Who says they are "harder"? You are adding more and more conditions to your earlier statement.Coito ergo sum wrote: If you honestly think that people tend to want to do harder jobs if they make the same money as easier jobs, and that is a result of your decades of experience in the university field, then so be it.
Yes, so you keep saying. I don't know anyone like this (other than that one PhD (and now that I think of it, another BSc who chucked it in to run his own business - a pub)), and it makes no sense. People of higher intelligence (who tend to be the people who go onto higher education) become listless if they aren't using their minds. I have a suspicion you don't know many intelligent people.Of course they would. But, if you offer them an easy way to make $X and a more demanding way to make the same $X, then plenty of them will tend to want to pick the low hanging fruit.rEvolutionist wrote:As I said, perhaps you know a lot of shallow people. Virtually everyone I know (given I generally only associate with intelligent people) would prefer to use their mind than let it sit idle in some menial job.In other words, all else being equal, people will take low hanging fruit rather than climb up and down a ladder to get similar fruit from higher up on a tree. Easy money is better than hard money.
Does it? Got any evidence to back this up? And does this evidence account for the fact that it is a choice between a skilled and unskilled job of the same pay? Because that's the concept we are discussing.That's why when you raise the minimum wage too much, it draws overqualified people into the menial jobs,
But you were talking about a situation where it was a choice between jobs of the same pay.This has nothing at all to do with being "shallow." It has to do with doing what makes sense. People need money. They, of course, also want enjoyable, intellectually stimulating and fun jobs. However, plenty of people sit tight in jobs they loathe because it makes $X and the job they would really prefer to do doesn't pay as much. That doesn't make them shallow. That makes them human beings.
"Plenty" implies "a lot". I just don't see it. And I've spent decades studying and working at universities.I never said it was "all about" money. There are, of course, other factors and there are plenty of people who would work their preferred job for less, rather than an easier job for money. That doesn't mean, however, that there aren't also plenty of people who would take the easier, more menial, job for the same money because they would rather work less and get paid the same. You need to understand the difference between the word "plenty" and the word "most."rEvolutionist wrote:No it's not, it's baseless opinion. Nearly every research scientist I know could earn heaps more money driving an airconditioned truck in the mines. If it was all about money, they'd do that. But they don't.The people that you refer to doing much more mentally interesting work tend to get paid more than minimum wage, by far. If, however, PHDs started earning little more than minimum wage, you'd see a lot of them wondering what they're staying up nights working on. This is common sense, rEv.
So you keep saying. Not seeing any reasoning for this, other than money is the big incetiviser. Perhaps the difference between our views is the difference between our societies. We are still considerably less ruthlessly capitalistic than the US is. We are also in a very long period of incredible growth and wealth, so money just isn't the big factor here that it perhaps is in the US.If you raise the minimum wage to $30k, you are, in fact, going to get "plenty" of college graduates applying for those minimum wage jobs, and they will do so because the pay makes them willing to do the menial job. As the wage for the minimum wage job increases and approaches the wage for the college graduate field, then more and more people from those college graduate fields will be lured by the low hanging fruit.
Average wage out of uni in Australia is probably about $40K, if that. Average wage for driving trucks at mines is about $100K. The trucks are auto, fully air conditioned, CD players. It's not a hard job. The hardest part about it is the safety aspect of making sure you don't run over a car or person on the mine.Of course, but driving trucks, particularly big rigs, is not easy and not something college grads can just jump in and do without additional training.rEvolutionist wrote:It's not about "easy" and "hard". As an intelligent person, using your brain isn't "hard". It's about what's most rewarding or pleasurable. I and most people I know find using our minds much more rewarding and pleasurable than driving trucks.Generally speaking, f you can make $10,000 the easy way or the hard way, which way would you make it?
I don't need to make up a pretext to make insulting comments towards you. If I want to make them, I will. I'm addressing your argument. Your replies are confused, as I have pointed out.But, you're missing the point, which I've explained again above. I am going to assume that you're purposefully missing it, in order to make your insulting comments toward me.
I'm really starting to see why you can't understand my point. You can't even remember the conditions you put on your own stupid hypothetical. You said "sit at home doing nothing". Now you are changing that to "doing something". How the fuck am I supposed to have a proper debate with you when you repeatedly do this shit?Why? If you could earn the money doing nothing, you could take that deal, and nothing would stop you from working part time on a volunteer basis, giving yourself the maximum flexibility to work when you want and not work when you don't want to. It would be stupid to reject the offer of free money and counteroffer with an offer that is worse for you. Nothing would stop you from "working part time" if you accepted the free money. So why would you say "I'll only take the money if I have to work part time for it." LOL. I don't think one of your decades of courses included "negotiating." Cuz, you're doing it backwards....rEvolutionist wrote:Great hypothetical. That's not a reality and never will be. And I'd prefer to work part-time and earn that money than sit at home and do nothing.If you could make it staying home and doing nothing, wouldn't you? All else being equal, that is.![]()
The important concept here is doing something active and rewarding with your mind. It wouldn't matter if that was paid work, or volunteer work with hypothetical utopia pay. The point is, that people don't just exist to make money. People exist to set goals and try and achieve them and pursue rewarding experiences. So no, most people wouldn't actually just sit at home and "do nothing".
Because "doing nothing" is like prison. Who wants to "do nothing" with their life?Of course not, but if someone offers you $50k a year for doing nothing, or, you can take a job that pays you $50k a year, why would you take the latter?rEvolutionist wrote: And I suspect that most people would too. This is typical conservative bollocks. Conservatives generally believe that money is the great incentiviser. Psychology, and real life, shows that above a minimum amount, it isn't. People have personal goals and enjoy personally rewarding experiences. Sitting on your arse all day isn't very rewarding for an intellectually gifted person. (and I speak from experience over the last year).
Is it "do nothing" or "do anything" now?The former allows you to take the money and then spend your time doing anything you want

So what the fuck are you talking about "hard" for then? The comparison YOU set up was between menial jobs and jobs in a graduate's field, for the same pay. What the fuck is "hard" supposed to be referring to then??I never made that equivalence of using a mind and "hard."rEvolutionist wrote:So now you are changing the hours worked? Why? I'd love to get a look inside your head. I can't understand what's going on in there. Myself and virtually every intelligent person I know doesn't find using their mind as "hard". They find it stimulating and enjoyable.Oh, I agree, they don't want to work menial jobs. And science and engineering folks tend to start out higher on the salary chain than other college graduates. The principle holds, though, if, say, a McDonald's fry slinger earned $50k and the starting salary for an Industrial Engineer was, say $55k, the Industrial Engineer would wonder why he's busting his ass in a difficult and demanding job when he can earn almost as much working 8 hours a day on an easy job. Plenty of folks would prefer to be home for dinner with their family than putting in late hours on the latest engineering project.rEvolutionist wrote:I'll grant that in the context of Arts graduates, you might be right. I've been involved with the sciences and engineering at my time at university, and I can promise you that those types don't want to work menial jobs.The point is that a lot of college graduates aren't exactly big thinkers, or particularly qualified. Some of them stay home and sponge off others, even. Not most, but some. And, there are quite a few who manage to graduate college without a significant marketable skill.
Rubbish. Labouring is most definitely not easier than working a desk job. Working in a factory is most definitely not easier than working a desk job. Obviously, when you get to the upper echelons in your field, it will get harder. But for a run of the mill job in most academic fields, it's not particularly hard if you are trained in that field.Most jobs that pay more are harder, irrespective of what amount of mental power is needed.
I'd love to get a look inside your head. I wouldn't consider them harder for a second. Have you ever worked in a kitchen (*I see below that you allegedly have)? It's one of the most unpleasant experiences ever.And, most jobs that require a lot of mental energy are also harder. That's why being a doctor, lawyer or engineer is generally "harder" than being a fry cook.
And according to you above, you think an office job is harder than all that. Way to sink your own argument.Oh, yes, I have worked in kitchens. Early in my work life I worked as a bus-boy, and I worked as a fry cook for a while in college. They were not unpleasant places to work. It's just a kitchen. I also worked in a couple of liquor stores, as well as a deli and a convenience store. I also powerwashed semi-trailers, including horse trailers (if you want to talk about "unpleasant..."), I roofed houses and commercial buildings in 90 degree heat and burning sun, and I did exterior and interior construction, and I worked on assembly lines running welding and CNC machines, etc.rEvolutionist wrote:I've never actually worked in McDonalds or the like, but I have worked in restaurant kitchens, and I wonder if you have? They aren't actually very pleasant places to work. Perhaps it's a bit nicer in Maccas, I don't know.Most college graduates don't command $50k a year in the US. The average starting salary is about $40k, and that is even a deceptive figure with the "average" person actually starting in the range of $25 to $35k. Give the McDonald's burger flipper $30k and watch who starts applying for those jobs, particularly with half of all college graduates now lacking full time employment anyway, and most of them not working in any field related to their major areas of study.