• plyth@feddit.org
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    3 days ago

    Do you see how you avoid seeing an opportunity? Pitching to the business you work for can create other benefits, like making yourself visible.

    • PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      Do you see how delusionally optimistic you are?

      Pick an average job like mechanic and an average obstacle like access to mental healthcare. How do you think a garage is going to spin off a mental healthcare business? Why do you think they’d want to? Why do think their boss would even listen to them, let alone appreciate the pitch?
      So not at work then, how do you think a mechanic would get access to the knowledge of running a business? Where do you think they’d get the connections to raise capital with the average person’s credit?

      If you work somewhere that you could pitch your own obstacle to your boss as a business opportunity, you’re in the 1% access to opportunities.
      If you have the ability to start your own business to solve your own obstacle, then you’re in the 1% access to opportunities.

      The advice just doesn’t apply to the vast majority of obstacles for the vast majority of people, and telling people that their inability to capitalize is a moral failing is evil, and actively helps evil people.

      • plyth@feddit.org
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        2 days ago

        telling people that their inability to capitalize is a moral failing is evi

        I think there is no moral judgement. There is no obligation to change perspective and especially none to capitalize.

        Do you see hour delusionally optimistic you are?

        That’s the point. Illusions, visions, inspirations, instead of resigning one can allow the brain to look for a solution.

        The advice just doesn’t apply to the vast majority of obstacles for the vast majority of people

        Which is an opportunity for change.

        • PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca
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          2 days ago

          You’re placing the onus on the wrong party. If you tell someone that they just need to take control of a situation in which they have no control, what psychological impact do you think that’ll have on them when they’re inevitably unable to?

          This advice is dangerously naive at best, and victim blaming to support existing power structures at worst.

          • plyth@feddit.org
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            2 days ago

            Nobody ever controls a situation entirely. That allows everybody to control something, and to grow from there, in theory. In reality the situation can be so frustrating that it is not possible. Yet whoever wants to, can try.