kindkit: A late-Victorian futuristic zeppelin. (Airship)
kindkit ([personal profile] kindkit) wrote2014-12-11 07:29 pm
Entry tags:

I haven't even done it yet and I already feel guilty

I really hate it when people are required to work on major holidays, unless their jobs are crucial to the health or safety or others. In general I disapprove of supermarkets, restaurants, etc. in the US being open on Christmas.*

And yet.

The Imitation Game is supposed to open nationwide in the US on Christmas day. Since I don't have any Christmas plans apart from Yuletide, I'm extremely tempted.

And then there's Yuletide. Judging by past performance, I may not have a working internet connection on Christmas day. I would hate not to be able to read my Yuletide fic on Christmas, especially since I'll probably have to work the next day. But Starbucks will be open.

If you listen carefully, you can hear my principles creaking under the strain.

(If I left a big tip at Starbucks, would that make it less wrong?)



*Obviously this doesn't apply to, say, a kosher bakery. Nor to any owner-operated small business whose owner chooses to personally work on a holiday. I'm thinking of larger businesses, and also of the fact that where I live, the overwhelming majority of people are at least culturally Christian and would probably quite like to have the day off.
executrix: (bahhumbug)

[personal profile] executrix 2014-12-12 04:20 am (UTC)(link)
If you stay home, the people assigned to that shift at Starbuck's are still going to have to work. I think it'll be madly crowded and the people who work will get good tips on top of holiday pay.

Sometimes people *have* to work because they don't have vacation days or personal time and can't trade with someone else, and sometimes it means they can't enjoy themselves or spend time with their families, but in any organization there's usually a balance between people who don't want to work the holiday and people who *do.* I write an arbitration newsletter, and there are a lot more grievances brought by people who weren't allowed to bid on holiday shifts than people who had to work unwanted overtime on holidays.