RhubarbCrumble wrote: » If I don't go to work, there's no one else there to do it and it has to be done next day. Given that I have to be in set places on set days, not a good idea. If I ring in sick the only person it causes a problem for is myself
tenton wrote: » or people in soft jobs, according to all evidence. "PUBLIC servants took twice as much sick leave as private sector workers last year\"http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/sickies-in-public-service-twice-that-of-private-sector-26798438.html
El_Dangeroso wrote: » I'm feeling under the weather today, think I'm coming down with a cold - not hungover if that's what you were thinking:) Not super sick, but definitely ache-y and slowed down and mostly thrown down on the couch listlessly. Currently debating whether to go into work tomorrow if I still feel this bad. If I feel worse it's a definite, but currently I'm borderline. How sick do you need to be before you call in sick? Are you the 'soldier-on-until-imminent-death' type or do you have a duvet day at the first sign of a runny nose?
TheBody wrote: » I don't get paid unless I'm at work, so I'm one of those 'soldier-on-until-imminent-death' people you refer to.
galwayrush wrote: » It's not an option for the self employed.
WileyCoyote wrote: » Nobody should get paid for not being at work.
Denerick wrote: » Don't understand the controversy. If you're ill, don't go into work. Are we ****ing slaves? The vast majority of us work so that a tiny minority can enjoy the trappings of wealth whilst we life at a subsistence or quasi subsistence level. The greatest enemy of the working man is the working man's warped sense of ethics.
woodoo wrote: » Too many steaks.
HondaSami wrote: » Get up and go into work, go home sick if you have too, looks much better than phoning/texting in sick.
Duggys Housemate wrote: » It's always an option for the self employed to not be self employed. Join PAYE.
Odysseus wrote: » Ah come on, a total blanket ban on all sick leave? On what grounds?
tenton wrote: » Communism has failed in any country it was tried in. Besides, two wrongs do not make a right. Quadrupling or multiplying by a factor of 10 the number of sick days lost in the economy would not help the economy.
CarrickMcJoe wrote: » On people who regard sick leave as an extension on their holidays!
Duggys Housemate wrote: » What has "communism" got to do with anything I said?.
tenton wrote: » you wrote "It's always an option for the self employed to not be self employed. Join PAYE." silly comment
Duggys Housemate wrote: » And then I said - what has that gotto do with communism. No point quoting me again. Explain why think you the PAYE sector is communist.
Duggys Housemate wrote: » The OP is sick.
tenton wrote: » what would every self employed person leaving self employment achieve? That type of society failed in case you never noticed.
tenton wrote: » Correction, The OP thinks he / she is "coming down with a cold". They must have a soft job if they think they can get paid for not working while they think they are coming down with a cold
kfallon wrote: » I work for a very large Financial Services Company and I have never heard of them mentioning absenteeism. In fact a mate of mine was out for months with depression and they went out of their way to integrate him back into the company. Think he even got a bit of a bonus in his first month back as it was annual bonus time in the company even tho he hadn't been there for about 9-10 months.
Duggys Housemate wrote: » I used to be self employed, now i dont. It easy.
tenton wrote: » so is getting paid for dubious sickies which some people advocate. Its easy. go for it.
Best username ever wrote: » Listen, I work in in a team of elite engineers, the grades go on time spent in the company, say 6 of us spend 90%' of our time there, the other four get 100% of their pay rises for 100% activity. It's not a great system but it roots out the useless fúckers.