Recognition of the Dignity of labour is universally acknowledged to be an American virtue.America is credited with recognising the nobility of work no matter how menial it seems to others. But I tend to see this in a different light. Any work is regarded as just work or not much importance is attached to the intrinsic quality of work. That is , in America work is graded according to the dollars it earns. This does not signal a great understanding of the nobility of labour. Elsewhere work or vocation has different scales. For example an academic earns more respect and is given a higher esteem rating in society than ,say a cab driver or a dust man. This does not mean cab driving or cleaning is not work.It is just that they do not compare equally on the social scale. But in America , the cab driver becomes an object of veneration over the Professor if the cab driver happens to earn more than the learned professor.This happens only if the income of the cabbie is more than that of the professor.What does this show? Certainly not the vindication of dignity of labour. It only shows a crass and shameless approval the place, not value , money occupies in American society. There money is worshipped and the man who makes more money is God. This blind confidence in money is what makes the American society consider the quality of work insignificant and the rest of the world mistakenly describes as the great American tradition of recognition of the Dignity of labour. If it was solely the dignity of labour that concerned them , then the cabbie would have earned the same respect as the man of science or culture or art if the cab driver's income was less. But that is not the case. Therefore, Dignity of labour in the American context is a misnomer. What it really is an abject admiration of money. There is nothing wrong with it. In fact there is a whole world of good in such a hedonistic attitude. But it should not be confused with the higher values such as dignity of labour. That is a grave mistake.
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- http://poppycock.blog.co.uk/
- 04.06.2007 @ 08:38:51
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- 06.06.2007 @ 06:48:44
Hi Hermit,
I am fine, thank you. You certainly are most sensible in not being interested in more money than is rasonably required for a simple life. Really nice to know that.
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- http://lois.co.uk
- 04.06.2007 @ 09:59:35
Well said - though it is not only in America that people think money and possessions are more important than how they live their life.
I have speculated recently on similar topics!-
- 06.06.2007 @ 06:51:35
Yes you couldn't be more accurate tho' it is in America where ' greed is good ' is an article of faith, so to say.
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- 04.06.2007 @ 23:54:32
This is the more visible but the more rooted "conditioning" we have, as we bathe in this consumption society... spreading to the whole planet as more and more countries are "developing"... developing a better level of living and comfort ? or developing false values... I guess that this "money level background" in the relationship with others is only the top of the iceberg... as all industrial societies converge on profit and competitiveness compulsion head by corporation influences, frightening if we'd know all... so getting out of this conditioning required a long and deep thinking... and a load of will I guess !
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- 06.06.2007 @ 06:54:00
Just knowing that 'value' is different from 'price' will save our civilisation.
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- 14.06.2007 @ 06:46:59
In the US , Mammon is God. -
- http://www.myword.blog.co.uk
- 23.06.2007 @ 20:46:00
Hello,
You make some profound and just points. There is a confusion between values of different types of work and earnings. I tend to believe the confusion is purposely generated to cloak the veneration of greed into something society would find easier to appease consciences. Thinking people like you will see through such deceits.
There is currently a school in Prague, run by an ex-British taxi driver who is training East Europeans to be taxi drivers in the U.K. He will not train existing taxi drivers for this work as he does not value their risky driving behaviours. This man selects educated people, they have degrees, some are vets, economists, teachers, entrepreneurs who cannot make a decent living wage or pay for medical treatment for their sick children.
Those who succeed this tough course, obtain jobs working long hours to earn levels of cash they could not dream of earning at home. Even allowing for the difference in the cost of living, and after all general expenses are disbursed, they could still be quite well off. These taxi drivers value themselves in terms of money and level of service given, as do their employers and from what I heard, the public who use the taxi firms who hire these drivers. Their academic and skills worth in other areas of training was not sufficiently rewarded because of their countries' economic circumstances. You wonder though, if those skills would be given the value if their countries could afford to give it or would we be looking at another American style dream?
Fascinating blog entry.-
- 03.07.2007 @ 09:18:50
The point I was trying to make was that the American 'virtue' of recognising dignity of labor is so often confused with their undue reverence for money. That is, in the US scheme of things, the lure of lucre takes precedence over everything else than elsewhere in the world and this is sadly construed as the great American virtue of respecting a person no matter what he does. But the relevance is not in what he does but how much he earns. That it is not a great virtue by any standards. The litmus test is whether a person will be regarded with the same esteem as another if his income is also less. If that is true , then my salutations to the American virtue. Thanks for your weighed assessment.
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- http://www.myword.blog.co.uk
- 03.07.2007 @ 14:22:10
I believe I understood your point. The trouble is, the same values are being disseminated elsewhere. Yet the Americans also create a value in 'cutbacks' amonst the few people whose skills and abilities have been valued. The people who are able to operate with zeal, the management of those contracting environments are the new valued people. They are busy creating an additonal financial underclass through the measures they live by.
It is sad that change has to incorporate devaluation of people and their abilities. It leaves just one thing, the very point you perceptively make, only money -lots of it - counts.
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- 25.02.2009 @ 21:14:13
You're half right.
There are people in the U.S. who believe in the dignity of labor regardless of its pay but that view is somewhat old-fashioned. People who subscribe to that point of view tend to be older or of lower socioeconomic status.
The example of the cab driver misrepresents, I think, the values in the U.S. I'm not sure the cab driver would be more respected than the professor if he made more money (I'm not even sure you can quantify such things). I do know that the cab driver would earn respect for having earned so much money. This isn't because Americans rank everyone in worth according to their income. It's because it's not easy for a cab driver to earn more than a professor. In order for him to have accomplished that, then he must have been doing something right.
Americans do value money to a great extent. We reward the winners of capitalism and punish our losers severely. What the country hasn't come to terms with yet is that money isn't always the best indicator of value to society. If the cab driver earns more than the professor, is there a problem with the market? Should the incentives be designed so that one can ear a better living driving a cab than teaching college students?
Anyway, just to be clear, we do not respect anyone who has money simply because they have it (anyone heard of Bernie Madoff?) and a person doesn't suddenly attain a higher social status simply because they have the money. Although, with respect to that last thought, what would be so bad if someone did attain a higher status simply because they had honestly earned a lot of money? Wouldn't that, in some way, be fairer than doling out social status according to intelligence? Not everyone can be a genius college professor. Not everyone was born with the right stuff. Why should people get respect and admiration simply for being born smart? Just a thought.
Munzly
Hi Gov, hope you are well.
You make some good points today, personally I have little interest in money, sufficient for a simple life is enough - people think I'm crazy.