Originally posted by northernladuk
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Reply to: Linkedin inbox of the week - Ok boomer
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Previously on "Linkedin inbox of the week - Ok boomer"
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TBF to them, this is predominately the big banks, they are very good with other volunteering. Things like Military reserve, magistrates, police/fire etc. Will more often than not give you additional leave to cover your commitments. Worked with a magistrate who got every other Wednesday off without effecting pay/holiday.
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Maybe but an extra day doesn't look as beneficial as a load of blurb about charity. It's about motivation.Originally posted by JustKeepSwimming View Post
If they can afford to do it then they can afford to give additional annual leave...
In that case they could be doing it for the wrong reasons and isn't aimed as a benefit. None of that at our place, people just book a day, go do it and come back. I will add as well, everyone that I spoke to about really enjoyed their day and came back refreshed so can't fault it as a benefit TBH.Places i've worked that do it make a big song and dance out of it. Company branded t-shirts, lots of photos and local press.
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Becomes like the 'We pay for dinner if you're still in the office after 7pm' benefit that I've seen.Originally posted by vetran View Post
there be your answer. Its good for ratings.
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there be your answer. Its good for ratings.Originally posted by JustKeepSwimming View Post
If they can afford to do it then they can afford to give additional annual leave...
Places i've worked that do it make a big song and dance out of it. Company branded t-shirts, lots of photos and local press.
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If they can afford to do it then they can afford to give additional annual leave...Originally posted by northernladuk View Post
They do this at my client and it's taken seriously. Some people disappearing for a day or two at key times (granted not critical) so they do honour it.
I'd love to do it to be fair. Bit of a team day out, break from the norm and do something worthwhile. I must admit I wouldn't lose sleep if the client didn't offer this so hardly a deal breaker but I must admit I do like that my client does it.
In a world of disappearing benefits I can respect a client that still pushes these types of values.
Places i've worked that do it make a big song and dance out of it. Company branded t-shirts, lots of photos and local press.
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They do this at my client and it's taken seriously. Some people disappearing for a day or two at key times (granted not critical) so they do honour it.Originally posted by Eirikur View PostHow is a volunteer day a benefit?
I'd love to do it to be fair. Bit of a team day out, break from the norm and do something worthwhile. I must admit I wouldn't lose sleep if the client didn't offer this so hardly a deal breaker but I must admit I do like that my client does it.
In a world of disappearing benefits I can respect a client that still pushes these types of values.
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Work in a foodbank to learn your place about what happens if you try and rock the boat with all this 'inflation pay rise' tulip, you plebs.Originally posted by malvolio View Post
You get paid for taking a day off to volunteer for something useful.
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They're a bit older:Originally posted by malvolio View Post
No it means, or rather meant the baby boomer generation, those now between 55 and 75. It since mutated to mean "older than us" for the current teens and 20s. It doesn't now extend to its original set who are simply the decrepit wrinklies (like me) quietly drooling in our care home.
Of course the teens of today are so poorly educated and insular their opinion can safely be ignored.
Gen Z 1997 – 2012 11 – 26 Millennials 1981 – 1996 27 – 42 Gen X 1965 – 1980 43 – 58 Boomers II (a/k/a Generation Jones)* 1955 – 1964 59 – 68 Boomers I* 1946 – 1954 69 – 77 Post War 1928 – 1945 78 – 95 WWII 1922 – 1927 96 – 101
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If you want to moan about house prices then make it clear to the political parties that unless they either reduce the number of people wanting homes or they start building enough homes to accommodate demand that they won't get your vote. There were enough houses about when I bought my first one! Arguing against mass population growth meant I was accused of racism by the idealistic youngsters so stuff you, I'm alright Jack!Originally posted by Paralytic View Post
It's quite clever what the boomers have done - made themselves the bogey man to a group so that that group spend so much time and energy being the victim, they don't have the inclination to realise that they could actually change things if they were so minded. Moaning on tik-tok about house prices is much easier.
It's all a bit lazy and cliched for a generation (or two) that consider themselves the most progressive ever.
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It's quite clever what the boomers have done - made themselves the bogey man to a group so that that group spend so much time and energy being the victim, they don't have the inclination to realise that they could actually change things if they were so minded. Moaning on tik-tok about house prices is much easier.Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostAnd DrewG and others with chips on their shoulders.
It's all a bit lazy and cliched for a generation (or two) that consider themselves the most progressive ever.Last edited by Paralytic; 31 May 2023, 15:01.
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And DrewG and others with chips on their shoulders.Originally posted by malvolio View Post
No it means, or rather meant the baby boomer generation, those now between 55 and 75. It since mutated to mean "older than us" for the current teens and 20s.
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For teaching them that this kind of commentOriginally posted by SueEllen View Post
For what? Allowing them on social media?
is in anyway acceptable.Originally posted by DrewG View PostChill out boomer, it was a joke.
Mind you, my kids have never used such expressions. I'm the generation after boomers and my parents the one before.
A friend of mine was very upset when she found antisemitic graffiti in her home town. It made here feel that the whole rich complexity of her identity had been reduced to just one single facet - she's Jewish. Dismissive epithets like "okay boomer" or "snowflake millenial" are not anywhere nearly as bad, but reducing anyone to a single aspect of their being is really quite a nasty thing to do.
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