Quote:
Originally Posted by inBOIL
There's a lot of talk about taking any job you can get in this economy. Of course, few of us would literally take any job. I doubt anyone would take a job stomping on babies, but there are real jobs that make some of us uneasy.
Where would you draw the line between a job you should take and one you shouldn't? Are your criteria just for you, or do you believe they should apply to others? Does it depend on how desperate you are, or whether you have dependents? Does the amount of pay dictate whether a job should or shouldn't be taken? Does it matter if the job is illegal? Degrading? Dangerous? Immoral? Does it matter if you're incapable of doing the job competently?
I think there's a gray area, where the degree to which the job is undesireable matters. Taking a job under a manager who insults and belittles his employees is probably bad if you've got savings to live on for a while, but if your food stamps have run out and you've got kids to feed, you should probably suck it up and deal until you can find something better. Similarly, if a delivery job requires you to drive 5 mph over the speed limit, or drive through a dangerous part of town, that's a much better choice than letting your kids starve.
However, there's a point at which a job becomes so immoral, degrading, illegal, or whatever that it's always better to stay unemployed.
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I'm a young, able bodied male. I can handle people, rain, sleet, hail, snow, and bright sunny weather all day long, every day, 365 days a year.
I refuse to do any job that requires me to perform morally or ethically questionable actions. As such, military, law enforcement, etc would be out of the question. The main reason is not because I can't handle it, but because I know I would end up in jail for causing problems. Otherwise, the only thing I have to worry about is getting fired.
I've realized, however, that working for other people sucks, and working for yourself is far more satisfying. I'm working now on increasing the money obtained as a result of my own independent work to levels beyond anything I ever had working for someone else.