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996

(lucumr.pocoo.org)
1002 points genericlemon24 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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santiagobasulto ◴[] No.45151088[source]
You're all answering from a very privileged standpoint. I started my career in tech from a small town in Argentina. When broadband was prevalent around the world (2012) I was still working with a dial up connection on a $200 computer.

I grew up seeing what poverty and lack of opportunities does to people, and I was determined to break away from that.

I got a job at a startup by sheer luck, and it completely changed my life. Heck, I was not even doing 996, I was getting up at 7AM and going to bed at midnight EVERY DAY including Sundays.

When I was not squashing tickets at a 2X rate than my European coworkers, I was learning new things, trying out new projects, writing blog posts for the company, doing customer support. I didn't care.

So yes, I agree now (from a privileged position) that 996 might be unhealthy in the long run. But let's not gate-keep or be naive enough to understand that some kids will need to put that effort if they want to make a difference. And yes, ideally the world would be fair and everybody should need only 40hs/week to make a living, butt that's a fairy tale.

If you're a young ambitious above-average person, and you're going to listen to people claiming this is "bad", please also compare your to their privileges: race, geographic position, net worth of your family, etc...

replies(7): >>45151247 #>>45151422 #>>45151547 #>>45151707 #>>45151882 #>>45152350 #>>45152729 #
davedx ◴[] No.45151247[source]
I don’t know if I would classify “living in a country with labour laws” as “very privileged”
replies(1): >>45151476 #
1. santiagobasulto ◴[] No.45151476[source]
In some countries, access to drinking potable water is a privilege. Imagine "labour laws".