When Did White-Collar Work Start to Look So Bleak?
littlexsparkee
20 points
16 comments
June 15, 2026
Related Discussions
Found 5 related stories in 110.5ms across 10,715 title embeddings via pgvector HNSW
- Roughly a quarter of American professionals hit a wall in their careers charliebwrites · 169 pts · June 01, 2026 · 54% similar
- White-Collar Workers Are Rebelling Against AI – 80% Refuse Adoption Mandates sarimkx · 29 pts · April 09, 2026 · 53% similar
- White-collar AI apocalypse narrative is just another bullshit mmiliauskas · 59 pts · March 23, 2026 · 53% similar
- The Morale of Tech Workers Is Plunging as Layoffs Mount bookofjoe · 11 pts · May 25, 2026 · 50% similar
- Young Graduates Face the Grimmest Job Market in Years koolba · 64 pts · March 24, 2026 · 49% similar
Discussion Highlights (4 comments)
JohnFen
For me, the first noticeable encroachment of bleakness was when we stopped having offices and started having to work in cubes.
cratermoon
In the 80s, after you graduated from college and got a white-collar job, you probably didn't have much in student loans, and if you did, you could be assured you'd pay them off in a couple of years. Then you'd have money saved up to put down on a house. If you wanted you could get married and have kids. Take two weeks vacation every summer to the shore or the mountains. You expected to be able to afford to put your kids through college, and after 35 years or so of service, you could retire with a pension and a gold Rolex as thanks for your service.
bag_boy
I don’t know if bleak is the right word, but keeping up with the pace of change with LLMs is exhausting.
tocs3
Bob Cratchit had a hard time as a clerk.