greencap wrote: » pretty much all jobs make the world a better place. since someone was not content with a situation and so paid you to change the situation to something which would make them a little bit more content. so after you've done your job there is one very slightly more content, though usually still ungrateful and moaning, person in the world. also the money from the job makes you slightly content for a brief period which you also quickly forget about. so thats two slightly more contented people for a slight moment. but without all the little jobs there'd be epic scale moaning going on. my job doesn't really make any great difference to any one individual, im just a cog, but i don't really give a sht about the end customer anyway, its all about me from my point of view. my boss could tell me that all the work i was doing all this time was secretly going into a big fire at the back of the building and that i'd helped not a soul in this world and i'd still just be thinking about my bank account. collectively almost all jobs are important, the surgeon can't perform surgery if he/she is on the phone trying to source nails for the leaky roof in the hospital which is filthy cause theres no cleaners.
paleoperson wrote: » Totally false. It's the exact opposite of that, many or most jobs are like digging a hole in the ground and filling it up again, plus carbon emissions, some of which are extremely huge.
Ubbquittious wrote: » There are some jobs that only do a disservice to those around them. clampers, tele marketers, airport security, most of the insurance industry, those involved in persuading people to buy unnecessary disposable chinese tat If you wiped out certain professions in the morning the world would only breathe a collective sigh of relief
pretty much all
almost all
rizzodun wrote: » I work for a medical device company, who also produce products that are intravenously administered to seriously ill patients. So if we cannot produce, it's not unreasonable to say people may become critically ill, or worse. Good to know I make a difference in some small way.
greencap wrote: » Wrong. If you're doing a banal job which doesn't do much in the way of making the world a better place, odds are you're still indirectly serving a greater function in society. So if you're selling bulk paper from an office in slough, you're still a component in some other slightly more relevant enterprise. Your paper might be used in the brochure for relaying essential information about a university course, or home designs. Ultimately if your job title is a stable one then the market has decided that you make the world a better place.
paleoperson wrote: » And I'm telling you that's garbage. Don't worry, I get what you're saying, we all do, we fully understand the idea behind your post. No need to worry about any of us not getting it. Someone wants it done so it's a market force, the "invisible hand of the market" right? Put into practice in the real world without any oversight (and sometimes with oversight and regulations) it's a stupid idea and a wasteful, garbage allocation of resources. It's amazing how a lot of hardcore capitalists/libertarians for some ridiculous reason get the impression that others don't understand that simple idea of the market. Like that they have to explain it to us. Yeah we get it, we ****ing get it, it's really a very simple thing. If people are spending their whole lives building life size houses for Kardashian dogs only to be demolished soon afterwards (and if you add up all the working hours involved including in the manufacture of the materials it would certainly amount to entire lives), that's just a bloody waste of life and carbon emissions. It doesn't make the world a better place, it's a waste.
sonyvision wrote: I did have a job while I attended school 1 hour a day I would cycle to elderly people who were house bound with their prescription. Certain individuals I would always leave till my last run because I knew they were lonely and would have a cuppa for 15/20 minute . I was 15/16 at the time.. I didn't create world peace, but for a few years I felt I was making a different to those people.