#1 Imagine A World Where We Worked To Build Beautiful Communities, Share With Our Neighbors, And Everyone Had What They Needed To Thrive

The No Hour Work Week has 14k followers and a pretty clear mission. The 'I Hate My Job' profile picture is probably all you need to know about their view on the modern work culture. Yet it's not just about being funny on the Internet. The page's creator(s) seem to be pretty passionate about the anti-work movement.
They share various resources for educating yourself on it in their bio. One of the links is to Bob Black's 1985 essay 'The Abolition of Work.' In this essay, the author posits that "no one should ever work" because it's "the source of nearly all the misery in the world." The alternative isn't to do nothing; Black suggests that it's 'forced labor' and 'compulsory production' that are bad.
#6 The 20th Century Labor Movement Gave Us 8 Hour Days, The 21st Century Labor Movement Will Bring Us 3 Day Weekends

So what should people do if they don't work? According to Black, it's play, which includes "festivity, creativity, conviviality, commensality, and maybe even art." But not the play as we understand it in terms of child's play. "I call for a collective adventure in generalized joy and freely interdependent exuberance," Black proclaims.
For him, the problem with modern work stems from the fact that most contemporary jobs are meaningless and just plain unnecessary. And he isn't alone in this rhetoric. The rise of the anti-work movement in recent years has similar ideas behind it. It's that many contemporary white-collar workers are asking: "What's the purpose of work?"
#7 I Had To Wake Up Every Day At 5:30 Am To Get To High School… It’s All Part Of Our Conditioning To Be Chronically Exhausted Dutiful Workers We All Deserve Better

#8 Just Looking For The Least Annoying Way To Afford Food And Shelter

For some, this might be nothing new. If you're familiar with the r/antiwork subreddit (and our content about it), you probably already know a lot of this stuff. But still, what is the end goal for the people in the anti-work movement? It's not to abolish working altogether. Proponents believe that they should self-organize and work only as much as they need. They don't believe in creating excess capital or goods because it requires working longer hours than needed.
#11 File This Under: Take All Of Your Vacation Time Commit Time Theft Do The Least Required Of You To Do Your Job

The anti-work movement, just like Black's ideas, has roots in the anarchist and socialist economic critique. The proponents argue that the modern workplace only "enforces wage slavery and deprives workers of the full value of their output," as Brian O'Connor writes for the BBC.
#13 ***relatable Content Alert*** This Is True For All Workplaces And Industries

#14 At This Rate This Is Going We Should Be Demanding Even More Than $24

Other critics of the modern work culture opt for a different strategy. One of them is Trisha Hersey, also known as The Nap Bishop. Her book Rest Is Resistance draws from Black liberation to oppose Grind Culture, capitalism, and white supremacy. "I don't want to be under the guise of believing that I have to be productive in order to be deemed worthy," Hersey talked about the central idea behind her book to NPR.
#16 Memes For Anyone Who Has Had To Lie When Asked “Why Do You Want This Job?”

The first tenet of The Nap Ministry is that rest is a form of resistance against white supremacy and capitalism. But it's about so much more than just taking naps. Hersey says that the current capitalist system doesn't see people as people; it only looks for profit.














