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We Don't All Have to Be Workaholics

By Anneli Rufus, AlterNet. Posted October 13, 2006.


In such troubled times, shouldn't those of us who can choose our work choose a job that, at worst, doesn't harm anyone and, at best, makes the world a better place?
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Are you reading this at work?

If so, are you sneak-reading it, keeping open a passel of other files that can hide this one at a click? Or not, because your job doesn't involve desks, or because it lets you stay home alone in pajamas, nibbling Cheezits? Or do you have no job because you can't find one or don't need one or don't want one, and you've got another plan?

In a country that hammered its way to world-power status while singing about hauling barges and working on the railroad, what we do with our live-long days is now, for most Americans, more a matter of choice than ever before. Technically, we're free. And in droves we opt out, slack off, shuffle back to our moms' basements. Sooner or later we become wage slaves. Or we don't. And watching clouds sail over the skatepark, or updating that spreadsheet with the latest sales figures, we ask ourselves whether "work" and "ethic" even belong in the same sentence anymore.

Tom Lutz probes 400 years' worth of changing attitudes toward work in "Doing Nothing: A History of Loafers, Loungers, Slackers, and Bums in America" (Farrar Straus & Giroux, 2006). A blues keyboardist and screenwriter who heads a University of California M.F.A. program, Lutz admits that he's conflicted: "My life of sloth blends imperceptibly into my pathological flip side, my workaholism." He and his friends are "all lazy imposters, and we are all workaholic slaves." He was just as torn when, as a boomer rebel at a '70s commune, he loved outwitting The Man yet wondered why he was, basically, breaking rocks in the hot sun.

In tracing the anti-career careers of superstar literary slackers -- Melville, Hawthorne, Wordsworth, Wilde, Whitman, Stevenson, Keats, Kerouac -- Lutz stacks the deck. Writers, especially ones we've heard of, hardly comprise a random sampling of any era's slacker sector. Because they are those select few with sufficient skill, schooling and in many cases rich relatives to fuel dreamy descriptions of their chosen lifestyle, theirs are the voices we hear. (Not to mention the fact that writing is one of those rare forms of work that pretty much require sporadic idle spans.) And theirs are the voices dominating this book, with shout-outs from songwriters (such as Harry McClintock, who penned "Hallelujah, I'm a Bum"), scholars (such as Barbara Ehrenreich) and celebs such as Karl Marx's Cuban-born anarchist son-in-law Paul Lafargue, fond of "the free and lazy American" who "prefers a thousand deaths to the bovine life of the French peasant."

But failed-businessman Lafargue lived on handouts from Marx and Engels. Wordsworth lived on an inheritance. Such realities sugar this book with a certain built-in elitism. Professors are funny that way.

But it's fun to fantasize with Lutz about utopias -- dreamed up by the IWW in 1933, by bestselling 19th-century novelists such as Edward Bellamy and William Dean Howells, by early 20th-century British philosopher Bertrand Russell -- which feature four-hour workdays. Or three hours. Two and two-thirds. Even ten-minute workdays, in Bellamy's book "Looking Backward." Such shifts would imbue labor with meaning "not because labor is good," Russell reasoned, "but because leisure is good." And "since men will not be tired in their spare time," he reasoned, they'll spend it wisely.

Uh huh.

Off-hours. On-hours. The sad fact is that for only the luckiest few, both types are equally appealing. I Love My Job is a joke printed on coffee mugs. Granted, at the far end of the spectrum some workers and would-be workers are strapped beyond the realm of jokes or choice or fantasy. But how the rest of us divvy up our days, and what we spend them doing, comes down to a series of equations, arithmetical and ethical. Their variables include skill and will, time and money. If work is hell, then how much is your freedom worth? Sacrifices seem less sacrificial if every skipped mocchiato, every thrift-shop shirt, buys you another Tuesday all your own.

The slacker is "a deeply ironic figure," Lutz muses before analyzing beggars and beachcombers, ramblers and rebels, Anna Nicole Smith and Ferris Bueller. Synonyms for slacking, he asserts, "could be used as insults or adopted proudly as a protest." Bums are loathed. Loafers are loved. Yet he sidesteps a crucial duel in this arena. Sure, some Calvinists scorn slackers on principle, simply because they don't work. Predictably, Lutz rushes to skewer such tight-asses, quoting John Ashcroft's 1995 screed against "welfare queens," then cherrypicking web postings in which boneheads and bigots rail against "these parasites," against "black teenage girls produc[ing] baby after baby so they can get AFDC." The voices of anyone actually receiving welfare are virtually absent from this book. Pummeling the "anti-welfare right," Lutz appears unwilling to accept that anyone but a bloody-fanged Republican might resent the idea of having to support slackers. Yet by not working, at least some nonworkers make workers work harder. So an ethical slacker, you might say, is one who never enslaves anyone else.


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Anneli Rufus is the author of several books, including "Party of One: The Loners' Manifesto."

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Yikes!
Posted by: talkville on Oct 13, 2006 12:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"In a country that hammered its way to world-power status while singing about hauling barges and working on the railroad, what we do with our live-long days is now, for most Americans, more a matter of choice than ever before. Technically, we're free."

Lots of blood, misery and humiliation in that 'singing about hauling barges and working on the railroad'. What 'choice' do 'most Americans' have in these glorious days, trying to put a bit of food on the table (if there is one)? Who is this 'we' in the 'we're free', technically or not?

Workers, and not only in this country but in all countries, remain under the yoke of those who manipulate us - of course individually (it's easier that way for them). Our work, their 'ethic'. Not only our labor but our very identities are now commodified in practical effect.

There may be some 'technically free', certainly not working people who direct their efforts to survive and exist in a minimum of dignity and justice. Of course, we must except those tireless workers like Branson, Gates or Paris Hilton - now they indeed have made it to liberty - and without singing 'this land is your land' or ever working on a railroad too!

It's time to jump out of our own heads and take a good look at this world we're in.

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productive
Posted by: rsaxto on Oct 13, 2006 1:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Work can be miserable, productive, worthless or cause great harm. Dropping bombs on Iraqis is causing great harm. Pushing junk food is causing great harm. Ending a great harm job can be quite joyful as can ending a worthless job. Politicians can do great good or great harm or just be mediocre. Much better to do the right thing whatever it is than to slog away at a miserable job. But lots of people have little choice but to take low-end jobs and just follow orders which suits their monied superiors just fine . The current situation in the USA leads to misery all over the world, a typical result of empire building.

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» Focus Posted by: edith
» RE: Focus Posted by: rsaxto
» RE: Focus Posted by: eightbitriot
» RE: Focus Posted by: WitchyNy
» RE: productive Posted by: Asses of Evil
Wouldn't It Be Nice To Be A Slacker
Posted by: edith on Oct 13, 2006 1:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but irrelevant to most people who don't have a choice of a slacker job that pays enough to support a family. you take what you can get hopefully with use of your degree or qualifications. Health insurance makes many folks stay at jobs that otherwise might keep. The article is a nice few minutes of fantasy and escape. But it's not the real world.

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Passive aggression
Posted by: ISlamIslam on Oct 13, 2006 3:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Are you reading this at work?

If so, are you sneak-reading it, keeping open a passel of other files that can hide this one at a click? Or not, because your job doesn't involve desks, or because it lets you stay home alone in pajamas, nibbling Cheezits? Or do you have no job because you can't find one, or don't need one, or don't want one and you've got another plan?"

Uh...are those my only choices? Since the overwhelming number of Alternet articles continue to fall into either the whiner or loser category, and sometimes both at the same time, as does this one, I suppose I shouldn't expect the author to mention a different possibility -- that the company allows its employees to take mental breaks throughout the day at his or her discretion. This would include reading articles and comments on Alternet, which generally make me want to return to my job with renewed energy after having a good laugh. And, luckily, the small company I work for would be on to the kind of cowardly, subversive behavior promoted by Maier in short order and free such phonies from those hideous capitalistic bonds that bind them.

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» RE: Passive aggression Posted by: Temporary
Buy yourself out of wage slavery
Posted by: Bobsays on Oct 13, 2006 5:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Much like the slaves of the past had only two ways out of it - run away or hope somebody buys their freedom - we need to buy our way out of wage slavery. My advice worked for me and my friends and I want to pass it on.

The first thing you need to do is save up an equivalent of six months average wages. Put this in a good interest savings plan. Then sit down and restruture your life to include only doing what you like and hanging with people you like only. This will clarify things and may cause you to quite or get fired from your current job. So what. You now have the cash in the bank to let you restructure your life to earn money for what you love. You have in effect bought yourself out of wage slavery.

I know work aroudn the world on my terms and for higher day rates than I ever earned as a slave. I take loads of holidays and I make sure to always save enough money to cover the kind of benefits I would receive if I still was a slave at the company. My friends look at me and wonder how I o it. I don't have a monster home or a 4X4, yet I could easily afford these things and live that life. But it would bore me. I like my freedom and the ability to flip the bird at people when I feel like it. I highly recommend this approach to life.

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» How Posted by: BlueTigress
Decent article, but such change must start by changing the culture--look to Europe
Posted by: mah_favorite_flavor_cherry_red on Oct 13, 2006 5:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Halfway decent article in some ways. But except for the somewhat cryptic reference to France in the last paragraph, Europe is not mentioned here. Why NOT? Europe is the kingdom of slackers! They have much more vacation time than Americans. Why did this article not make Europe the centerpiece? Because the book did not? Why not? Because the American FakeLeft culture is controlled from above, and because Europe is a dangerous example which the overclass prefers to ignore.

If you want a less workaholic culture, you have to hook the middle class on income redistribution and its powerful ability to provide benefits for the MAJORITY. Not just for the poor.

Here is the KEY-->Europe income redistribution is not for the poor. It is for the MIDDLE CLASS. THe article above mentions how Americans hate the beneficiaries of income redistribution (welfare queens etc), but in Europe the middle class gets substantial benefits from income redistribution. THAT is KEY. THAT is why progressive taxation is vital. That is why progressive taxation and its primary expenditure, universal healthcare, MUST be at the forefront of ALL trueLeft activism. Because THAT is the culture-changer. THAT is how you break the back of neoliberalism and workaholism.

But the American FakeLeft is a sheeplistic class controlled by the overclass, so therefore nasty, hypereducated iconoclasts like me have to rub your faces in the facts until you see the light. It's OK. I enjoy it. Otherwise I would not be what I am.....

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» Europe is not that great Posted by: owleyes
» RE: urope is not that great Posted by: vangogh69
» RE: urope is not that great Posted by: owleyes
» RE: urope is not that great Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: urope is not that great Posted by: Bobsays
» RE: urope is not that great Posted by: davewuxi
Uh
Posted by: eightbitriot on Oct 13, 2006 6:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unemployment, taxes.

Would everybody quit fetishizing Europe please.

There are alternatives to the corporatist American model and the spineless liberal European model, you know?

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» RE: Uh Posted by: bjerko
Just what we need ... another book review
Posted by: AdamSelene40 on Oct 13, 2006 7:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Especially when the topic is more interesting than the book is well-written. (But that's AlterNet's core mission: selling books and other harmless artifacts.)

Good headline though: suggests there might be something to the Buddhist principle of 'Right Livlihood."

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Work
Posted by: Pirate1 on Oct 13, 2006 9:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Articles like this hang everything upon the basic assumption that work, as we do it here today, is somehow morally right and that anyone who is poor because they either can't or don't want to work for whatever reason somehow deserve their poverty. There is always this implied sneer and snort at anything that doesn't uphold the status quo as to what is expected of a person from his or her late teens until they retire. If you think, for a minute, you'd notice that when people from our "culture", be they explorers seeking evidence of oil or mineral deposits who happen to encounter people here to fore "unknown" to us, or missionaries seeking souls to devour, NONE of these still natural human beings spend their entire adult lives working every day. This is something we "reward" them with for being "discovered". They have the gods that have served them for thousands of years declared false, and instead are given a new one that introduces shame and guilt and fear that can be manipulated by various priesthoods. They are introduced to clock time replacing their sense of time based of natural cycles and given wages to buy food that someone else far away grows because they now must sew endless seams somewhere or cut down what was once their forest home to make cardboard packaging for the pricey toys of "civilization and no longer have time or a place to grow their own. Work is how we are CONTROLLED people. Look back in history a couple of centuries and see how recent all this is. Once most of us lived in "commons" with market places something like what we pat to frolic through at Rennaisance Faires and such throughout the country. Having a clergy that keeps us thinking there is some oversized wrathful spook in the sky who will strike us down if we decide not to play the game, keeps it all going. There have always been slaves. People told that they have it good... people who believe what they are told. Without them empires fail.

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» RE: Work Posted by: owleyes
» RE: Work Posted by: WitchyNy
» RE: Work Posted by: owleyes
» RE: Work Posted by: Pirate1
» RE: Work Posted by: Pirate1
» back to the earth Posted by: edith
Truly, that is professors for you
Posted by: owleyes on Oct 13, 2006 9:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The book in question sounds like so much sensationalist, pseudo-scholarly drivel. I have seen its kind before. Sometimes professors get bored or uninspired, and wish for some kind of simple, blue-collar life, which is easy to idealize from such a distance. They can use their easy access to the public forum and mastery of academic language to put their cliche fantasies, disguised as analysis, on display. Scholars do a better job when they embrace their roles, and don't presume to know what life is like for Joe Lumberjack just because they read a book about Paul Bunyan. If scholars want to know what life is really like for those people, it's probably best to go ask them, then compile the data and do a study, or publish the interviews like Studs Terkel. But if all you do is textual analysis, then publish a book that claims to illuminate something about the lives of working people, it only confirms that academia's bad reputation is justly deserved.

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You should all move to Costa Rica!
Posted by: andrew4cr on Oct 13, 2006 9:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Articles like these, and others on AlterNet continue to help me reaffirm my decision to move to Costa Rica! No army, 75 years plus of continuous democracy, highest literacy in Central America, incredible natural wonders and more.

I left at the height of my career in Washington, DC (age 40) last year and I am not looking back! I got out of the corporate world and became an entrepreneur. I'd love to have more like-minded people come down! Here are a few of my sites:

Relocation/retirement tour: Boomers Tours Costa Rica

My "Boomers" Blog: Boomers Blog!

My B&B: Angel Valley Farm B&B Costa Rica

My personal blog, all about exploits in Costa Rica--its funny:
Andrew's Blog

I hope to hear from some of you!

Andrew
San Ramon, Costa Rica
andrew4cr@gmail.com

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But what about the working class?
Posted by: WitchyNy on Oct 13, 2006 10:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some Government official....(I forget who) once said in an interview..."if we shortened the work week, men would just drink more".
I never forgot that..he does have a point. Look what happens on the weekends..beer and football on TV.

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» men would, but not women Posted by: deborama
» RE: men would, but not women Posted by: owleyes
» RE: men would, but not women Posted by: whoever
» RE: men would, but not women Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: men would, but not women Posted by: WitchyNy
» Give It A Shot Posted by: edith
» RE: But what about the working class? Posted by: countingdaisies
There's a line...
Posted by: bobulah on Oct 13, 2006 10:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let us not forget that there is, for many people, a sense of pride and accomplishment in working. Whether it be marketing or mining, there are many benefits to earning a living.
I sell advertising space for a middle-road newspaper. I feel good when I leave work every day (and not JUST because I'm leaving). I feel good because I have used my mind, honed my communication skills, I've solved problems, I've set goals and met them. It's unbelievably satisfying. I don't do anything terribly "grand scheme" important, but I've served my customer well, contributed to my community and my country by using my skills, my greatest strengths, to sustain my life--and my livelihood. I am not passionate about my work (few are afforded that luxury), but it lends balance to my life.
That is not to say, of course, that our culture, our fellow citizens, are not overworked. When I come to work, I am completely, 100% focused on the tasks at hand (nevermind that I am typing this at the office). When I leave at 5 p.m. every day, it remains here, and I return to my life. I go back to my family, my friends. I watch television, and talk to my best friend while playing with her job. I go out to dinner, have drinks, and enjoy everything in life my hard work has afforded me. It is rewarding, and it is the kind of working culture for which we should all strive.
One thing we should be asking ourselves, are human beings were not designed for hard manual labor? Should we strive to eliminate manual labor through the use of computers, robots, and other technology? Would we then be in a position to elevate humanity by requiring that our greatest working tool be our minds, rather than our hands?

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The Job is an Unsavory Institution
Posted by: JimTheAnarchist on Oct 13, 2006 11:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If politicians and entrepreneurs can take credit for "creating jobs" or "preserving jobs", even going as far as using these as excuses for going to war, isn't it appropriate to speak of workers "consuming jobs?"

Anyone who accepts a job, even a job that does no direct harm, can be said to be "consuming a job" and is in some sense responsible for the killing and environmental destruction that is done in the name of "creating jobs." After all, if a health care worker, for instance, quits his or her job that person will be replaced. The replacement will either quit a job or pass up another employment opportunity, thus creating a job vacancy. And so on until a vacancy is filled somewhere by someone who would otherwise be pressuring his or her elected representatives to vote for a weapons' purchase or to vote to approve some environmentally-destructive activity in the name of creating a job. There is a sense in which the world would be a better place if we all quit our jobs until jobs are created by sharing the work that needs to be done and not by creating new jobs at any cost.

Economists complain that to speak of sharing the work that needs to be done is to commit the "lump of labor" fallacy. I'm no economist but any disclipine that considers the production of goods that the world would be better off without as a good thing has to be making some flawed assumptions. Economists seem to blindly worship economies of scale above all else without regard to the fact that the time and talents of the workers that have jobs producing useless or destructive products are completely wasted. The world would be better off if they had stayed home.

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» Life is unsavory too Posted by: edith
» RE: Life is unsavory too Posted by: countingdaisies
» RE: Life is unsavory too Posted by: JimTheAnarchist
» RE: Life is unsavory too Posted by: JimTheAnarchist
Work
Posted by: vangogh69 on Oct 13, 2006 1:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The puritanical roots of American society are responsible for the American work ethic, an ethic which overall sacrifices everything here for a reward later/there/"in heaven". In the US, we work ridiculously long though it must be said that it is partially due to the structure of capitalism, the goal in the system being to keep the majority slaves and the minority in power.

As far as this article goes, well, the author sounds a bit comfortable. Would that everyone had the resources to work when they wanted to with much free time! I at this point in my life work for myself and this means that collectively I work at the most, 30hrs a week (but that I'm also really working when I do), don't clock in anywhere, and can come and go as I please. I recognize that not all are so lucky, nor have the choice to work when and as they please, and that I'm very blessed to have this option.

The standard is 40hrs for most folks and it bears stating that this used to be much higher til labor successfully got it reduced to the 40. Back in the day, the bosses would simply work you til you collapsed, then replace you. They've gotten more cleaver since those days and now either pay you little so you work more (i.e. "overtime"), overwork you since you're salary-compensated, or work you very little since this way, they can keep a large staff, have limited responsibility to keep their workers fed and clothed, and keep you in the job with the threat of your being replaced by another worker AND force you to work elsewhere in addition (thereby keeping the wheels of surplus labor (thank you Marx!) going). (The last example is how Gap did do business, back in the late 90's. I'm not sure if they as a company still operate this way.)

A last thought. Much of the work we do now is to produce goods and services that people neither want nor need. The first step to correcting the problem is to point out the waste in both what is produced and in what is consumed. If we can learn to collectively simplify our lives, we all won't have to work as much and can have more time for each other. Or not. Just a thought.

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the vegan girl with the mouth full of apple
Posted by: owleyes on Oct 13, 2006 1:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Does anyone besides me think this picture is kind of gross?

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The PROBLEM is the USA economic system and free trade!
Posted by: sofla100 on Oct 13, 2006 1:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem is the USA economic system and free trade. The system keeps doing everything possible to gut worker rights and drive down production costs. Even a good employer has to deal with a competitor outsourcing to slave and child labor in India and China. Did you see one of the latest NY Times articles? If China gets tougher on work and human rights, US corporations are saying they may go elsewhere. To Malaysia, Bangledesh, wherever worker rights and salaries are the least protected. So American workers work more and more for less and less. Call this the Republican system that is completly designed for those at the top, the corporate ruling wealthy elite. Who, by the way, using massive wealth and influence, have bought off the politicans and control virtually all the US media (only some parts of the internet remain free, for now). Now, you might complain about the Europeans and the French because they are a bit pompous and nationalistic. But, at least they have found a way to balance things a bit better and protect their own people and the average worker. Not the USA. As for free trade, we all know what that means. Just a give away to the wealthiest owners of the corporations, of capital. The average American now has to compete with $1 a day prison labor from China and the like. This is the problem.

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the idle bourgeoise
Posted by: edith on Oct 13, 2006 4:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
sounds nice. but utterly irrelevant to the average american. factories have been replaced by computer stations. the "health" industry is one of the few industies that grow in the US. A business that is mostly about shuffling forms instead of curing patients or making sad people feel better.

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» Evils of American medicine Posted by: medstudgeek
But...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Oct 13, 2006 10:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...doesn't a full day of hard work, in which you accomplish something special, still feel a little bit good?

To anyone?

Tell me my fellow liberals (and "progressives" who are, by definition "getting there") haven't given up on labor? An honest day's work for an honest day's pay?

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» RE: But... Posted by: BlueTigress
Attitudes
Posted by: BlueTigress on Oct 13, 2006 10:37 PM   
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I have a friend who thought I was lazy because I preferred to only put in a 40 hour work week. She would routinely put in 80-100 hours a week and then complain about how taken advantage of she was.

I had had a job previously where my boss liked to work a 70 hour week and wanted her subordinates to also, but I found after an 8 hour day, I wasn't getting much accomplished and all the customers I needed to talk to were gone for the day. I also had an hour commute and she was 10 minutes away. After 2 years I was sick to death of fighting her so I could try and have a life, so I quit. I had everyone from the executive vice president on down trying to get me to stay, but I had to get away from her. I heard through the grapevine that my boss was let go about 6 months after I quit.

It's not like I won't work late or come in early if it's necessary to finish something, but the idea of just putting in face time is faintly foolish to me. But then maybe it's because my dad had a government job and when five o'clock came, that was it. And, oh yeah, he also used all his vacation time and we took family trips.

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frustration!
Posted by: christii on Oct 13, 2006 10:40 PM   
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"…writing is one of those rare forms of work that pretty much require sporadic idle spans..."
Note to article author: these "spans" should preferrably be filled with some kind of intellectual activity.

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8 hours a day 5 days a week?
Posted by: toolband on Oct 14, 2006 7:32 AM   
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The thing that bothers me most is how much of your time is stolen by work. I can't help but think that in terms of productivity, just as much could be accomplished with about a 5 hour work day. Most people spend at least 2 hours day slacking at work and most people are terribly unproductive after lunch. The day should end after lunch. Why does the work week need to be 5 days a week also? Why not 4? A more equal balance of work and free time seems more reasonable to me.

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Debunking the "Work Ethic"
Posted by: BobbyGreyFriar on Oct 14, 2006 7:28 PM   
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The morality of work is the morality of slaves, and the modern world has no need of slavery.
[...]
This is the morality of the Slave State, applied in circumstances totally unlike those in which it arose. No wonder the result has been disastrous. Let us take an illustration. Suppose that, at a given moment, a certain number of people are engaged in the manufacture of pins. They make as many pins as the world needs, working (say) eight hours a day. Someone makes an invention by which the same number of men can make twice as many pins: pins are already so cheap that hardly any more will be bought at a lower price. In a sensible world, everybody concerned in the manufacturing of pins would take to working four hours instead of eight, and everything else would go on as before. But in the actual world this would be thought demoralizing. The men still work eight hours, there are too many pins, some employers go bankrupt, and half the men previously concerned in making pins are thrown out of work. There is, in the end, just as much leisure as on the other plan, but half the men are totally idle while half are still overworked. In this way, it is insured that the unavoidable leisure shall cause misery all round instead of being a universal source of happiness. Can anything more insane be imagined?
BERTRAN RUSSELL ("In Praise of Idleness")

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American Dream
Posted by: Jack Saturday on Oct 15, 2006 10:13 AM   
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“Pummeling the "anti-welfare right," Lutz appears unwilling to accept that anyone but a bloody-fanged Republican might resent the idea of having to support slackers. Yet by not working, at least some nonworkers make workers work harder. So an ethical slacker, you might say, is one who never enslaves anyone else.”

It’s amusing that Slackers seem required to have a different ethic than capitalist entrepreneurs. The American Dream has always been to become a slacker supported by others: for instance, the Walton family live as multi-billionaires on the backs of a million underpaid wage-slaves who cannot support families on the pittance. The American dream, based on “individualism” and “the individual seeking his (her) own advantage in fierce competition” is a race to exploit others so that one can get rich and not have to be a wage-slave. Exploit or be exploited. The fact that billionaires like Bill Gates may be workaholics is immaterial, because they are not motivated by the “lash of need,” their work is a free choice. To hear economic moralists evoke altruism specifically for the poor getting food, clothing and shelter, while not even acknowledging the billionaires who use others to get billions, is to strain at a gnat while swallowing a camel.

Secondly, Ms. Rufus doesn’t seem to notice that technology has brought us to the point where, as John Taylor Gatto says, quoting a Harvard study, 5 % of the population is all that is required to run the machines that produce everything we consume. Monies allocated for the poor (welfare) go in large part to pay the salaries of workers in agencies and institutions while preserving poverty. If welfare increases anybody’s labor, it’s bureaucrats and social workers who live as poverty pimps – those workers live on the backs of the poor, not vice-versa, in a world of abundance.

Let’s face it: tech can now produce what we need with minimum human labor. A few people claim to own the tech, and for your access to the cornucopia, you are told how good for you it is to serve Wal-Mart, McDonalds, or Boeing.

Jack Saturday

LIFE

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