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by pie_flavor
1051 days ago
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You can frame 'getting helped less than the ideal' as 'getting screwed', but it doesn't change the fact that the baseline is 'not getting helped at all'. If you say 'you have to pay them American market wages or not at all', and they say 'okay, guess we won't hire them at all', who has this ultimatum helped? https://laneless.substack.com/p/the-copenhagen-interpretatio... |
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This sort of ethics is almost shame-oriented, with a subtle "You should be appreciative you got anything" undercurrent in its view of the world. Does that mean we should only put the bare minimum of human consideration into our business offerings? That's how we got such destructive capitalist practices.
If humans cannot do business that is equitable to all parties, it shouldn't be happening. If that means some rich people can't access a service because it's not scalable yet or a tech firm has to hire developers to get code written, so be it. I can't get whatever I want, or justify getting it by swindling others. Why should a company?
There seems to be this in-built value in modern society that it's okay to totally screw somebody if you fit into some business-accepted guard-rails. Please note that business ethics are an oxymoron.