Soft Lies
Remote work exacerbated the divide between knowledge workers and management. While high-speed Internet is comparatively pricey in the United States, when compared to other countries, it's still inexpensive enough to be more-or-less ubiquitous, and, as a result, most people who can command a knowledge worker's salary can afford it. And a number of them expect that expenditure to free them from needing to actually commute to their jobs.
Employers, on the other hand, have started requesting, or requiring, people to come back to offices. The reasons for this are many, varied and in the mind of the beholder. Business executives claim to be looking for serendipity and interplay between co-workers to spark creativity and productivity. Distrustful workers claim that it's a cynical ploy to get people to quit; and thus lower headcount without resorting to laying people off. Some business analysts have noted that managing teams for output (as opposed for time and activity) is a skill, and when management doesn't have it, their lives are easier when everyone's in one place. Either way, it's something of a brewing fight, although given today's very soft job market, one where management has the upper hand.
This hasn't prevented people from being upset about it, and when people are upset, one can be sure that social-media types will be quick to step up and tell them "hard truths." Mainly, that they're right, and whomever disagrees with them is wrong, stupid, evil or some combination of the above.
And this is where my own brand of cynicism comes out to play. Because I've seen this movie before. Some time ago, in fact.
94.3 percent of the time [Senator] Obama never really tells the audiences anything uncomfortable though he boasts that he will 100 percent of the time. What he promises them instead is to tell people they don't like (auto executives and Wall Street fat cats) what THOSE GROUPS don't want to hear.And if pretending to tell people "uncomfortable things," "hard truths" or "things they don't want to hear," when one's really doing the opposite is pandering when a candidate for political office does it, it's pandering when some internet rando on LinkedIn or X does it.
John Dickerson "Obama's Closing Argument" Slate Magazine, 21 April, 2008
People accept being pandered to because it affirms them and their worldviews. People like that. And I don't blame them. I'd probably like it, too, if it didn't immediately make me suspicious. But suspicious I am; along with dubious that people who run multi-million-dollar businesses don't know what they're doing.
But it's also true that I understand who wins when one fights the law, and so I prefer to work within the system. And doing that means understanding why the system (or, more accurately, it's management) does what it does. And listening to rabble-rousers tends to work against that.