It is shocking and unethical to not have sick days, because it means that most sick people go to work anyway and infect their coworkers.
Agreed. And not just for that reason. Some people get to take vacations in fun places; other people get to stay home sick or care for a sick child. They should definitely be separate entities.
As a consultant myself, I'm surprised that there are so many people who think that if they have fed you, they have paid you. Tongue
Well, I'll have to admit that job pays pretty well. Much better than my newspaper staff job, anyway. But if you count the benefits from my newspaper job -- I don't get sick pay, but dental and PTO and 401K match -- the gap narrows. So the lavish parties and dinners and lunches and team outings are a nice little perk in the contract job.
Newspapers never do any of that stuff, at least not anymore. My editor took me out to lunch on my first day at work and, although the union holds potlucks and a once-a-year holiday party with cash bar but free hors d'oeuvres, that first-day lunch was the last bite of food the company itself ever provided.
OTOH, he has to work the day after Thanksgiving, when a lot of us have a holiday and get a four-day weekend.
I've never had that Friday off. Newspaper reporting is one of those jobs that at least somebody has to be there every day to do. So a few people work on Thursday (and get paid time and a half), and everybody (who doesn't take PTO) works on Friday, but it's usually pretty slow.
I don't shop Black Friday, so I don't care about that. But the real importance of having that day off is so that people with out-of-town families can be with their loved ones on Thanksgiving. I've spent many a Thanksgiving with friends or friends' families, which is fine. But now I think about my poor mom during the years both my brother and I lived far away, when she would have been alone.

Yeah, we get a good amount. Here is the banking holiday schedule.
Jan 1st (New Year's Day)
Jan 15th (or so - 3rd Monday in January - Martin Luther King Jr. Day)
Feb 15th (or so - 3rd Monday in February - President's Day)
May 28th (or so - Last Monday in May - Memorial Day)
July 4th - Independence Day
August 28th (or so - Last Monday in August, or first in September - Labor Day)
October 11th (or so - Columbus Day)
November 11th (Veteran's Day)
November 23rd (or so, third Thursday in November - Thanksgiving
December 25th - Christmas day.
I recently applied for a job with the State of Minnesota. I haven't heard from them, so I assume I'm not getting it. That job posting said it came with 11 holidays. I count 10 for you, Chuck. I wonder what the other would be? The day after Thanksgiving would be the logical one, but it doesn't seem like a typically government-mandated holiday.
The main reason I wanted that job (besides the fact that it sounded fun) is that it came with a pension. Oh, anything for a pension.
We also have leave for sick children. When my son was little it was 60 days per year per child that the parents could stay home with a sick child. I don't know if the number has changed since then.
We finally got that in 1993 through the Family Leave Act. You can take time off to care for a sick relative. Unpaid of course. And as I recall it barely squeaked through Congress.
So that's fine for people on salary (except the sacrifice of PTO). But if you're an hourly wage or contract worker and stay home with a sick child, you don't get paid for that day. And many people can't afford to take even a day off, let alone more if the child has a lengthy or chronic illness.
The only explanation I can give for these ridiculous U.S. policies is that Republicans hate women and poor people, and Democrats are too weak to combat them. That's a
slight oversimplification, of course.
I'm sure you could dig deeper and form a theory involving America's classic idealization of "rugged individualism" or something. Years ago, when I wrote about the unfairness of European vs. U.S. vacations, there were a few different explanations offered but the most credible one was that Europe has stronger labor unions. (That's why the state job I mentioned had such good benefits -- government employees have among the strongest remaining unions.) But again, that's related to America's stupid fondness for rugged individualism vs. collective action and people supporting each other and helping those in need.
I'm not even sure where that "rugged individualism" thing even came from. Andrew Jackson propaganda? Old Davy Crockett mythologiy? Jeff, maybe you can elaborate.