыл бұрын
I considered nursing school just for the shifts lol. I decided against it because that's a horrible reason to be a nurse, but the schedule sounds amazing.
@taan1424 Жыл бұрын
eh, its a job like any other, you dont need a special reason to do it @@elimcfly350
@masterdecats6418 Жыл бұрын
I don't know how medical staff can handle working... I hear that some doctors are forced to work more then 24 h/r a shift sometimes!?!
@ellienyah Жыл бұрын
The 3x12 sounds great, but the heaps of nurses who say they don't have time to stop to pee, eat or drink during their entire shift is dystopian...
@tylerhopkins7080 Жыл бұрын
that always seemed like the best full-time schedule to have
@a.lamontagne Жыл бұрын
I just managed to get a job where I’m only expected to work 4 days/week. The pay is less but my vote on how the human work/leasure balance should look like has been made. Good luck to all of you out there, especially those who are enslaved to high bills that require unreasonable working hours. Don’t leave change in the hands of those who rule us, because they’ll invent things like clocks and 16 hour workdays.
@VascoHenr Жыл бұрын
Sounds like you got a voluntary arrangement between you and an employer. You would not be allowed the same optionality under communism.
@a.lamontagne Жыл бұрын
@@VascoHenr Work under capitalism isn’t voluntary as long as your survival is dependant on it, so I would disagree with the notion that it’s voluntary. I enjoy my new job and would do it voluntarily but it could have easily have turned out different. I may have hated it and have regretted renting an appartement in the city near my work and now I’m imprisoned by the bills I have to pat simply to survive. Under communism, concepts such as work and employment would be so different compared to how we experience them under capitaism, you can’t really compare them. To me it seems like the systems we’ve designed to “work” under capitalism can’t just be copy pasted under a different economic system such as communism, so yeah, if that’s how you look at work under communism, I can see how you wouldn’t be able to see how it would benefit us.
@VascoHenr Жыл бұрын
@@a.lamontagne Indeed the universe forces you to do something to survive. You seem to interpret that the something is violence. I believe humans can work with each-other voluntarily under simple systems or complex. Violence removes options and very quickly becomes rule of the most violent.
@a.lamontagne Жыл бұрын
@@VascoHenr What gave you the idea that I think we're forced to partake in violence? I'm saying we could just work less hours without having to sacrefice our quality of life. Did you watch the video btw? I don't see the violence in this standpoint
@xway2 Жыл бұрын
@@a.lamontagne Work is not voluntary under any system (unless you're part of the elite, which also exists in every system). You need things to survive. You need to either produce those things yourself or get someone to do it for you. Unless you want to enslave them, you need to give them something in return. You will need to do something in order to have something worth trading (if it's easy to get, they could just get it themselves). There is no economic system that will free you from labour altogether.
@Parso_YT9 ай бұрын
Having worked at a major retail store, the bit about people having a life outside of work upsetting bosses brought me back to when I worked there, luckily for me I had my studies as an excuse to not work every day for 10-12 hours, some people though seemed to just be stuck there with no life outside of work
@aldee27874 ай бұрын
A friend worked for an American company in Germany and they brought over the American way of working culture, like trying to make peoples private lives and working lives mix so they would stay longer in the office. They had great food, a bar, a coffee place, dart machine, snooker table, soccer kicker table, other games, made every Friday a "weekend kickoff party" at 8pm so people would stay that long. They tried to shame people who took all of the 6 mandatory weeks of vacation. My friend said it was like a cult! He left and and the company still has a high fluctuation of workers. We Germans just don't like to have no life outside of work.
@Blackshark876 Жыл бұрын
The last job i worked was for 32 hours per week on 4 days per week. Although i got shamed for it by society for being "lazy" it was the most productive time and my mental health was incredibly good.
@SudoBurger Жыл бұрын
Modern work culture doesn't rob us of our mental health. It conditions us to rob OURSELVES, and make us feel guilty if we're living too much of our own lives. It's infuriating.
@samwisegamgee9525 Жыл бұрын
Then it means your mental wasn't good in the first place because you were lazy
@SudoBurger Жыл бұрын
@@samwisegamgee9525 Wow, what an excellent take Mr Gamgee
@TheSubso Жыл бұрын
@@samwisegamgee9525 its so cool that people with profiles like yours have the most stupid and destructive ideas and feel so confident throwing them out there. Whats up with wanting to be a slave
@sheastewart7608 Жыл бұрын
@@samwisegamgee9525?????
@franciskafayeszter4138 Жыл бұрын
Where I live (North-East Hungarian countryside) the church bells are still ringing at 5AM and 8 PM. It was proposed several times by the priest to abandon this practice (especially the 5 AM bell), but the local people INSISTED to keep it...
@BattleHerb Жыл бұрын
I suppose that's a really good example of the self propagating power of cultural norms, good on that priest rho trying to right old wrongs
@IndieGinge Жыл бұрын
Interesting phenomenon. Did the community feel like it was drifting apart at all? Church attendance dropping? Youth moving away to look for work? One thing that lots of people have written about is how capitalism is a metaphorical acid bath for communities. Destroying connections by instrumentalizing workers and subjecting them to market forces that overpower other ties. Seeing as material conditions demanding labor still existed, did the annoyjng bells feel like a symbol of an old community that was harder to see in the township?
@affel6559 Жыл бұрын
Are they ringing the bells this way every day or just on Sundays? In both of these cases, the actual reason most probably is to call the people to prayer/Holy Mass and not to send them to work? Or am I too naive?
@franciskafayeszter4138 Жыл бұрын
@@affel6559 They ring the bells every day at 5AM, noon and 8PM. Besides that, they ring the bells an hour before mass, 30 minutes before mass, at the beginning of mass and when the priest transubstantiates the bread and wine (it's a Catholic church). So the 5AM bell is not really for prayer.
@franciskafayeszter4138 Жыл бұрын
@@IndieGinge I think is not that complex, but I might be wrong. I'm not originally from this place, I grew up in the suburbs of the capital city, Budapest. Of course urbanisation is a real thing here, but the effects on this particular village is not that bad, because it is close to a big city, so there are not that many people moving away (or if they move as young adults, most of them come back once they are settling down and getting kids, because the village is very family friendly and in a beautiful place). The church is also more or less full every Sunday. When we asked, why they want to keep the 5AM bell, they said: "Because that's how it always was". It's an old tradition and they certainly don't know the origins of that tradition. So I guess, that it could be for the reasons you listed, but I don't think that the local people would give it so much thought. I don't say, that the 5AM bell is necessarily a bad thing. It's just interesting, that something, that was originally created to exploit the local workforce became so engraved into local traditions, that even when everyone has an alarm clock or a cell phone (and most of them don't need to get up at 5AM), people are not just used to it, but actively defend it, when the priest suggests to abandone the practice.
@richmcgee434 Жыл бұрын
This goes a long way toward explaining why so many folks are resisting going back to the office even here in 2023, and why working from home for a year had so little negative impact on the economy - efficiency actually went up for many people, not down. And predictably, the business owners cannot see the lesson at all.
@terawatt1 Жыл бұрын
the point is the one HC makes late in the video... it's not about productivity - it's about power, the ability of the capitalist to control workers' time, and thereby their freedom...
@richmcgee434 Жыл бұрын
@@terawatt1 Yeah, I understand. There are always going to be maladjusted human beings who live for power over others instead of mutual assistance or at least neutrality. Lots of them in the upper ranks of business and politics, because it's rare for sane individuals to actively oppose them. If they didn't spend so much time and effort fighting each other things would be even worse than they are - which part of why the uptick in autocracies supporting one another is so alarming. Been too long since Operation Barbarossa taught the tyrants not to trust one another. They're starting to cooperate to quash democracy now, and that needs to stop.
@kinu40877 ай бұрын
People used to work for living now they're living for work.
@Gothic7876 Жыл бұрын
I do have to point though, that Non working time in the Stone Age and medieval age was still full of jobs, mending clothes, tending your animals, gathering water, and so on. They didn’t just kick back and relax.
@bluegravestone58 Жыл бұрын
Fair enough, but that was labor for personal reasons, not labor meant for something or someone else
@laisphinto6372 Жыл бұрын
it is still labor just because they didnt get paid doesnt mean they didnt work, there is also the work of armies they sure as hell didnt just work for 4 hours, then the elephant in the room slavery
@MysteriousFuture Жыл бұрын
In the modern age, we call non-paid work for personal maintenance: errands The bane of adult existence 😂😂😂
@Zezzimo Жыл бұрын
thank god taking care of your pets, your hobbies (productive or not), groceries, cooking, cleaning your living space, fixing your possessions or getting them fixed, seeing and/or taking care of your relatives/friends/family, spending time with your kids, maintaining important relationships, and improving and educating yourself (among others) is all completely optional with modern labor! stone age/medieval workers were suckers lol
@ellesf1606Ай бұрын
@@Zezzimo 😂
@abelnicolaebaritone Жыл бұрын
03:54 you just described Spanish schedule. 07.00 - desayuno ( breakfast) 08.30 - work begins 10.30 - almuerzo ( smaller breakfast, between breakfast and lunch) 13.00 to 15.00 ( lunch and siesta) 17.30 - merienda ( smaller lunch, between lunch and dinner) 19.00 - work ends. 20.30 or 21.00 ( dinner) 22.00 - bedtime -> 8 hours of sleep. This + extensive use of olive oil = 84 year life expectancy :D
@roberth9814 Жыл бұрын
Olive oil keeps the pipes flowing
@MaxGalofre Жыл бұрын
Or also known as "having no time for anything else but work and sleep".
@h.inusitatus Жыл бұрын
Working for 12 hours sounds miserable, even if there are breaks in between. Those breaks aren't that useful, because you still have to get back to work.
@tadcastertory1087 Жыл бұрын
The Spanish schedule is really the result of Spanish weather. You don't work in the middle of the day because it is far too hot.
@marceloantunes998 Жыл бұрын
@@h.inusitatus The breaks aren't useful? You're broing it out with your bros at work, socializing, recharging, making friends, making lovers. Is it better to work 8 hours straight then go home to be a couch potato?
@1wor1d Жыл бұрын
I travelled across Asia in the 80's, Indonesia, Thailand, India, Pakistan, Nepal etc from Australia to England. I noticed this traditional work culture in many of these countries. In agriculture people would start work very early around 7am, work to 11am take a break have a nap then more work in the late afternoon. It was usually women that worked in the field. In India and Pakistan men would be sleeping everywhere in the middle of the day, most shop owners would have a mattress on the ground so they could have a nap, men in the post office would be asleep on bags of mail. TukTuk drivers would be sleeping in the back seat, security guards would use their shot gun (yes shot gun) to rest their heads as they tried to take a nap in the bank!!
@konstantinosnikolakakis8125 Жыл бұрын
Remind me to rob South Asian banks.
@ihavetwofaces8 ай бұрын
Something that really adds to the enjoyability of your videos is that you take actual pauses in your video. It's nice that you don't pursue a frenetic pace and that you can afford to take a few moments to allow the viewer to reflect on the content so far to lo-fi beats such as at 6:53. I've always appreciated these little lacunae.
@prestonfladwood5693 Жыл бұрын
I work in aquaculture. Work is highly seasonal and sometimes there is literally nothing to do. Some mornings the first two hours of “work” is sitting in the break room drinking coffee. Other times we pull 24/7 rotations of 12 hour shifts. Work for me feels natural and enjoyable. I would highly recommend looking for work outside of the traditional 9 to 5 office jobs.
@lilbiggs4661 Жыл бұрын
Surprisingly I feel this as a teacher as well. The natural school schedule, while not directly aligned with the stone age and medieval period work schedules, I still am able to get that rhythm. Which is surprising especially since schools were turbocharged by capitalists to pump out factory workers.
@frankfrankfrankfrankfrank Жыл бұрын
That isn't actionable on a large scale. There aren't enough nontraditional jobs for everyone, just a few of us. I am also one of those people with a nontraditional job I'm pretty chill with but the majority of people need to be fed to the machine in order for society to function
@ChampagneBaller Жыл бұрын
@@frankfrankfrankfrankfrankThis isn’t true at all. One of the most common arguments for long work hours, is the idea that modern society wouldn’t function without. Fact of the matter is that all of today’s luxuries would still be accessible to mostly everyone if productivity was lessened. The problem stems from the excessive greed for expansion and bigger profits, which is why productivity and cost of living don’t follow eachother linearly. The underlying weakness of capitalism is that it is a zero-sum game, whereby constant growth simply isn’t sustainable, without it negatively impacting the common worker.
@spaceletsgothere8906 Жыл бұрын
Your comment reminds me of a joke, "Dolly Partin could write Das Kapital, but Marx couldn't write 9 to 5" lol
@frankfrankfrankfrankfrank Жыл бұрын
@@ChampagneBaller Today's luxuries come at the cost of more slaves existing today than ever before in human history. The many suffer so that the few may prosper as it has been since the conceptual invention of property and ownership. Your concept that mostly everyone would have access to luxuries is so ludicrously naive to the situations billions of people find themselves in across the world that its hard to take seriously. To change the system from the ground up you need to kill the capitalist class and a large number of propagandized lumpenproletariats. Capitalists are a result of a tumorous growth in human sociological development that somehow convinced generations upon generations of humans that psychopathic, selfish behavior should be rewarded. You aren't dealing with normal humans, capitalists are a devolved form of human sociologically speaking. Our self domestication required the rewarding of pro-social and agreeable traits rather than selfishness and agression and yet those traits are the ones that lead them to succeed. Point is: to remake the system to avoid the continued empowerment of maladjusted humans, it must be destroyed. If its destroyed, we regress hard because the fulcrum of capital has put a gun to humanity's head and is daring us to pull the trigger. Continuing in the complacency of this hole our ancestors dug is what the majority prefer because its soul numbingly comfortable and the work is soul crushingly long. Pendulum is very far from the degenerative movement needed to swing us to the other side.
@DanNikon Жыл бұрын
This is so wildly interesting, just from my experiences with working on a farm and with my parents in construction. With my parents, they woke up when the sun rose, and spent it getting ready for the day and having coffee with each other and with the workers they had join them before slowly getting into the work. They would work hard early in the day before it got hot and took frequent breaks where conversation was encouraged. They brought beer and food for everyone and the afternoon was a mix of intense work and relaxation and resting before the day ended by around sundown. When i would work in a more conventional workplace, it was crazy how time oriented everything was. One memory I have was being yelled at by a cashier for resting in the shade and drinking water for too long, before I told her to fuck off lmao. What an interesting video.
@greatunclekeefie Жыл бұрын
I love the fact that medieval employers would recognise that if a person is kept over a designated meal period then the employer should have to feed them. That is one practise that needs to make a roaring come back. That and nap time. I’m old
@Silchwint Жыл бұрын
That sounds nice in theory, but in practice it'd need strict regulation, otherwise most bosses would serve the smallest portions of the cheapest, most marginal prison food they could get their grubby little hands on.
@thelostcosmonaut5555 Жыл бұрын
@@Silchwintyou mean a pizza party?
@TheOriginalFishPond Жыл бұрын
They would feed you slop. Better to get more pay and buy the food yourself.
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Жыл бұрын
There is no dish that would make everyone happy and the employees would demand it stop on the first day. Unless it was a very big office that could support enough variety naturally. The healthy food/unhealthy food dynamic would be the biggest issue.
@h.inusitatus Жыл бұрын
Why? So you get off work two hours later because you had to waste your time with some shitty meal and a headache inducing nap somebody else forced on you?
@skyeparker13339 ай бұрын
the irony of watching most of this on my lunch break and then immediately going to the clock app to set a timer for a 12 minute nap before heading back in to finish out the work day
@huffn_puffn37109 ай бұрын
Surreal dude, strength to you
@malcolmgrossman6712 Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised you didn't reference the roman poem "hacked up days" raving against sun dials. It's one of my favorites
@LuisAldamiz Жыл бұрын
Never heard of it. Title sounds good though.
@codekillerz5392 Жыл бұрын
The gods confound the man who first found out How to distinguish hours! Confound him too Who in this place set up a sundial To cut and hack my days so wretchedly Into small portions! When I was a boy, My belly was my sundial: one more sure, Truer, and more exact than any of them. This dial told me when it was time To go to dinner, when I had anything to eat; But nowadays, why even when I have, I can’t fall-to unless the sun gives leave. The town’s so full of these confounded dials, The greatest part of its inhabitants, Shrunk up with hunger, creep along the streets.
@red_nikolai Жыл бұрын
@@codekillerz5392Thanks for posting this. I was just wondering whether anything like the modern phenomenon had happened before.
@FoxSnootz Жыл бұрын
I work at a golf course so I can't work when it rains and winter shuts down everything. It was surprising to learn I share the same work to idleness as a medieval European. Hits different the line "difficult to even dream that big"
@birch0398 Жыл бұрын
You don’t, you have infinitely more leisure time than medieval peasant that has to upon getting home from his forces work on his lords farm, farm his own food, process it into edible form, cook it, hand wash their clothes, walk 20 min to get shit infested water, and then gather wood for a fire so they don’t freeze to death. The idea that we work more today is absurd.
@청솔향-g9u Жыл бұрын
And on those rainy days, your income goes to other indoor golf courses.
@andrewhooper7603 Жыл бұрын
Just last week I sat in a focus group with our factory's top boss and some lowly tech made sure the boss knew he thought the UAW's 32 hour work week proposal was an utterly ridiculous idea that would ruin America if everyone adopted it. I've given up on trying to not hate these people.
@graboidgang9077 Жыл бұрын
nitpick but why would your hypothetical peasant be both gathering crops and firewood to avoid freezing to death? You dont freeze in summer, and you don't farm in winter. The idea that we work more today is true if you allow for constant 8 hour work days 330+ days of the year accumulating vs a peasants frantic field prep/planting/harvesting seasons interspersed with winter (where basically nothing happened other than chores and maintenance) and the growing season. @@birch0398
@Adam-bj7tk Жыл бұрын
@@birch0398 I've read that the invention of the washing machine had as much economic impact as the invention of the internet. It freed us from hours of labor per week. I think you're also forgetting the fact that most of the medieval labor force was men, and women did a lot of the washing, cooking, etc.
@jonny-b4954 Жыл бұрын
I'll be honest. Since taking over my family's company as the main person running everything, I answer the phone, set up estimates, sell/bid the jobs, set the schedule, confirm dates and colors etc, order the materials, make sure they come yada yada. And I work like this. I dont' truly get started until 9-10. But I've already been to the shop to get the guys going, started a lot of my texts and emails I'm going to send. Then I do a good burst from 9-10 to 1-3. Do all my estimates, do a small repair job etc. Then I come back, do paperwork, sometimes put in another hour or two of real work like organizing material, laying out next days job, confirming dates, responding to voicemails. I think it really is the natural way to do things. You don't bust ass all day. And just take things as they come.
@MegaSimmaster Жыл бұрын
Not saying you can do anything about it, but recognize how different your schedule is to your own employees. When a person is expected to keep busy for an entire shift, it doesn't feel good. Just remember that when you start thinking an hourly is lazy or slow.
@ItzAnOrk Жыл бұрын
@@MegaSimmasterThere is something he can do: Unless the work is literally an assembly line that keeps ticking, he can stop expecting workers to keep (pretending to be) busy all the time. People are naturally productive in bursts, then they slow down or find excuses to pause for a bit, chat and relax. We're not physically able to sustain high productivity for many hours nonstop. Even on outright industrial production where the work is expected to go on steady, a few short breaks through the workday can make shifts much more tolerable.
@eastfrisianguy7 ай бұрын
My grandpa was a farmer here in northwest Germany until his 20s (1953 to be precise) like his ancestors. From October until February, the farmland turned into a huge puddle of mud and apart from looking after the cattle, there wasn't much work. Slaughtering took place in winter and there were a few more days of "stress", with the women doing most of the work. When the money ran out, he went to work in a factory on a daily basis, and when he had enough money, he enjoyed his free time again. Work peaks were for planting and during harvest time, up to 17 hours were worked in the field for a few days. When his brother inherited the farm, my grandpa left the farm and went to work in production and suddenly he had a 50+ hour week and initially 10 days vacation per year. He even worked after 10 hours of physical labor for another 2-3 hours in a plant nursery in the summertime, because money was sparse. My grandpa told me that he found it extremely exhausting at first, but later the situation eased up .And let's be honest: who nowadays works productively for 8 hours a day? For me it's more like 4-6.
@TomSistermans Жыл бұрын
HC in 2016: let's just go through all of Caesar's life instead of random politics or battles HC in 2017: hey this Alexander fellow is interesting HC in 2018: let's talk about some Native Americans HC in 2019: you know what, British monarchs suck and I don't think enough people know. HC in 2020: I should go further back in time maybe, some 1200 years or so HC in 2021: you know what, Russian monarchs suck too and not enough people know HC in 2022: about time I finish up that Octavian fella HC in 2023: PROLETARIANS OF ALL COUNTRIES, UNITE
@ankelaostheweird905 Жыл бұрын
I'm all happy for it.
@fionafiona1146 Жыл бұрын
Karl Marx was inspired by his own analysis of history it's quite interesting how that in turn inspired a number of modern social sciences
@charizard7628 Жыл бұрын
It's his KZbin channel he can do whatever the fuck he wants
@HarrisonScottHisoandso Жыл бұрын
I recently went from having an office job at a health insurance company to being a window cleaner. And while my work is way more difficult now and physically exhausting, I much more prefer it. I get long and short days and make about the same amount of money while having more free time. Plus I'm outside and socializing and I feel like I'm having a more positive impact to my community.
@dgpsf Жыл бұрын
Good for you for quitting! Every time I have to deal with my health insurance company I want to scream at them "You are working for a gross parasitic entity that makes everything worse!" but I don't want the individual to feel attacked. I'd like to say that to the CEO though.
@HarrisonScottHisoandso Жыл бұрын
@@dgpsf I only worked for their mail department, but the sheer incompetency and waste of money was absurd while I would regularly see letters from customers who were suffering and trying to get help, knowing it'd fall on deaf ears
@StygianSunder Жыл бұрын
Years ago I had a breakdown over how I felt like my life was being governed by a clock. I never expected that years later I’d find a video relevant to those feelings.
@bilbobaggins9451 Жыл бұрын
And we all sit around and scratch our heads wondering why metal health is in the toilet. Probably because we quite literally live at our jobs and only visit our homes on the weekends for a few hours.
@thomaswalsh45522 ай бұрын
The level of animation detail on a smaller history YT channel’s side project is beyond comparison 10/10 on that alone