Xequecal wrote:
I don't feel it's something to be ashamed of. That doesn't make it any easier to suffer everyone's derision. I'm sure you know or at least know of people who have a general disdain for people in "McJobs", make jokes at their expense, insult their intelligence, and generally don't treat them like human beings.
Your statements are in direct contrast with the idea that you don't feel it's something to be ashamed of, even without the statements that you'd be less ashamed to take welfare than work at McD's.
Dude, I've worked since I was 15, guess what kind of jobs a 15 year old can get. Guess which 16 year-olds were buying their own car and taking girls out with their own money. I felt absolutely no shame (or embarrassment, RD), especially when I saw the guys who were "above" working the places I worked getting money from their mommies to pay for what I was selling.
Hopwin wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
I don't see anything in the latter two which reflect on Xeq -except that he is a rational observer of human motivation.
I don't take each statement someone makes individually, I use as many of their remarks as I can to create a picture of their views. Based on his repeated statements, I see someone who would take welfare over a minimum wage job - someone who sees working for their pay as being more shameful than collecting welfare. YMMV
As a sane, rational human being I would too. If Bill Gates swung by tomorrow with a check for 2 million bucks and said you can have this if you quit your job guess what i would do?
You'd collect welfare rather than getting a job? I don't imagine you'd give the $2 million away so you could go on welfare and not work, that wouldn't be very sane or rational. It would allow me to retire about 5-7 years earlier than I'd planned, however that's not really the same as taking money because you'd rather be on the dole than work.
Xequecal wrote:
LadyKate wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
I'm sorry yo feel that honest work is something to be ashamed of.
This.
I went from having an awesome career as an IT consultant for a university with a nice cushy salary with benefits in a professional environment, to working M-F for barely minimum wage as a waitress at a roadhouse.
Is it demeaning? Well, yeah, it's a little humiliating. But am I ashamed? Nope. I have a job in a town and an economy where even minimum wage jobs are hard to come by. At least I'm working.
I've never collected a welfare check, food stamps, or had to work for minimum wage to make ends meet. That said, I will never forget my experience working for AMC as a teenager. Obviously at that point I didn't need the job, but I had co-workers who did need their jobs, and I've never met a group of people so miserable. Even the ones who had credible plans for the future had emotional problems. They got no respect from anyone. Many customers showed them no respect, up to openly insulting them within earshot, and you could tell that it affected them. They got paid the same age as us, (maybe $0.25/hr more) and had the same official duties as us, but the managers gave them all the shittiest, nastiest work because they knew they couldn't afford to complain, in contrast to the teenage part timer workers like me who might have walked out if we'd been asked to do it. I remember once I accidentally threw out a crucial part of the popcorn machine due to a misunderstanding. (they asked me to throw away a part that was getting replace, and I threw away both that part and an important connector) Did they make me, the one who **** up, go through the piles and piles of garbage to find the piece? No, they reassigned that task to one of the minimum wage 20-somethings barely getting by. That made me feel terrible, but I can only imagine what that must do for the self-esteem of the other guy. That you're so worthless that the part-time teenage employee who doesn't need to work is worth more than you.
It made you feel terrible, just not terrible enough to get the piece yourself, right?
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko