On Job Duties, Burnout, and Being "Grateful for the Opportunity"
Workplaces pay people $15 or less per hour and expect the equivalent of a $40 per hour employee's work rate and workload in return with no "guff" from those employees.
Workplaces pay people $40 per hour and expect people to give them the equivalent of absolute subservience while being willing to have no boundaries around separating their work from their life and needs with no backtalk or asking for a lighter load.
Neither situation is equitable.
No position should ever feel so overwhelming that people are in a constant state of burnout.
No position should ever be set up in a way that makes employees feel like if they speak up about how their role overwhelms them, they'll lose their job or face retaliation.
No one should be made to feel they should be "grateful for an opportunity," so they should "earn their pay" and overwork when companies could take the time to distribute job duties among multiple positions to mitigate burnout.
Companies need to quit actin' as if they own us when we agree to work for them and have the right to drain us.
Companies need to build more equitable job descriptions that factor in what a legitimately reasonable workload looks like for a position.
And that has nothing to do with whether you're paying someone $15 or $40 an hour.