2026年6月6日 星期六

iPad 的反叛:當「Netflix」成為職工福利

 iPad 的反叛:當「Netflix」成為職工福利

在一個普通人連糊口都感到吃力的時代,一群年薪高達 7 萬 4 千英鎊(約 74 萬港元)的倫敦地鐵司機,為我們上了一堂生動的「當代傲慢」課。倫敦交通局(TfL)為了推進數字化改革,好意向這群高薪專業人士配發工作用的 iPad,期望提高效率。你可能會以為接下來的討論會聚焦於數據安全、班表管理或是訊號訓練。然而,這場會議最終演變成一場只有受到強大工會保護的勞工,才演得出的鬧劇。

根據《Evening Standard》爆料,在某次平板電腦發放會議上,工會代表對管理層發出的抱怨並非關於工作流程,而是理直氣壯地抗議:「這 iPad 螢幕太小了!根本沒辦法看 Netflix!你們應該換個大一點的給我們。」這一刻,我們看見了現代勞工運動的「尖端水準」——他們不再討論如何服務乘客,而是爭論雇主提供的設備是否足以滿足他們上班時「追劇」的需求。

這深刻揭示了人性中關於「舒適度」的貪婪本質。當人類一旦習慣了某種程度的特權,就不再視其為運氣,而將其視為理所當然的「基本人權」。如果下一年的福利沒有比今年更好,我們便會產生一種發自內心的、燃燒般的憤怒,覺得自己遭到了壓迫。我們建立了一個過度保護的制度,在那裡,「工作」這個詞早已與「職業素養」脫鉤。

這是機構保護主義最陰暗的一面。當一個組織大到不能倒、硬到不能改時,員工不再關心未來,只會關心哪裡能找到最舒適的地方「打混」。這是一個悲哀的寓言:當社會契約被無止盡的索求取代,勞動價值便隨之崩解。如果職場上最大的困擾,竟然是公司配發的平板電腦螢幕比例不夠大,那麼你不是脫離了現實,你只是住進了自己打造的鍍金牢籠裡。別以為這只是個別的笑話,這是一個時代走向平庸與怠惰的縮影。


The iPad Rebellion: The Unbearable Heaviness of Being a Subway Driver

 

The iPad Rebellion: The Unbearable Heaviness of Being a Subway Driver

In a world where the average worker is lucky to scrape together a living, a group of London Underground drivers—each pulling in a comfortable £74,000 per year—has provided us with a masterclass in modern entitlement. Transport for London (TfL), in a desperate, optimistic attempt to modernize its archaic operations, offered these highly paid professionals iPads as part of a push for digitization. You might expect a conversation about data security, shift scheduling, or signal training. Instead, the dialogue descended into the kind of farce that only a protected, unionized labor force can produce.

According to internal forums leaked to the Evening Standard, the response from a union representative regarding the new work-issued tablets was not about productivity, but about screen real estate. The complaint? "The screen is too small! We can't watch Netflix on this!" It is a staggering moment of clarity. Here we have the vanguard of the modern labor movement, essentially arguing that their employer-provided tools are insufficient for their primary daily objective: binge-watching television during their shifts.

Human nature is defined by the "ratchet effect" of comfort. Once we attain a certain level of privilege, we stop viewing it as a fortunate circumstance and start viewing it as a baseline right. If we don’t get a slightly better perk next year, we feel—with genuine, burning indignation—that we are being oppressed. We have built a system so insulated from the harsh realities of the competitive market that the concept of "doing a job" has been completely detached from the idea of "professionalism."

This is the darker side of institutional protectionism. When an organization becomes too powerful to fail and too stubborn to reform, its employees stop looking toward the future and start looking for the most comfortable place to snooze. It is a cautionary tale of what happens when the social contract is replaced by an endless demand for more. We aren’t just looking at lazy employees; we are looking at the natural outcome of a culture that has replaced the "work ethic" with the "entitlement ethic." If your biggest problem at work is the aspect ratio of your company-issued iPad, you haven’t just lost touch with reality—you are living in a gilded cage of your own making.


商店街的搶劫時代:當秩序崩塌,全民買單

 

商店街的搶劫時代:當秩序崩塌,全民買單

在現代英國的商店街上,店門口掛的招牌恐怕不該寫「營業中」,而該寫「歡迎零元購」。向來保持企業優雅形象的馬莎百貨(M&S)高層,最近不得不聯名寫信給倫敦市長薩迪克·汗(Sadiq Khan)與內政大臣馬曼婷(Shabana Mahmood),卑微地請求政府正視日益猖獗的店舖盜竊問題。零售總監 Thinus Keeve 的抱怨簡直是字字血淚:當犯罪被默許,當執法淪為口號,商界根本無力招架。

這是人性中陰暗面失控的必然結果。一個社會如果喪失了對「後果」的敬畏,將犯罪視為某種「被害者無感」的娛樂,那麼貨架被清空只是遲早的事。這是一場社會契約的慢速瓦解。但崩潰不僅止於收銀台,英國零售商協會(BRC)行政總裁 Helen Dickinson 一語道破殘酷真相:沒有所謂的「免費犯罪」。猖獗的竊盜成本,加上那種對企業極度不友善的官僚政策,最終全部轉嫁到了普羅大眾的購物籃裡。

歷史上有太多文明不是亡於外敵,而是亡於內部秩序的鬆弛。當政府無法履行保護商人、維持法治的最基本職責時,這個政權的根基就已經鏽蝕了。我們現在面臨的「生活成本危機」,早已不僅僅是全球能源價格波動的問題,而是我們正在被迫支付一筆高昂的「混亂稅」。我們花錢買的每一條麵包,都在為政府的無能買單,為那些寧願高談社會議題、卻不願在街角派駐一名警察的官僚買單。如果你想知道為什麼你的社區正在凋零,別怪經濟大環境,去看看那些絕望的店主,和那些大搖大擺走出店門的竊賊吧。這就是我們選擇縱容秩序崩塌後的代價。


The High Street Heist: When Order Collapses, Everyone Pays

 

The High Street Heist: When Order Collapses, Everyone Pays

In the modern British High Street, the sign hanging in the window should no longer say "Open for Business." It should say, "Open for Looting." The leadership at Marks & Spencer, normally the picture of corporate reserve, recently fired off a desperate letter to London Mayor Sadiq Khan and Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood. They weren't asking for subsidies; they were begging for the most basic service a government is expected to provide: the maintenance of order. Retail director Thinus Keeve put it plainly: when the state treats shoplifting as a victimless hobby rather than a crime, the business community is left defenseless.

This is the inevitable consequence of a society that has lost its grip on the concept of consequences. When we prioritize the feelings of the criminal over the property rights of the shopkeeper, we shouldn't be surprised when the shelves are cleared out by mid-afternoon. It is a slow-motion unraveling of the social contract. But the rot doesn't stop at the checkout counter. Helen Dickinson of the British Retail Consortium reminds us that there is no such thing as a "free" crime. The staggering costs of rampant theft, combined with a regulatory environment that seems allergic to growth, are being baked directly into the price of your weekly groceries.

History is littered with empires that fell not because of external invaders, but because they lost the internal will to enforce their own laws. When a government fails to protect its merchants, it signals that it has abandoned its primary function. We have arrived at a point where the "cost of living crisis" is no longer just about global energy prices; it is about the local cost of lawlessness. We are paying a "chaos tax" on every loaf of bread we buy, funding the apathy of a political class that would rather sermonize about social issues than actually stand a police officer on a street corner. If you want to know why your neighborhood is dying, don't look at the economy—look at the empty hands of the shopkeepers and the open doors of the thieves.



勒死市中心的絞索:當官僚主義成為經濟的葬禮

 勒死市中心的絞索:當官僚主義成為經濟的葬禮

如果你想看墳場,不必去荒野,到你家附近的商店街走走就夠了。馬莎百貨主席阿奇·諾曼(Archie Norman)近日發出了極為罕見的嚴厲警告:英國現時的商業環境正處於「反增長」狀態,政府的高稅收與繁文縟節,簡直是在勒死全英國的企業。當巨頭馬莎百貨還在竭力「乘風破浪」時,那些支撐城鎮靈魂的中小型行家,早已成了這一波官僚政策下的犧牲品。

不只是馬莎,英國產業界的老闆們對現任政府的憤怒已來到臨界點。全英最大酒吧集團 Stonegate 的老闆 David McDowall 在 LinkedIn 上怒斥,年輕人失業率飆升,正是政府「懲罰創造就業」的鐵證。Next 的老闆 Lord Wolfson 更直指政府正死踩著「經濟煞車掣」,那些原本適合年輕人入行的入門級職位,正面臨斷崖式的崩塌。就連 Currys 的老闆 Alex Baldock 也警告,盲目擴張勞工權益,最終會殺死大量兼職機會。諾曼主席甚至刻薄地稱這些勞工改革為「國家負擔不起的政治奢侈品」。

人性總有一種荒謬的傾向,熱衷於建立那些最終會窒息自己的體制。我們把「聘僱員工」這個最簡單的商業行為,變成了一場充滿法律風險的耐力測試。政府往往將企業視為取之不盡的電池,以為可以無止境地索求,卻忘了電池一旦耗盡,所有的燈火都會熄滅。

這場危機揭示了官僚主義最醜陋的一面:政客們為了展現「保障權益」的道德姿態,卻無視了一個最冷酷的現實——如果沒有健康運作的企業,所謂的勞工權益根本就是空中樓閣。我們正在見證一場由政策催生的經濟衰退,這不是在為人民謀福利,而是一場政客為了自我滿足,寧願犧牲全社會生存空間的「政治奢侈」。市中心變成了「死城」,這就是我們用理智換取政客虛榮後的代價。


The Great Stranglehold: How Bureaucracy Is Killing the High Street

 

The Great Stranglehold: How Bureaucracy Is Killing the High Street

If you want to see a graveyard, don't visit a cemetery—take a walk down your local High Street. Marks & Spencer Chairman Archie Norman, a man who usually keeps his composure, has issued a warning that sounds less like a corporate update and more like a funeral dirge. He observes that the British commercial environment is currently "anti-growth," strangled by a lethal combination of punitive taxation and bureaucratic red tape. While a titan like M&S might have the muscle to weather the gale, the small businesses that give a town its character are being systematically wiped out.

It is not just M&S. The leaders of British industry are currently in a state of open revolt against the government's policy path. Stonegate Group’s David McDowall points out the glaring irony of surging youth unemployment: it is the direct result of a system that punishes job creation. Why hire a novice when the regulatory cost of doing so is treated like a state-sanctioned liability? Lord Wolfson of Next has warned that the government is essentially slamming on the "economic brakes" with new employment legislation, leading to a catastrophic decline in entry-level roles. Even Alex Baldock of Currys has signaled that expanding worker rights to such an extent will simply kill the part-time economy, which serves as the lifeblood for students and entry-level laborers.

Humanity has a peculiar talent for building systems that suffocate the very people they claim to protect. We have transformed the simple act of "hiring someone" into a high-stakes legal endurance test. Governments, in their infinite wisdom, treat businesses like infinite batteries—they assume they can keep drawing power without ever considering that if you drain the battery completely, the lights go out for everyone.

Norman rightly labeled these current labor "reforms" as a "political indulgence" that the nation simply cannot afford. It is the ultimate expression of bureaucratic narcissism: prioritizing the moral signaling of "rights" while ignoring the cold, hard reality that without a healthy business, there are no jobs to have rights within. We are choosing to oversee the managed decline of our economy, all in the name of policy goals that prioritize the comfort of the legislator over the survival of the merchant.


學歷泡沫:高等教育的集體幻滅

 

學歷泡沫:高等教育的集體幻滅

我們花了大半個世紀打造了一座高等教育的聖殿,卻在今天猛然發現,這座神壇背後空無一物。根據最新的英國社會態度調查(British Social Attitudes),英國民眾對大學學歷價值的信心已經跌至歷史谷底。不到十年的時間裡,認為學位「值得」的人數直接砍半;三分之一的英國人公開承認,大學教育既耗時又燒錢,完全不值一顧,這一比例比起 2018 年幾乎翻了一倍。

這不僅僅是一場信心危機,這是一場學歷泡沫的集體破滅。多年來,我們向年輕人推銷著一個美麗的謊言:以為學位是通往精英階級的黃金門票。我們盲目擴張招生規模,把大學從追求真理的殿堂,變成了中產階級的保姆中心,同時還讓一代人背負了難以翻身的債務。

人性中最陰暗的弱點,在這場騙局中展露無遺。我們是渴望符號的部落動物,而學位成了現代社會最昂貴的標籤。我們誤以為那張證書就是能力的保證,卻忘了現實世界的審計從不留情。當職場充斥著過剩的文憑,而學費成長速度遠遠拋開薪資漲幅時,謊言終於被戳破。

我們終於意識到,我們花了大把銀子換來的,只是一張證明自己能在學校體制內虛耗四年、忍受官僚體制的廢紙。我們為了虛榮的校名,犧牲了學徒制的紮實與謀生技能的磨練。當一個國家的三分之一人口都認為他們的「教育」是一場失敗的投資,這不只是對政策的抨擊,更是對這場集體詐騙的覺醒。大學體制已成為我們集體盲從的墓碑,而清醒過來的公眾,終於開始轉身離去。