Most Important Thing in the World - podcast episode cover

Most Important Thing in the World

Mar 14, 202422 min
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Episode description

More talk of the 4 day work week is happening in the senate, but what would it really be like, and why aren't we doing it?

Transcript

You're listening to the downbeaty the freak. Thank you for all the support via text for Soroy Industry's picture of diamond teeth. Just one person said, what if some people were born with rare types of diamonds for teeth too, not just your traditional clear diamonds, like the rarest the red, the vivid red

colored diamonds based on your background, well at heritage. Ah, maybe that like pure bread, or you just have one red die, like, oh my god, that thing's worth ten times more than the rest of those teeth. He's got a ruby, Well, rubies aren't worth as much as diamond He's got a diamond, a red diamond, fire, a beautiful red diamond or pink blue, yellow, green diamonds come out. And also also, scientists believe that a quadrillion tons of diamonds lie deep within the surface of the

Earth. Earth. No, all that is wild. They're like not rare at all, but we just can't reach these quadrillions of diamonds. Well, I learned a lot about diamonds when I bought one, and you know what, you can kind of get mesmerized by it. I kind of always rolled my eyes at it, and then I went and I looked, and you look at it and it's like, how is it so bright? You go down? Do the layers? Beautiful? Kind of insane and then she gets

off your ass. Just think about dump. Somebody texted in Diamond Teeth is actually making me look forward to the masked Singer update. Oh I'm gonna read that one. Don't read that one. Don't read that one. Jabs and body shots coming at you at nine today. Don't read that one aloud. Jabs and body shots, the return of jabs and body shots. Yeah, it's been a while, it's back at nine. Of course. The headliner today though, is the Downbeats Pot of Gold eight o'clock. Yeah, oh

hey, Mike, Cowboys signed a free agent. That's seven at seven. Also, can I tease seven thirty real quick? Because I have all something in the scuttle. But so, there is a mysterious building that is housing a future food and drink spot in Dallas. But the wind blew the tarps up, and someone saw the logo on the building. They had tarps covering this building. Yeah, and the wind blew the tarps up, and someone got a peeza and someone goes, oh, I know what it is.

Now so we know what it is and we'll tell you it's seven thirty. Oh that is a really good tease. Someone's been listening to the news junkie or although sabrinas you know that's the hit, that's the star Sabrina. Yeah, Seeli, Big Dave Matthews band fan though, well, they're on our station. Twenty four hours will be pretty soon. It's unreal like at six and then like again at ten, it's nuts. I mean not last Time's bed MAVs, but oh yeah, MAV's one last night one of that seven

Right now, it's time for this. JJ went ten dollars on the pottery ticket. Good job, JJ, JJ you scratch yours yet? Bro? I did the first couple and then I got four. Did you do you have a nickel? I need a nickel. That bar of your nickel I used my keys key doesn't work. You don't have a traditional key on you. It's bobby, it's super What about your house. I don't carry house keys. Where's your house in the house? What do you have some sort

of I have a garageler. Mikey boy, you open the garage when you go home? I know, I get out of the car like don draper and lift up the handle and let myself in. No, your garage and you just pull right in. Yeah, just pull right in. You walk right in the back door. No need for it. Why would I ever use the front door? That's amazing. I'm a back door man, Kevin. What's that JJ? Oh yeah, yeah cool. Do you have a garage, Yeah, but you do house key? I have a house key.

I just don't ever tarry. No, do you park in the garage. I don't want to ask you. No, I don't. You got a tarf that's blowing up and everyone sees all your stuff in So yeah, twenty five seconds to lock Mike, twenty five seconds. I'm doing it, Scotty, Scotty, twenty twenty seconds? Are you changing it? Don't change it? I think I'm gonna leave it. Markwa we're locking in our mark Kawa. Yeah, all right, GA one and done. Tournament starts in

ten. I was gonna switch to Rory. I don't have a courage seven. Rory's gonna be three percent. Change change it. Change what's the button? Press the button? It stuck? You have no entry. Lie, you're listening to Live Gambling on the air. Well you get that a lot right, you just locked five ago. Now look and then right on TV on the T box our Heroes at TPC Sawgrass Marca was the play How fun is that? All Right, it's Scottie Scheffler. I'm going to read you

something. Today's most important thing in the world. I'm not going to tell you who presented this until we get going a little bit, because I want you to hear it with a clear, unvarnished ear. Okay, So a bill was introduced in the United States Senate and it is called the Thirty two

Hour Work Week Act. Obviously something that we have all kicked around, considered, talked about, looked at other countries, and I don't know that something's actually been presented in the past, but it was presented yesterday, the Thirty two Hour Work Week Act. A few DFW schools have done that, some have backed off of it, but it has been tried out by you know,

a few schools here in DFW two probably two excellent results. The bill introduced to establish a standard four day work week in the United States without any

reduction in pay. The idea is the bill, over a four year period would lower the threshold required for overtime pay from forty hours to thirty two, and it would require overtime pay at the rate of time and a half of a workers regular salary for work days longer than eight hours, and it would require overtime pay at double a workers regular salary for work days longer than twelve hours. The thirty two Hour work Week Act would also protect workers pay and

benefits to ensure no loss in pay at all. I mean, it's pretty cut and dry. It's screaming out loud. F the forty hour work week. We don't need it. It's antiquated, and let's stop it. Let's have a four day work week Monday through Thursday. It's in the Senate and that is juicy. Yeah, I know. I wonder, let's, you know, suspend disbelief because I don't believe this will happen in any of our lifetimes, to be quite frank, now, I wonder how that would affect

us people. Is there certain? Because as far as our time up here, we're not up here forty hours already. As far as our time in this building now, our work transcends being in this room for four hours and maybe the hour that we get here prior combined with a few minutes or thirty minutes we hang out afterwards. But if they there was no way they would shut us down to broadcast Monday through Thursday, well, I mean we would still work afore or a five days. It depends on society, you know.

I mean, no one on and everyone knows Saturday Sunday that's the weekend. That's just because that's how it's always been. And if it was slowly changed to Friday Saturday Sunday, there's your weekend. You work four days, then you get the three days off. I mean it would take generation or two to make it comfortable conversation like obvious, that's just what it is. But if no one was going to work on Friday, then yeah, we would fall in line with that, I would imagine. But yes, I

mean in our it won't. I wouldn't think it would affect us in our working lifetimes. Would you do a five hour show Monday through Thursday to have a three day weekend, Yeah, yes, I would, Although people that have done the five hour show that I know haven all big one of them just absolutely it's got to be yeah awful, it's a half a free fall. Yeah, a day the idea behind this say. They say it's an important step toward ensuring that workers share in the massive increase in productivity driven by

artificial intelligence, automation, and new technology. Moving to a thirty two hour work we with no loss of pay is not a radical idea. Today, American workers are over four hundred percent more productive than they were in the nineteen forties, and yet millions of Americans are working longer hours now for lower wages

than they were decades ago. That has got to change. I also believe that the forty hour work week, if you analyzed productivity, you would probably be able to shave eight hours out of someone's five day work week that they're absolutely doing nothing or fake working, cutting corners, taking long breaks, whatever

the case may be. In a forty hour work week, you're not You're not getting a jgitimate forty hours of actual work, unless maybe you're on a very monitored assembly line where if you're missing, you know, well, that carburetor doesn't get this gasket adhered to it, so that house cannot built without a dish works. Well. There's yeah, where there's actual real accountability, but in most cases it's hard to account for every minute of every day for

every employee and correct left to our own devices. We're human beings, and I fully believe it's my belief that we all find ways consciously or subconsciously to shave off. We cut corners as much as possible Boeing. But yeah, I will say so. Forty hour work week began by the Ford Motor Company in nineteen twenty something. I've mentioned this a million times in the air whenever

these stories come up. But it is a little crazy to me that in twenty twenty four we still abide by the rules of an auto plant manufacturer a manufacturer in the nineteen twenties. That is crazy to me. But what companies benefit from that being the status quo and we can't stick together and yell enough to change it. The things that I think could help, though, are

unhappiness in this world nation. Maybe we keep it here, mental health stuff and all that, and people realizing, well, you know what, I do think more people are realizing across the board are going, I'm working this job for who. I think more people are saying that, and that allows you to not care as much and then to hide out at your job. Therefore, that's just another way of saying less productivity and thirty two hours a

little benefit for you there. You get a bigger weekend, you're not at work as much, have a little more healthier work life balance, all that stuff. And I know there's gonna be a portion of the audience who says this is the wlassification of America and all that stuff. I also think four factory work for what needs to be made. Yeah, forty hours might be what needs to be done for the two companies that make airplanes, the bowing

in the airbus. Everyone hearing this is applying it to their job. Yeah, right, some people, it applies to some people, it doesn't. Some people it's realistic and obvious that it would work, and some people are like, that's crazy. You just can't lose that productivity. I get it. But that's why the baseline would be thirty two hours. And if you're hourly in any way, then yeah, if you're working more because it needs to be done, guess what you get time and a half. Well.

It would also open up opportunities for jobs. Just because the individual has a limit on the number of hours they can work in a week doesn't mean that factories have to shut down on Fridays, you would just hire more employees to work like those. Yeah, those extra eight hours. You know, you would stagger that to where one guy works Monday through Thursday. Well, the other guy works Tuesday through Friday, and so on and so on. So

the factories could stay open twenty four hours a day if they wanted. You would just have to hire employees to replace those staggered eight hours that you're losing. I wonder what happened. What was the country like before the standardized forty hour work week was kind of implemented. What did we do before then? Was there a standard? Was that we only work thirty hours a week? Or did you just kind of work whenever you wanted? Was everybody salary based?

I don't even I mean, was it even something you had to consider prior to the Industrial Revolution? I guess or did everything was just privately smaller and privately owned, and you may have had someone work for you, but then it was whatever your agreement was with them. I don't know. It seems so long ago, Mikey. I think it's before factories. You didn't need to make sure someone was here walking in at this time and walking out at that time, right, I think I'm looking it up. What did

you just search verbatim telling me what you wrote in there? You just typed in how many hours? Typed in boobs? How many hours were work weeks? Are you looking at a boob in nineteen ten? Aka boobies? Now? How many hours were work weeks in nineteen ten for manufacturing fifty seven, for construction forty five. That's loose, but again that's manufacturing Internet. Yeah,

so the factory the fact factory work changed everything. Okay, so fact, look the factory work, you know, for the forty hour a week, standardized factory template that may have been lowering hours from what they were before. Kind of what maybe they're recommending now it's just an elongated trend, possibly in eighteen twenty sixty to ninety hours per week your whole life in the world.

It's what I can't it's so here's a quote. While CEO's wages continue to increase, our workers are finding themselves doing more, earning less than they have in decades. This thirty two Hour Work Week Act would allow hard work in Americans spend more time with their families while protecting their wages and making sure profits aren't the aren't only going to select few. I mean, it's a

far larger conversation. But yeah, I don't know how this or if we are just on a collision course with some sort of massive revolt of CEO wages. And because if you work and then they get a twelve billion dollar bonus, twelve dollar bon this sounds like they're trying to put a horse back into a barn and maybe add a friend for him to have a friend with him.

Because look, when things get taken away for the benefit of presidents, CEOs and shareholders of companies, that doesn't they're not going to give up piece of their pie to accommodate us the common people. We know how this world works, and those in power that have that ability to make those types of decisions aren't gonna say, yeah, you know what, I'm going to take a five million dollars a year pay cut to so these people can work less.

Right, But that's what labor unions are for. I mean, we collectively are the people doing the work that makes them those bonuses in that money. Right Thereby holding the power in our hands, we choose not to wield the sword though, Well, it's because of fear that you're going to lose your job if you do. That's why if the government steps in and makes it baseline, that's I guess how a change like that could happen. There are a lot of countries who've done this, made the move. France has

a thirty five hour work week. They're considering a move to thirty two. Norway, Denmark, always among the highest happiest countries in the world, have work weeks of thirty seven hours or less. I mean, I think it's fascinating, especially when legislation gets proposed and someone's gonna have to actually look at it. But what I don't get is people hearing this, who this would

benefit. You'd get a three day weekend every week, and they're like, nah, That's what I don't understand is the is fighting for things that don't benefit you. But then you can look at the entire political yeah, sure situation and scratch your head at that all day. Just someone text in definitely not realistic in the medical field because there's not enough doctors nurses. Is that

that I wonder? I mean, in theory, it does open up more opportunities and open up more places for people to work because you're gonna have those hours that there's a chunk, you know. Yeah, hospitals have to remain open twenty four to seven. Of course, maybe that inspires more people to go into the right they're going to those public service fields. I don't know. There are plenty of things that doesn't exactly apply to and couldn't apply to.

But my point going back to putting the horse back in the barn. We remember what happened in two thousand and eight when you had the big real estate collapse and we hit that massive recession and there were massive layoffs. We saw it in our old company, where I think they ended up laying off around thirty to forty percent of their staff. And the mantra back then was do more with the same do more with less, do the same job with less, and once this thing turns around, yeah, we'll get back to

what we were before. That never happened. You know, all those people that got fired at our old job didn't get those jobs back once the economy regained its strength. They just realized, whoa, Okay, so we're now flush and doing better financially, but all these people are doing the same job. Let's just keep it like it is. And yeah, and once that cycle came back around to where you know, these corporations were healthy, they

were making more money than they were before the recession. I thought COVID was the most convenient excuse ever for people to really cut costs. And I do think it affects the product of a lot of things. But I thought that was like tried and true, right there, here is an easy way to save a ton of money. Pandemic. You know, that's a fifteen year cycle, and we'll probably have something else crazy happening twenty thirty eight or twenty

thirty five or whatever. But I thought, I'm surprised that there wasn't just an absolute collapse in commercial real estate after the pandemic, because one thing that did show is not only do we not need to come in a lot of people don't need to come into an office. They can work remotely and be just as effective. We don't need to go to meetings. We can do these via email or zoom. We don't have to be in person to be your audience. You know, all of this stuff can be done elsewhere.

I was really surprised that the commercial real estate world did not just completely the bottom fall out from under it because they realized how much money are we saving by not paying ridiculous leases on these giant buildings when people can just do the crap at home. I started working here a month before the pandemic hit, so I'm here for four weeks. But the entire cell staff was full of people and they were all on the floor below us. There was a huge

space for them. And now we're all condensed up on one floor and they're renovating the other side of the building just to you know, create room for all sells people because they do want them coming back into the office and things like that. But they're not no nuts because I would be like, Okay, let's go down and see what it's doing. It's a party down there. They've cut they've cut their they've cut their rent in half by doing that. Yeah, yeah, well yeah. And I don't think this is a

topic that's ever going away. Honestly, this is gonna keep popping up a lot. But it's on the on the floor of the Senate. The thirty two hour work week bill probably gets swatted, and some companies have experiment with that. I know a company and didn't I know a guy who runs a company and they switched to four day work week, and he's like, we're getting more production, my employees are more happy. Yeah, granted out running

company that has eleven people, I'm not working in a factory. It was kind of his point, if you own a something small like that and you do not lose productivity, I think it's amazing to do that. Take care of your people. Yeah, and you're like, dude, four days a week, just bust ass. Yeah. But but that's a far vast minority of country of companies that could can do that. And for those asking, I didn't say the name of who proposed it because I didn't want it.

You know, you don't want me to do an impression of him. I think he's I think he's on your list. The former Detroit lines running back Barry Sanders. It was Bernie Sanders. You know which side you're on? Coming up next. It was a crucial game for the MAVs last night. Plus the Cowboys finally some hold on, Plus the Cowboys finally signed somebody next on the freet

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