The 'Work Ethic' and The Electronic Age
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Sat Sep 16, 2006 6:12 am (PST)
_August, 2006_ (
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_Vision and the Fight for a New World_
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The 'Work Ethic' and The Electronic Age
By Bob Lee Homeless, and dreaming of a home.
ILLUSTRATION/LAUREN ALEXANDER
Why do we work? Most people would probably answer, "Because I have to if I
want to eat, and because it's expected." But consider these two facts: First,
the wealthy few who tell the rest of us to get a job don't do any work
themselves, and second, we're moving rapidly toward a society where no one will
have to "work" in the traditional sense.
The "work ethnic" is the idea that a person who is physically and mentally
able to is expected to work for a living. It has roots in both necessity and a
capitalist inspired morality.
Historically, we worked out of necessity, to survive. When capitalism arose,
the capitalists needed our labor, and they ensured that work was also seen
as a moral obligation.
Work is considered our contribution to society. We are taught that hard work
will be rewarded -- anybody can get ahead if they work hard enough. And
we're taught that we have to compete with one another for the best jobs.
But it's becoming clear that there is a real contradiction between the work
ethic and reality.
There are not enough jobs to go around. And for many of us, the jobs we do
have don't pay enough. Most of us never do "get ahead," no matter how hard we
work. Indeed, many homeless people are working full-time.
On top of this, the work ethic is used against us. The powers that be in
this country use it to turn us against one another. They get us to believe that
some people are unemployed simply because they don't want to work. The
country is in crisis because we've turned our backs on "traditional values," we're
told.