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by 1dom
437 days ago
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I feel you're missing the point. Your angle is self perpetuating. People have a higher risk of cardiac arrest at the fear of the consequences of missing the IRS date. The argument being made is that there won't really be any major consequences - if millions of people miss it because of a TurboTax issue, an extension will be granted. Why should the engineers be stressed and overworked because other people are scared of something that doesn't have to happen? The world is less stressful and - I think - better without manufactured urgency like what you're defending. Don't get me wrong, some things are life and death, like life support machines. Taxes are not. |
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Despite not being anywhere near life or death, the stress is real. And for most people it's not crippling stress, but neither is being on call for a single week out of the year. If we're going to blow that level of on-call into a "risk of cardiac arrest" then to be reasonable we have to do the same thing for tax filing failures.
There's no way for deadlines to not be moderately stressful. You can't decide to avoid urgency and stress.