Martha Stewart is clarifying her stance on remote working, and the 81-year-old says she is going “on the rampage” to get people back into the office.
Martha Stewart says remote work prevents work from getting done
The businessman spoke on the subject during a recently published interview shoes news,
While seated, Martha took it upon herself to declare directly, “You can’t possibly get everything done by working three days a week in the office and two days remotely.”
He threw France into the mix, as many people in the country famously take a month – usually August – off work.
“Look at France’s success with their stupidity… you know, off for August, blah blah blah.”
Before moving on, he targeted France, declaring that it was “not a very prosperous country.”
Martha asked again, “Should America Go Down the Drain Because People Don’t Want to Go Back to Work?” Oops!
Too Loaded Celebs Aren’t All About the Work-From-Home Lifestyle
Of course, other wealthy celebrities share this sentiment about the work-from-home gang as well.
As shadow room As previously reported, the Tesla founder and former Twitter CEO Elon Musk Demanded the employees to return to the office.
“Anyone who wants to do remote work must be in the office for at least 40 hours per week (and I do mean *minimum*) or Tesla must leave. That’s less than what we ask of factory workers. Is.”
Elon also pointed out, “The ‘office’ should be a main Tesla office, not a remote branch office related to job duties.”
RELATED: Elon Musk calls remote Tesla workers ‘pretending to work’ and demands all employees return to the office
Elon told his detractors once they started reacting on Twitter to “use an archaic concept”. “Must pretend to work somewhere else.”
they should pretend to work somewhere else
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 1, 2022
mayor of new york city Eric Adams was also an outspoken opponent of working from home, as he decried the idea of ”staying”[ing] Back in February 2022. Home in your pajamas all day. However, he recently allowed many city employees to work remotely two days a week, wall street journal,