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Mynewadventures t1_iww463g wrote

Our rulers could not give one single fuck for us, and private corporations ONLY care about our money.

This is a perfect example.

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taintpaint t1_iwwpt55 wrote

I remember once when I was a really little kid in the car with my dad and he stopped at a stop sign and I asked "Dad, how does the police officer know if you stopped because you actually wanted to stop and not just because you didn't wanna get in trouble?" And he laughed and said "the police don't care why I stopped. They only care that I stopped."

Comments like this sometimes feel like they're coming from me as that little kid. I don't know why you care about whether Samsung really loves you deep down in their hearts. If their incentives are aligned such that they end up doing something good, that's a success of the system.

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PromptCritical725 t1_iwwrsad wrote

A system that accomplishes good things because of greed is better than one that seeks to do so in spite of it. Greed always wins. Better to use it than fight it.

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durrtyurr t1_iwy4r4s wrote

The phrasing that economists use for that is "aligning incentive structures"

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zanderkerbal t1_iwx22zw wrote

They ended up doing less than the bare minimum, though. This didn't work and it didn't address the underlying conditions that made people suicidal. I don't care whether Samsung loves people deep down in their hearts. I care whether people will live good lives, and right now, far too many of them won't, and there's no incentive for Samsung or any other megacorp to change that and a lot of incentive for them to make it worse. If this is the response the system produces to mass suicides, the system is failing.

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taintpaint t1_iwx3kco wrote

Lol so your big issue here is that they didn't actually solve the entire problem of suicide? Is that an expectation you would've had for Samsung before you heard this story? Or can a corporation only do a good thing if that thing completely solves some huge societal problem forever?

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zanderkerbal t1_iwxeud3 wrote

Let's connect some dots. Samsung's life insurance division put these photos on the bridge. This means Samsung's life insurance division was paying out to a lot of these suicides. This means that a lot of the suicides were Samsung employees. I don't know whether the suicides were disproportionately Samsung employees or whether they happened an average amount and Samsung is just a big company, but I do know that people's suicide risk is not disconnected from their socioeconomic status. If your job is shitty and soul-crushing or your pay is just barely making you scrape by with no improvement in sight, your mental health is going to end up in the gutter.

And Samsung has the responsibility, both because every single corporation has that responsibility and because Samsung is by far the largest corporation in South Korea and has massive influence over its society in general, to provide its employees with good working conditions and a wage sufficient to live a decent life on. I don't expect Samsung to solve the entire problem of suicide. I do expect (though this is hardly unexpected) them to do more to address the role they do undoubtably have in that problem than plaster a bridge with some feel-good photos.

A corporation choosing to do a cheap publicity stunt rather than anything that affects the material conditions on those dependent on income from it to survive is not all that much better than nothing and demonstrates that they are working their workers to suicide knowingly and by choice.

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taintpaint t1_iwxfnzi wrote

Just curious - where are you getting the idea that these are Samsung employees committing suicide en masse? The article just says it was a common suicide spot.

>Samsung's life insurance division put these photos on the bridge. This means Samsung's life insurance division was paying out to a lot of these suicides. This means that a lot of the suicides were Samsung employees.

I think you're misunderstanding what this article meant. It's the division of Samsung that sells life insurance, not the division that handles life insurance for its employees.

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zanderkerbal t1_iwxg5zm wrote

> It's the division of Samsung that sells life insurance, not the division that handles life insurance for its employees.

Ah, okay, I did misunderstand that, yes.

I was getting the idea that a significant number of the suicides were Samsung employees based on the fact that Samsung Life Insurance, which I thought was life insurance for Samsung employees, was paying to put up these signs, presumably with the aim of paying out less life insurance to Samsung employees who committed suicide.

It's still statistically speaking probably true that a significant number of these suicides are Samsung employees, though, given that the bridge is located in South Korea and Samsung is by far the largest company in South Korea.

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taintpaint t1_iwzavic wrote

>It's still statistically speaking probably true that a significant number of these suicides are Samsung employees, though, given that the bridge is located in South Korea and Samsung is by far the largest company in South Korea.

Okay well I guess to me it just sounds unreasonable to think that this means that they're so responsible for all Koreans' well being that any good thing they do can be criticized as "not even the bare minimum" unless they pretty much solve the problem.

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S-Vagus t1_iww8u0k wrote

I don't recall ever needing a ruler to give a fuck about me OR that anyone other than myself has to care about my money.

Humans really are a confused bunch.

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Trapptor t1_iwwl2af wrote

Would you consider this a privilege, or do you actually think that the entirety of humanity has that luxury?

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S-Vagus t1_iwwwaf0 wrote

I don't think everyone has the privelege of reading your reply to my reply to the comment of OP's content, however I do believe if you and I work together we can provide that luxury to all humanity by enshrining this moment somehow... any ideas?

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Trapptor t1_iwwyklm wrote

OK.

Would you consider the fact that you “don’t recall ever needing a ruler to give a fuck about [you] OR that anyone other than [yourself] has to care about [your] money” a privilege, or do you actually think that the entirety of humanity has that luxury?

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S-Vagus t1_iwwz8rq wrote

If it is a privelege then it is a privelege I give myself, if it is a luxury then it is because I've elevated the artform of the English language to such heights as to only have followers of the examples I set, and whether or not all of humanity wants to experience the joy that is superior communication skills is an exercise left for a given individual to attempt, occupy, pursue, or present.

​

I am Source, Material, and Inspiringly Interesting: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLqF61tQWcaAHpBDAkmPNxMiLUM5FDhOzV

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Trapptor t1_iwx03tp wrote

You’re so close to passing the Turing test, but the lack of comprehension isn’t quite hidden by the appeal to absurdity.

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S-Vagus t1_iwx0qwo wrote

I agree that the fact anyone finds me appealing is a joke in and of itself, much like the word 'privelege' and 'luxury' when compared to my cultural language of Vagus Story Hands.

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Trapptor t1_iwx1ff1 wrote

See above comment

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S-Vagus t1_iwx69zh wrote

You can't exceed the standards and thresholds I set? Aw, you really do love me. Thanks.

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Mynewadventures t1_iww9i73 wrote

Are you implying that I'm confused about something? If so, please explain and specify so that I can explain any point or confusion.

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BlackBrass_ t1_iwwhwto wrote

Well, you are definitely confused by his message

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PromptCritical725 t1_iwwrhpw wrote

Rather liberating isn't it?

The only real difference is that I expect companies to only care about money. That makes them predictable. It's the government people that are problematic because they're supposed to be elected to represent us, but they don't in varying degrees.

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S-Vagus t1_iwwwtzb wrote

If all companies only care about money then what is money and why doesn't it need so much care? Is money trying to predict human reaction profiles? They would actually succeed if they learned the Vagus Martial Arts of Ego.

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PromptCritical725 t1_iwx07hq wrote

Money exists because bartering is inefficient. That's all.

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S-Vagus t1_iwx0n7x wrote

Teaching is indeed the superior superlative semantic shaker. That's why I just teach people how to get paid by other people who aren't me. What other lesson is there in any given economy?

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