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Elias Winter's avatar

Pragmatically, much of this advice makes sense. When people are worried about layoffs, they’re thinking about rent, healthcare, and keeping the lights on — not staging a 21st-century reenactment of the labor movement. Optimizing your visibility and aligning with what your boss likes is rational in the short term. Most of us are not in a position to test the moral limits of corporate tolerance.

That said, it’s worth remembering that many of the workplace norms we now treat as ordinary — predictable hours, weekends, basic protections — didn’t materialize because employees mastered the art of strategic quietness. They came from collective leverage. There’s also something slightly ironic about a system that teaches workers to survive by staying agreeable and invisible. Individually, that may be prudent. Collectively, it starts to look like training. I’m not advocating recklessness at work. I’m just noting that the long-term health of a democracy probably depends on workers having enough shared power that “don’t be too loud” isn’t the primary civic virtue of the age.

Luke K.'s avatar

I'm not even remotely close to this industry, but I think this kind of advice holds true in more scenarios than journalism (unfortunately).

In any case, good luck out there. Here's hoping this is a blessing and an opportunity, rather than a setback.

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