Seeing wealthy ppl joke about not being able to do laundry or get themselves a glass of water, is so gross to me.

For the love of Stalin these ppl need to be put in gulags / re-education centers asap.

  • @panic
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    92 years ago

    There are edge cases ofc. Such as taking care of elderly people but again it can be argued that capitalist work ethic means that family members aren’t given the time to adequately take care of their elders and etc.

    Caregivers are generally performing unpaid labour for their family or close friends. They are expected to hold a full-time job while giving care or receive poverty level checks from the government.

    This is a different subject than hiring domestic workers and it’s more related to disability rights, but people are ignored by the government the same way.

    • Neptium
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      42 years ago

      I do agree with your sentiment but I have to ask you to elaborate on how caregiving and domestic labour are separate issues?

      What differentiates caregiving and domestic work? Are they not both performing the same duties?

      Unless you mean the key differentiator is that for caregivers, the work is a necessity, but for domestic labourers it isn’t?

      • @panic
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        2 years ago

        Domestic labour can be a part of caregiving. But domestic workers aren’t performing the duties of a caregiver. Caregivers specifically help disabled, ill and/or injured people with medication, personal hygiene, feeding, going to the toilet, etc.

        The difference would be the type of role the person is performing. A domestic worker (or “maid”) is working as a servant for an entire household. A caregiver works (takes care of) the care receiver.

        There are professional caregivers but the majority of caregivers are unpaid family and friends struggling against the capitalist system.

        Edit: remember that work and labour don’t mean the same thing.