Of course they don't want to make it less exploitative. They want to make it serve their convenience even more by giving them more freedom to control their workers without the government or workers sticking their noses in. I suppose there are ways this could end up somehow less exploitative, but it would be incidental to what benefitted bosses more rather than an intrinsic design choice.Of course, it's exploitative, but Musk and Vivek want to reform it too and I am guessing what they mean is to make it less exploitive
In theory, sure, Russia can join the EU, in the long term.Invading countries like this is generally a bad thing, but if everyone is doing it, you would be a sucker not to as a state/country/governmental entity with land. Also, Russia should be a long-term goal of the EU if they are rational actors, and I have asked for Russia to join the EU in the past.
The problem is that Russia is a wildly different state with very different ideas about the world and its place in it, plus is very large to throw its weight around. It wouldn't work smoothly as part of the EU - would very likely bring the EU to a shuddering halt. It's already been a challenge bringing in the ex-Communist Eastern European states; some have adapted well but others less so.
Russia still sees itself a great power whose natural role is dominating states all around it - and with crude brutality. It's just not compatible with the EU project and mindset. From the leaders down to the people, it functions too differently, thinks too differently. Perhaps if it had taken a different path in the 2000s and moved towards rule of law, amity and democracy, I might be optimistic. It takes generations - literally, generations - to get a nation's people accustomed to democracy, but Putin has reset it to autocracy, militarism, totalitarianism akin to the Soviet Union.