Cut the country some slack and introduce gardening leave

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Aurora

Cut the country some slack and introduce gardening leave

Post by Aurora »

The Guardian - 02/04/12

Downtime would allow overburdened oil and food systems to function better while addressing broader economic and social problems.

Article continues ...
When Utah put its workforce onto a four-day week in 2008 in response to the recession, it saved millions, saw reduced absenteeism, healthier, happier workers and cut its carbon emissions by about 14%.

We could call them National Transition Days.

So, instead of turning our garages or cupboards into petrol bombs, lets hear some good advice from government, the introduction of gardening leave for the nation (you wouldn't just have to grow food - walk, talk, fix a solar panel, take your choice).

The working week has reduced beyond recognition in the last 200 years, lets just take it to the next logical step.
:D Sounds like a great plan to me.
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Post by woodburner »

+1
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biffvernon
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Post by biffvernon »

My preference is for the abolition of Tuesdays. You get a six day week, four days at work an two off the weekend. Instead of 52 weeks in the year you get 61.

Most importantly that means 61 weekends - more opportunities for parties.
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parties

Post by ujoni08 »

Most importantly that means 61 weekends - more opportunities for parties
Like it 8)
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Post by madibe »

:lol:
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Post by SleeperService »

:lol:

I've taken things a bit further with one long weekend a year. 365.25 days on average 8)
Scarcity is the new black
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UndercoverElephant
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Re: Cut the country some slack and introduce gardening leave

Post by UndercoverElephant »

Aurora wrote:
The Guardian - 02/04/12

Downtime would allow overburdened oil and food systems to function better while addressing broader economic and social problems.

Article continues ...
When Utah put its workforce onto a four-day week in 2008 in response to the recession, it saved millions, saw reduced absenteeism, healthier, happier workers and cut its carbon emissions by about 14%.

We could call them National Transition Days.

So, instead of turning our garages or cupboards into petrol bombs, lets hear some good advice from government, the introduction of gardening leave for the nation (you wouldn't just have to grow food - walk, talk, fix a solar panel, take your choice).

The working week has reduced beyond recognition in the last 200 years, lets just take it to the next logical step.
:D Sounds like a great plan to me.
It is completely logical. There are two arguments against it.

(1) It increases "human resources" overheads, because you need more stuff per unit of work.

(2) Everybody earns less money.

The positives are so numerous I can't be bothered to list them. I have no idea whether it is ever going to happen though.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)
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Post by the_lyniezian »

biffvernon wrote:My preference is for the abolition of Tuesdays. You get a six day week, four days at work an two off the weekend. Instead of 52 weeks in the year you get 61.

Most importantly that means 61 weekends - more opportunities for parties.
As a Christian I'm rather too attached to the importance of the seven-day week.

But at the same time when it says "six days shall you work, but on the seventh day shall you rest"- what does it mean by work? A big hint: it was preached to a bunch of nomadic herdsmen who later settled dow n and became agrarians. It probably isn't mostly talking about paid emploment. I suspect gardening, and all the other things people never quite get round to doing by being "too busy" (sadly in my case, as the Devil makes work for idle hands :oops:), might well include them.

Just my thoughts, anyway.
Aurora

Post by Aurora »

the_lyniezian wrote:"six days shall you work, but on the seventh day shall you rest"
Makes the bible sound like the first corporate handbook. :wink:
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Post by biffvernon »

Seven, like forty, was, you will recall from serious study of biblical literature, not a real number. Seven was used for 'quite a few' and forty meant 'quite a lot'.

I'm not proposing the abolition of Sunday or even of the Sabbath, just Tuesday, which honours some rather obscure Germanic god, with the French Mardi named after the Roman god Mars.

Fear not, this is not an attack on Christianity - just a scheme to get us to work less and play more.
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UndercoverElephant
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Post by UndercoverElephant »

the_lyniezian wrote:
biffvernon wrote:My preference is for the abolition of Tuesdays. You get a six day week, four days at work an two off the weekend. Instead of 52 weeks in the year you get 61.

Most importantly that means 61 weekends - more opportunities for parties.
As a Christian I'm rather too attached to the importance of the seven-day week.
God doesn't care how many days we work. You know that, don't you?

What sort of petty-minded God would be bothered about such things when there's so much more important things to be bothered about?
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)
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Post by biffvernon »

Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday

Moon, Tiu, Woden, Thor, Freia, Saturn, Sun... the week has never been a Christian thing.

Soon be Easter
O.E. Easterdæg, from Eastre (Northumbrian Eostre), from P.Gmc. *Austron, a goddess of fertility and spring, probably originally of sunrise whose feast was celebrated at the spring equinox
:D
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Post by ceti331 »

biffvernon wrote:My preference is for the abolition of Tuesdays. You get a six day week, four days at work an two off the weekend. Instead of 52 weeks in the year you get 61.

Most importantly that means 61 weekends - more opportunities for parties.
wednesdays as a mid-week break is better IMO.
2 days on 1 day off 2 days on 2 days off.
alternate complimentary activities like desk work and fitness regime, one is rest from the other.
"The stone age didn't end for a lack of stones"... correct, we'll be right back there.
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Post by emordnilap »

I work Tuesday to Friday in a mainstream job.

The three day weekend is brilliant. Even with a modest lie-in, Monday has become the most productive day, unless I decide otherwise. :lol:
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
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Post by the_lyniezian »

UndercoverElephant wrote:
God doesn't care how many days we work. You know that, don't you?

What sort of petty-minded God would be bothered about such things when there's so much more important things to be bothered about?
Well maybe your god doesn't. Mine does.

I think it's only reasonable that God should care about even the smallest of things, and I think it's fair to say there should be something to stop people from working so hard (and in the case of the ancient Israelites, they probably had to to survive) that they wear themselves out.

Of course Christians believe that we are not under the Law anymore (or at least Christians, and it's doubtful Gentiles ever were) so it's not set in stone, but that it was included in the creation narrative gives us some hints that a seven-day week a perfectly natural arrangement. I've heard suggestions (albeit from the likes of my pastor) that other arrangements don't work, though don't quote me on that.

You could also say that, in a purely practical sense, that with modern technology and so on we don't need to work anywhere need as hard as we do- we are not exactly living a hand-to-mouth subsistence lifestyle. So we don't need to work six days, though what would be the point of messing about with how many days there are in the week, anyway?
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