- cross-posted to:
- wired@ibbit.at
- cross-posted to:
- wired@ibbit.at
WIRED obtained notes from a Social Security Administration management meeting, where employees pressed leadership on plans for the agency.
As the U.S. government shutdown stretches into its second month, agency leaders at the Social Security Administration (SSA) are becoming increasingly worried about how the key government department, which provides benefits to roughly 70 million Americans, will continue to operate.
During the call, managers spoke candidly about staffers who can no longer afford to drive to work and a crisis of confidence in the agency.
“People are coming to me saying they cannot put gas in their car and they cannot afford to come to work anymore, and they’ll need to get other jobs,” said one employee on the call. “Pretty soon they won’t be able to afford to work at the agency.”
“My heart’s breaking because I hear all this stuff across the country,” Sriubas responded. “We had to close an office in California today because we didn’t have enough people to open the doors … Nobody wants to close an office … But I also understand that people have to live their lives and they have limited means to do that when you’re now missing your second full paycheck.”


Second paycheck?
How does this get this far?
After not being paid the first check and no EBT we should be in the goddamn streets by now
What the fuck is wrong in the United States?
we should all be staying out of work and rioting and participating in civil disobediences
When Roe v Wade expected more too but we just silently bent over saying but one more vote for our team will win it
Because people are scared. If you don’t show up to work and cite “General strike” or “political protest” as your reason, you won’t have a job when you return for 90% of people.
No job means no food and no home. SNAP/EBT are being cut so you can’t rely on the social safety net to survive. Being homeless means you’re free game to get snatched off the street and shipped to El Salvador in an unmarked van.
The average American is in a vise. Many federal workers now don’t have much left to lose because they aren’t being paid anyway, most everyone else is just trying to survive.
We’ve been coddled all our lives. We as a country need to have to affect us personally to wake us up to it. And when we wake up, all hell will break loose; for that I’m sure.
I kind of doubt us citizens ever stand up. If they do, it’ll probably be against one another rather than against billionaires.
I guess we will find out. Hopefully sooner rather than any later than it’s already been.
~We certainly live in interesting times.~
2nd FULL paycheck. It’s almost 2.5 paychecks actually.
The fact that after two paychecks, government employees are looking for new work says a lot about how fucking underpaid government employees are paid, how many are living paycheck to paycheck, and how there is a best a threadbare social net.
I mean, you don’t get paid everyday, missed paydays are the metric of pain people are feeling.
While this sounds great, it only works if a very large % of people do it. And there is no way to know how many will actually do it.
It’s similar to 20 people standing in front of a guy with a knife. If they rush him, maybe 1 will die, others might have some injuries. But they will easily win. Yet people are programmed for self preservation. It’s literally in the dna. So you need a real catalyst. Someone or several someones that people believe will be followed. Not just a rando on the internet.
Another commenter for on another post found academic studies that support the fact that less than 3% are needed
But needed for what. If it’s the same thing I have seen before, it covers what is what is needed to disrupt the economy enough to matter. But to get that 3% to actually do it, you need a lot more in reality. The people will need to feel like everyone is doing it in order to take the chance. This is more about perception than reality when it comes to if a person will strike or not.