I guess I could get affordable weekly brain surgeries by just waiting at the curb for the brain surgery truck to roll by. — Hanover
Very Funny,. You guys kill me. You act as if you had a choice. Ha Ha Ha. For a fun little change, take a sec and think of the most profound thing you could do and imagine doing it. Why aren't you then? I am interested to know. Perhaps life just is. The least, most, best, only thing to have. Change it, i dare ya. — Franklin Crook
What is needed is a way for every able-bodied person to have a job which is safe and which pays them enough for them, and their families, to live a decent life with decent housing in a reasonably safe neighborhood, good healthy food, health care, good education for their children, etc. etc. Let's do that. Then we can worry about boredom. — T Clark
I think just those two measures would eventually improve the lives of many people. In the current system there are plenty of bullshit jobs and jobs that make the lives of others worse, which induce huge inefficiencies, so I don't think giving a job to everyone would improve things that much. Able-bodied people rather ought to be given the opportunity to work for themselves, to build their house, grow their food, take care of their health, that work would not be effort wasted. — leo
take a sec and think of the most profound thing you could do and imagine doing it. — Franklin Crook
I've grown strawberries in my garden--they weren't worth the trouble. Raspberries -- much easier, because they just take over and rule. The soil on my lot is either poor or way too shady. I know how to grow vegetables and corn, but one needs a large garden, decent soil, and little shade to grow a significant amount of food for a family. Plus, I'm getting a little old to undertake urban agriculture. — Bitter Crank
If we're doomed anyway (many think we are) we might as well enjoy the show. Throwing in the towel, leaning back against a tree, and just observing might actually have some salvific power. Ceasing to strive, is, after all, the opposite of what has gotten us to our sad state of ourselves being bored to tears by technological production even as we breed our way to a more complex destruction. — Bitter Crank
Funnily enough, I had just been thinking along related lines when I came across this discussion. When most people speak of “work”, they refer to tasks that they would not voluntarily do but require some form of monetary incentive for due largely to the boredom you mentioned. And so when we put efforts into what we enjoy doing and for which no pecuniary recompense is forthcoming, we are widely regarded as “not working” and by extension of not being productive. Of slacking off, lounging about, or—with vicious ethical precision—of being takers rather than givers. So why is it that work, that socially necessary currency of mutual respect, should be generally defined as boring with non-boring alternatives treated with such suspicion, and what does that say about the way we live now? — Baden
I've grown strawberries in my garden--they weren't worth the trouble. Raspberries -- much easier, because they just take over and rule. The soil on my lot is either poor or way too shady. I know how to grow vegetables and corn, but one needs a large garden, decent soil, and little shade to grow a significant amount of food for a family. Plus, I'm getting a little old to undertake urban agriculture. — Bitter Crank
not everyone can be a Jack Kerouac watching the world progress away in tedium — schopenhauer1
Now wait a minute. I learned how to garden from my dad. He had a shovel (a spade), a pitchfork, 2 heavy garden rakes, and a hoe (the implement, not the other kind). He also used a hand-pushed cultivator. I'm still using his pitchfork. That's it. He did all his work himself by hand after work and on weekends. Never used artificial fertilizer (he used leaves). On this ground he grew beets, carrots, onions, Swiss chard, leaf lettuce, cucumbers, tomatoes, pole beans, and corn. The beets, tomatoes, pole beans, and corn were canned in a pressure cooker or big kettle of boiling water (depending). Cucumbers were made into pickles and canned. Apples were bought from orchards and canned. — Bitter Crank
I suppose packaging seeds was a boring job. And somebody had to drive around the countryside stocking seed displays in hardware stores. Hey, you could do that. It would be fun. Out on your own; going into small town hardware stores, selling seeds and preaching the anti-natalist gospel. — Bitter Crank
If you want to know what was boring, it was canning hundreds of jars of food every summer and fall. It was tedious and hard work at the same time. — Bitter Crank
Giving people land won't work. Most people don't want to build their own house or grow their own food. This is not a realistic alternative for the great majority of people. — T Clark
So yea if you love your job and your kids love their job, giving a job to everyone seems like the solution. But when you look at all the people who hate their job and all the negative consequences that has, more jobs doesn't solve the underlying problem. — leo
But when you focus on people who hate their job and earn just enough money to pay for rent and food, and have a poor health because they're constantly stressed because of the job they hate that they have to go to every day, and 40 years later they're still not owning a house and they live in poor health or die because of it, I think these people would have liked to have the opportunity to work on building decent housing for themselves and grow some of their food and take care of their health, making use of what they would have learnt in an education that taught them to take care of themselves. — leo
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