PyramidHead
Contributor
Jacobin article to chew on.
These are conversations we should be having in our political discourse, now a full 30 years after those unionists initially floated the idea (though the concept of resisting the imposition of endless work has always been a plank of socialist activism). All of the arguments against it are exactly the ones used against paid maternity leave, the 8-hour workday, and the weekend. Contrary to all those objections, productivity has not gone down but up, dramatically, as workers have gained more free time to pursue their ambitions. Technology is no doubt a large factor in this, and we should leverage it to give everybody a break, not invent new tasks for people to perform under the mistaken assumption that people will become lazy degenerates if left to our own devices.
In the 1990s, trade unionists and socialists in the United States formed a Labor Party. The political circumstances of this experiment were unfavorable and it didn’t gain much traction, but the Labor Party’s program was full of demands that elevated the value of free time and the right of working people to lead their lives. A whole plank of the platform, titled “More Time for Family and Community,” was devoted to preventing working people’s precious time from being gobbled up by work. These included a shorter workweek, twenty mandatory paid vacation days for all, and one year’s paid leave for every six years of work.
This last demand is the most thrilling one. Imagine that: you work for six years and you are promised a whole paid year off to do whatever you want, with your job still waiting for you afterwards. What would people do with this time?
Probably some would sit around eating Doritos and playing video games — and that’s fine, because playing games is a pleasurable part of the human experience, and people have a right to leisure. But most people wouldn’t do that the entire time, because most of the Doritos-and-game sessions that occur under capitalism are people stealing a moment to relax and unwind amid the constant pressures of work and tedious life administration, like refinancing their student loans and calling around to see which doctors are in network.
Some people would probably start out the year Doritos-and-gaming, and then grow tired of it. What might they dream up next? Maybe their favorite part of Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood was the part where they got to engage in hand-to-hand combat on the rooftops of the Alhambra. Maybe they decide to book a plane ticket out of the US for the first time in their lives, and they end up at the Court of the Myrtles, watching the goldfish pond ripple gently beneath the full moon.
There’s no limit to what people would decide to do with their sabbatical, and that’s the point. Humans are capable of so much, and so few ever really get to explore their own capabilities.
These are conversations we should be having in our political discourse, now a full 30 years after those unionists initially floated the idea (though the concept of resisting the imposition of endless work has always been a plank of socialist activism). All of the arguments against it are exactly the ones used against paid maternity leave, the 8-hour workday, and the weekend. Contrary to all those objections, productivity has not gone down but up, dramatically, as workers have gained more free time to pursue their ambitions. Technology is no doubt a large factor in this, and we should leverage it to give everybody a break, not invent new tasks for people to perform under the mistaken assumption that people will become lazy degenerates if left to our own devices.