Opinion We Deserve Way, Way More Time Off

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We Deserve Way, Way More Time Off​

This Labor Day weekend, I’m savoring the last days of summer, but also feeling that I did not spend enough of it in the right way. I spent too much time working.

I know I’m not alone. Nearly one in fourAmericans get no paid vacation at all and no paid holidays. Many who do get paid time off are reluctant to take it because of workplace pressures.

I was more fortunate than many, however. Over the last two weeks, I did almost no work for nine days. I read two novels. I dropped my son off at college, took long car trips with my husband, saw friends, hung out with elderly relatives. At my father’s house, I had time to help with house tasks: putting up fences to protect fruit trees from marauding deer, moving a bookshelf off the porch. I spent time watching a pond that was, at different times, both lively as hundreds of hopping frogs and still as ramrod-straight little blue herons. I noticed that if you’re quiet enough, the buzzing of a tiny hummingbird’s wings can be surprisingly loud, like a motor, and that it’s funny how a woodpecker thinks everything is a tree. I got lost in mossy forests and admired the surf off the rocky coast. I listened to coyotes at night. I had an incredible Hawaiian massage from my niece.

When I got back home to New York City, I did not immediately catch up on work, email, or chores; instead, I went with friends to take in the public joy that is the Bronx’s Orchard Beach — the cleanest beach on Long Island Sound — where we swam, enjoyed the weekly Sunday salsa party, and saw a great egret.

All this enjoyment was justified, but not because I’m especially deserving. Nor was it merited because now, rejuvenated, I’m more productive. I’m probably just the same as I was before: same periodic flickers of intelligence, same woolgathering, same laziness. But the break mattered because there is more to life than work. We all have families, friends, and a beautiful world to enjoy.

This is not even an insight in most rich countries, but it’s one we’re discouraged from exploring in hyper-capitalist America. Earlier this summer, the media was buzzing with a concept absurdly called “micro-retirement,” which Fast Companycalled “the latest Gen Z trend.” These cutting-edge young people apparently take a two-week break from work every six months or so. These breaks help them “avoid burnout . . . and enhance their overall well-being.” Whoa, what will they think of next?

No weird new jargon is needed. This is called a “vacation.” Perhaps the young are unfamiliar with this custom because American employers, almost uniquely among rich countries, aren’t obligated to provide any, even unpaid. Europeans, by contrast, thanks to left-wing initiatives of the 1930s like the French Popular Front’s “holiday movement,” enjoy weeks of paid time off even to this day. If you go to Paris in August, few actual residents of the city will be there, and most businesses will be closed.

The 1936 Soviet constitution included a “right to rest.” In the early days of the Soviet Union, authorities viewed vacation as a way to help workers be more productive on the job, but they came to embrace it as a way for humans to explore capacities and interests beyond work and to bond with their families. While the human capital arguments are legitimate (vacation does help us avoid burnout and work better), historian Gary Cross quotes the British Trade Union Council of the 1930s arguing that the worker is not “merely a machine to be kept in working order but a human being with a life of his own to be lived and enjoyed.” We all have elders, children, and ponds full of hopping frogs to appreciate.

We deserve more vacation, for sure. But we also deserve more free time all year round. Americans work hundreds of hours a year more than Europeans. Imagine if we had more time for our families, friends, the natural world, and our own minds every week.

One appealing and highly practical approach is the four-day work week, whose implementation Boston College scholar Juliet Schor has been studying in over thirty companies. She’s finding widespread satisfaction among both employees and employers. On Jacobin Radio, Schor told my husband Doug Henwood that workers described huge improvements in their well-being, calling the move to a four-day week, “life-changing, transformational, best thing that ever happened to me.” A UK study found similar satisfaction, with most participating companies saying they would continue, citing decline in workforce turnover and no loss of revenue.

As usual, when it comes to moving this idea forward, socialists are the ones leading the way. Bernie Sanders recently talked about it on the Joe Rogan Experience. Phara Souffrant Forrest, the socialist New York State assemblywoman representing my Brooklyn district, has introducedseveral bills to advance the four-day week, through both public- and private-sector pilot programs, establishing a tax credit for participating private employers.

Forrest told Newsweek in June that the research showed that “workers thrive when given more time to care for themselves, their families and their communities.” She hoped New York’s experiment would become a model, “not just for our state but for the whole country.”

Socialism holds the potential to end some of the worst exploitation, bloodshed, and suffering in the world, but it can also help us to live better, fuller lives. With so much else to do, and our time on earth so limited, there’s no reason for us to work as much as we do.

I’m still thinking about my vacation and how much better I feel after having had some free time. As the long weekend approaches, I probably have to catch up on work. But I’m also looking forward to getting outside, reading, watching birds, and yearning for a world abundant in the leisure we all deserve.
 
I had time to help with house tasks: putting up fences to protect fruit trees from marauding deer
I hate shit like this. If I'm on vacation, I don't want to do major renovations like this. I'd almost rather work more, maybe overtime, then pay someone else to do it.
 
The 1936 Soviet constitution included a “right to rest.” In the early days of the Soviet Union, authorities viewed vacation as a way to help workers be more productive on the job, but they came to embrace it as a way for humans to explore capacities and interests beyond work and to bond with their families.

Says everything about the author right there. She seems to write alot about her love for Zohran Mamdani and she a member of the Democratic Socialists of America.

As far as I can tell, she doesn't have a job. She does piecework journalism for the Nation. Her whole life is a long vacation. She probably lives off her Husband's pay as an editor at "The Nation". She seems to occasionally teach adjunct classes at NYU and Colombia.

Trash.
 
Americans work hundreds of hours a year more than Europeans.
Productive work is what matters. The most productive teams I’ve worked with have been Scandinavian. They all stop three times a day for a proper coffee break, and a cooked lunch, and they take a month off in summer, and the work is done, without fuss, to an incredibly high standard. Never quality issues. Never needs rework. Just gets done. impeccable English, absolutely zero drama either.
 
You won't get it if you are having to compete with illegals who will work for much less and much worse conditions.
 
You won't get it if you are having to compete with illegals who will work for much less and much worse conditions.
It always makes me laugh that the people supposedly pushing for in increase in the minimum wage to increase the rights of the workers are the very same people advocating for mass immigration and the acceptance of tens of millions of illegals into the country. They see zero issue with the conflicting issues that they hold at the same time
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Retard citing the Soviet Union as example of "workers rights." Citing the Stalinist constitution as proof no less. DSA people are so retarded, and have no idea what they are talking about. They regularly shot people for striking and NEETdom was a crime. Stalin would have shot everyone in that party for being a degenerate. Soviets worked way more hours than the average American and had less of everything. It was a society based around the concept of full employment, not free time.
 
I am at work right now, on fucking Labor Day, because kikes flooding my country with shitskin people willing to undercut my wages and value of time has necessitated that I have to work on NATIONAL HOLIDAYS otherwise they will find someone else who is willing to show up to work today.

Shut the fuck up and die in a fire.
 
Market forces. Refuse to work 40 hours. Refuse to work for less than you think you're worth.

Either you'll get what you want because you really are worth it, or you'll get what you want because everyone starts doing it, or you'll get what you want by being unemployed and having all the free time in the world.

Also repeal the 19th.
 
or you'll get what you want by being unemployed and having all the free time in the world.
Rent money doesn't just grow on trees. Assuming you don't live with your parents you have to work to live. If you aren't a nigger you can't just stay unemployed, you absolutely have to get a job to pay the bills so you don't get evicted and starve to death
 
Rent money doesn't just grow on trees. Assuming you don't live with your parents you have to work to live. If you aren't a nigger you can't just stay unemployed, you absolutely have to get a job to pay the bills
Gee almost like a culture that kicks its kids out of the house immediately has wider social ills caused by that culture.

From another perspective, being so concerned about society tokens is low IQ nigger behavior. Couple thousand years ago we lived off game and berries for FREE. That shit just grows out of the ground. Go live in a field somewhere. Better than begging for society tokens in a city.
 
You won't get it if you are having to compete with illegals who will work for much less and much worse conditions.
This. Cunts like this writer will beg and plead for more H1Bs and immigration, especially illegal immigration, and then wonder why people can’t afford to take time off and why employers have the leverage to not offer paid time off. As soon as I read what she did for vacation before returning to her suite in Manhattan, I knew she was way too out of touch with reality to know what she’s even talking about.
 
Hmmm.

Imagine being a leftist and then when it takes hold being like "hey this is actually too much work"

The 40 hour work week is slavery brought on by making industrialists more money. It wasn't some blessing.
 
Coincidentally it also caused some of the worst exploitation, bloodshed, and suffering in human history.
Well, yeah, the Soviet regularly shot people for what was called "wrecking." If you did not work enough, missed a quota, missed a day at work - you would get broomstick in the back of the head for being a counter-revolutionary.
 
There are way better examples of vacation and leave policies in socialist countries than the Stalin Constitution/Soviet Union. It sounded great on paper but the loophole around anti-Soviet activities allowed all of the other provisions to be nullified basically at will. In fact by 1940 it was up to a 56 hour week working seven days a week, and it became illegal to voluntarily leave a job. The sentence for that "crime" was 2 to 4 months in prison!

It wasn't even until the 1950s that working hours in the USSR were reduced to 42 hours per week (still six days per week) and not until the 60's that the 40-hour, 5-day week became standard.

Socialism holds the potential to end some of the worst exploitation, bloodshed, and suffering in the world, but it can also help us to live better, fuller lives. With so much else to do, and our time on earth so limited, there’s no reason for us to work as much as we do.
The US barely has a national identity anymore, let alone the social and cultural cohesion needed for most socialist policies. At best we can start with some things that make sense, like paid maternity and sick leave that address the most critical issues. If these things translate into improved productivity, they can be expanded into mandatory vacation. People are getting rewarded to work harder and as more coherent teams.

One thing I would also do is end salary abuse by massively raising the cap making a lot more people eligible for overtime. That's one of the biggest sources of labor exploitation, there are people making $34-40k a year that are on salary.
 
Imagine getting Labor Day off just to bitch about getting time off work. You know what didn't close today? The pipe plant and the ceramics factory.
 
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