How about "day job"? Gotta have one or you'll starve on the street, can't do anything unproductive with your day!
Socialism
Rules TBD.
"Grindset"
Yeah you're living life up with your eighty hour week at two minimum wage jobs bro
Imagine grinding anything other than the bones of billionaires.
The entire managing class peddles euphemisms for a living, and has done so for generations.
My favorite remains “Human Resources”.
Here in Mexico is very common for employers to ask us to "ponernos la camiseta" (put on the team jersey). I believe this has football connotations, but I thinks it means the same as taking one for the team. It is mostly used when the employer, manager, sr manager, etc. requests us to do more than we are paid for, e.g. to work longer hours, work on weekends, take on two people jobs, etc.
Always a team/family until you ask for a raise instead of them taking out extra profit.
"Human" as a deceptive descriptor for dehumanizing concepts, practices, or framing of people. "Human resources" is the most common version of that but it doesn't stop there. When some rich asshole talks about "human" this and "human" that or how they want "fellow humans" to "be better humans" or whatever it's pretty much always a thin creepy mask over some surveillance state shit or social manipulation.
Reddit had that "remember the human" slogan while normalizing and making excuses for all sorts of cryptofascist shit on that site, including thinly-veiled targeted harassment campaigns trying to drive vulnerable people into self-harm, and all of that was declared to be "not against the rules" and therefore permissible.
I hate the word "content" and the title "content creator". It emphasizes the platform/publisher as the actual product and implies anything on it is just interchangeable, vague filling. Is Steven King a content creator for Simon & Schuste?
well quiet quitting is the new hotness.
That's an excellent question and there are so many. The most recent and prevalent has to be "la valeur travail", the work value or the work virtue I guess are closest -but it really is untranslatable because it is deliberately so fuzzy. The bourgeoisie is trying hard to turn it into a sort of national and personal pride, to sugarcoat labor until people are begging to be let in on it.
I think there is always something ominous about talking of grand qualities the populace should embody. Trying to spin wanting better work conditions and fair compensation to some kind of ungrateful immoral thing is equally bad.
"Middle class" as a way to pretend that workers, petit bourgeoisie, managers and small capitalists are one homogenous group.
What do you mean by petite bourgeoisie and small capitalist? Thanks :)
From Wikipedia:
Although members of the petite bourgeoisie can buy the labor of others, they typically work alongside their employees, unlike the haute bourgeoisie.
Essentially they are small business owners who employ a few people. Although an owner of a small shop with a few employees does not exclusively sell their labor power for survival, they also do not really own the means of production. As a class they usually identify with the higher bourgeoisie class, but they are not playing on the same level field.