I'm not from the US, so I keep wondering: is unemployment so bad in the US? Are American citizens truly so desperately in need of those manufacturing jobs?
No but also yes to your questions in that order. I'm a Canadian but we also suffered similarly to the US and people who live in a former manufacturing town know what it's like when their manufacturer leaves for lower cost countries. I lived in a GM town for what felt like an eternity, where you had guys who weren't too bright, who didn't have an education, and had no marketable skills yet somehow owned a large four bedroom home, an RV, a cottage, a boat, and went on plenty of vacations with their nuclear family of 3 kids, kids that were all put through university on their father's salary. The richest people around were high school educated GM workers and there were almost 10,000 people who were in that category in my city. Then GM shut down a plant and wiped out 90% of those jobs, it was devastating to our region's economy.
According to the WEF, the United States has lost more than 2.7 million of these jobs to China over the past 24 years. So when you ask if American citizens are truly so desperately in need of those manufacturing jobs I would say that every first world country would truly so desperately want those manufacturing jobs.
People are comment about what "he" did, which demonstrates they didn't even read the article or watch the video before commenting
... a demonstration which has zero impact on the opinions of posters. This woman disrupted a company event to engage in personal activism. What more does anyone need to know? I don't care about her feelings or hearing about her perception of what her company's product may be used for. I bet Israel uses Windows' computers too!
they all have very high expectations, and there just aren't tons of high-paying jobs where you just show up, or "work" from home.
This has been my experience as well. We've put up job postings for IT positions over the past couple years and almost every job applicant in Gen Z years are asking how many hours they're expected to come into the office. "all of them" would be my answer but the woman handling the human resources communications basically copies and pastes the amount of hours the job posting was listed at, if she even replies at all. Despite that we did end up with a shiny new Gen Z worker who didn't expect to work from home and he's been doing a great job so not all of them are aiming for the top level jobs right out the gate.
We know damn well RTO has far more to do with keeping middle-earth management cube farmers employed for obsolete reasons
I don't know any such thing, I prefer to work at the office because I'm more productive. The only time I want to work from home is when it's advantageous to my personal life, like I have to catch up on laundry or someone is coming to fix an internet issue. My brain prefers to rest away from work at home and prefers to lock in at work at the office.
"In the long run, every program becomes rococo, and then rubble." -- Alan Perlis