I really think it’ll depend on how bad the employment situation gets. At some point people are going to start realizing they’re not temporarily inconvenienced billionaires, and that their interests aren’t aligned with the oligarchs. Software devs have been largely insulated from general economic problems until recently. Getting a job has been relatively easy, the pay was way above what most people make, and that fed individualistic behavior. Now that jobs are becoming scarce, and there’s a huge pool of laid off workers, people are starting to get concerned.
At some point people are going to start realizing they’re not temporarily inconvenienced billionaires
Hahaha, so accurate. The psychological poisoning seems so effective on many levels, like those on welfare voting against their own interests as they know they’re just one lottery ticket or get rich quick scam away from financial freedom. Or the billionaires that think they’re one harebrained scheme away from becoming a god-king.
those conditions describe the entirety of the united states and, yet, unionization is still abysmally weak.
and i would expect that an entire field whose members have prided themselves on anti-collectivization would be less apt to adopt a union than any other field.
to be fair: i agree that it will happen eventually, but it’ll come at a time after the americans vote out their political duopoly like the mexicans did to their duopoly back in 2018.
I love the couple days a week I don’t have to work with software developers, in my experience they generally have a god complex comparable to surgeons, so good luck to the unemployed software developers starting a union I suppose because any of them that stay employed are just going to grow their ego further until it crumbles on top of them.
wonder when software devs will get serious about unionizing
this will never happen in the current landscape; it’s controlled by libertarian & neoliberal people who detest collectivism in all of its forms.
and toxically so, my psychological well being has improve dramatically ever since leaving the field.
What did you pivot into, if you don’t mind my asking?
IT; I did it for 10 years before hand and now I’m back.
I really think it’ll depend on how bad the employment situation gets. At some point people are going to start realizing they’re not temporarily inconvenienced billionaires, and that their interests aren’t aligned with the oligarchs. Software devs have been largely insulated from general economic problems until recently. Getting a job has been relatively easy, the pay was way above what most people make, and that fed individualistic behavior. Now that jobs are becoming scarce, and there’s a huge pool of laid off workers, people are starting to get concerned.
Hahaha, so accurate. The psychological poisoning seems so effective on many levels, like those on welfare voting against their own interests as they know they’re just one lottery ticket or get rich quick scam away from financial freedom. Or the billionaires that think they’re one harebrained scheme away from becoming a god-king.
it’s like capitalism just turns the whole of society into one giant casino
those conditions describe the entirety of the united states and, yet, unionization is still abysmally weak.
and i would expect that an entire field whose members have prided themselves on anti-collectivization would be less apt to adopt a union than any other field.
I guess we’ll see, but I do think people will start adapting to their new reality out of necessity.
to be fair: i agree that it will happen eventually, but it’ll come at a time after the americans vote out their political duopoly like the mexicans did to their duopoly back in 2018.
We’ll see how it goes, the US might just descend into a civil war scenario at this point.
at the rate we’re going at, i fully expect a civil war to happen before we stop voting for our duopoly AND unionization to become reality.
I love the couple days a week I don’t have to work with software developers, in my experience they generally have a god complex comparable to surgeons, so good luck to the unemployed software developers starting a union I suppose because any of them that stay employed are just going to grow their ego further until it crumbles on top of them.