| > You'd like to keep your job, so cognitive dissonance induces you to conclude - without much evidence - that this status quo is The Best of All Worlds. No, I'm just unhappy working from home, and greatly miss the office. You don't need to invent a conspiracy theory. > It is not at all necessary in our modern world I never said it was. I said that many employees find it preferable. I agree some do not. But you're solution seems to be to ban offices. > Overall, onsite office work binds you to exactly one option, remote work allows you a huge freedom of choice - and that is categorically a positive thing. But you're proposing not the option of remote work, but remote only. That does remove choice, the choice to work from my company's office in proximity to my coworkers. I value that. > However, there are so many other options available, and I dare suggest you shouldn't declare them all inferior before trying them. I don't think I have. Please stop putting words in my mouth and getting defensive about other people's preferences. |
I never suggested "banning offices" (how would that be achieved, exactly?). In fact I specifically presented a model in which voluntary offices / co-working spaces exist for those who want them.