If we mock the working class the joke is on us
Copyright © HT Digital Streams Limit all rights reserved. Lounge Nisha Susan 5 min Read April 27, 2025, 08:00 AM is the gap between the rich and the poor of India is now beyond British colonial rule. (IStockphoto) Summary While white-collar workers make videos that mock the working class, it is historical, every right they own, of a working-class fight, I am constantly filled with admiration for people’s ingenuity online-the complex dance routines, the sketches where you play the best people, the direct delivery of the world’s bad. I have a big deadline next month and I did the thing that never helps anyone’s productivity; I deleted the programs that suck me. And there are the smart people. Unfortunately, the last two “pieces” I saw were the opposite of inventive. To be honest, they were the worst (which I meant the worst). In Video No.1, we first see a young woman in a sari, who makes a tired gesture while leaving an apartment, apparently after clearing. What we see next is a mounting of apparent martyrdom – the woman’s employer who puts things away (mats, matte and so on) and other things in an exact angle (bowls, buckets and so on). I have to admit that I didn’t look the whole thing because my eyes rolled out of my head and fell to the floor. Maybe the video is rage-bait, content that was deliberately created to make viewers beat: “Are you a crazy person?” Over and over in the commentary section. I definitely wanted to type: ‘You have so much free time! You have so much free time to make this evil video, because that woman cleaned your home, also under the trays and buckets. ‘ I didn’t, because just to type if I hope to be paid is the new secret to my productivity. Type. Also read: It is never too late to learn lessons about exams in video No.2; We are shown that different people who look important in an office/house under construction, and then we see a painter sitting on the floor with a brush in one hand asking someone on the phone: Do you love me or aren’t you? The commentary was almost completely “Hahaha so funny that they are just like that.” Both of these videos are the opposite of resourceful, and lean as hard as on your old “lazy servant” gag. At this point, you can only indicate the working class in India, as lazy, that you are on hallucinogens. According to the World Bank in 2024, nearly 129 million Indians live on less than £ 181 a day, that is, in extreme poverty. In 2024, we also learned from the World Onequality Lab that the gap between the rich and poor of India is now wider than under British colonial rule. In the event that it all sounds abstract, most families with low and middle income are only one recording in the hospital away from its financially cleared. Should we be surprised that white collar workers are still, say, are unclear about where their position is in the world? Do they not see another CEO demanding that they work 100 hours a week, not smile at their wives, take fewer holidays and understand that they are in a wheel that enriches just someone else? If CEOs had a private social media network (as opposed to public podcasts), they would surely post videos of you who call your girlfriend and their CEO friends, would comment: “Hahaha so funny that they are just that.” They would surely put martyrdom videos of the fonts on the Excel sheets you made. White collar workers who suggest that they are special are in the way of labor rights. We push the working class and congratulate ourselves that we are the most hard -working everywhere – just if we do not have a small mattress magazine, Memory Foam pad to fall in. A pillow that can be depleted in three hospital recordings, but no matter. Historically, every right that the white collar worker owns comes from a working-class fight, including the 8-hour work day, which gives CEOs a result. In many countries, a multinational must have to work hard to reach the dystopian state, where they allegedly promise workers (in a heat wave) that they would take no breaks to drink water or go to the loo. But in India, we have decades of practice of letting workers get kidney disease – across sectors. We live in a country where the government recently announced that it is not practical for locomotive managers to take breaks to eat or use toilets. Train managers must wait until the end of their shift. The Railways Ministry told the Hindu that the “service hours of loco pilots have been reduced from 10 hours to nine since 2016.” Or they have to wait until the government manages to fit a loo into the locomotives. They have managed to fit 883 out of 15,000 since 2018, so it will be a long time to keep it in. And while our white-collar workers make evil videos and drink the hustle and bustle, the working class fights to get labor rights back. Human Rights – Advocate Sudha Bharadwaj wrote a few months ago in the front that although labor rights were shredded in India, “the working class does not stop fighting – whether it streams workers in Mumbai’s Azad Maidan to claim better wages. From Maruti Suzuki who claims to 12 years. locomotive problem does not. @chasingiamb. Download the Mint News app to get daily market updates. More Topics #Features Mint Specials