Yes, the communists, famous for not doing much of anything.
In the year 2021, absolutely. This isn't connected to 20th century genocide, it's connected to reddit. Reddit is great because it's got a community for basically anything, but it's also terrible because it maintains an anonymous yet enforceable hierarchy , and that system has lead to communists and pedophiles becoming many of the most influential people on the site. They don't do anything of consequence on reddit, other than try and push their insanity to the front page so that regular people will stumble into it and potentially be corrupted. r/antiwork is one of their babies. Hence, this probably wasn't printed by communists, but by people manipulated by communists.
What statements do you disagree with?
In the manifesto shown? Nothing at all until the very end, "learn more: reddit.com/r/antiwork"
"Antiwork" is another one of those things like "defund the police". "Defund the police" genuinely meant "abolish the police" and was advocated for by communists, but the phrase was coopted to mean something much more reasonable because abolishing the police is nonsense and nobody likes communists. "Antiwork" was communists talking about how they want to end the current conception of "work" entirely, but got coopted to mean something much more reasonable because "ending work" is stupid nonsense and nobody likes communists.
Like, for comparison.
Printed Manifesto: You have a right to discuss your wages... you should demand a raise if you're being paid less or find a new employer... poverty wages exist because people are willing to work for them. All of that is about improving the lot of workers within the current system.
r/antiwork: " A subreddit for those who want to end work ." " We're against jobs as they are structured under capitalism and the state: Against exploitative economic relations, against hierarchical social relations at the workplace. "
The receipt is talking like most of you here would, I'm sure most of you would advocate for employees receiving fair and equal compensation, which is a reasonable stance to take.
r/antiwork was set up by seanchaidh-style communists, who protest the existence of "employees" and "employers" as concepts.
That's the disconnect here.