Prompted by a response elsewhere which pointed to this cartoon - http://www.bishop-hill.net/blog/2013...-josh-243.html
I pose the question "Why do we need jobs anyway?" What's the big deal?
Clearly at one level there are "things to be done", and people have to find ways to get them done - either by employing others, or by using machinery or other methods. Some things are rather fundamental, such as growing crops for food, and establishing a distribution chain, but are many jobs really necessary? There is a lot of activity in our society - and we seem to get worried if it is disrupted - as we can note by yesterday's disruption to train services and roads. However, I would suggest that a lot of what we do collectively is totally unnecessary, and the real reasons we do whatever it are because we want to feel involved, we don't want to be isolated socially, and it keeps us busy and off the streets.
At a personal level of course individuals need to survive, and in our society this usually means having money, which can be obtained by various means, but one of the most socially acceptable is to have a job.
The cartoon suggests that politicians don't really care about green energy, but are more concerned with providing jobs, whether they are really needed or not, which is where I came in.
I pose the question "Why do we need jobs anyway?" What's the big deal?
Clearly at one level there are "things to be done", and people have to find ways to get them done - either by employing others, or by using machinery or other methods. Some things are rather fundamental, such as growing crops for food, and establishing a distribution chain, but are many jobs really necessary? There is a lot of activity in our society - and we seem to get worried if it is disrupted - as we can note by yesterday's disruption to train services and roads. However, I would suggest that a lot of what we do collectively is totally unnecessary, and the real reasons we do whatever it are because we want to feel involved, we don't want to be isolated socially, and it keeps us busy and off the streets.
At a personal level of course individuals need to survive, and in our society this usually means having money, which can be obtained by various means, but one of the most socially acceptable is to have a job.
The cartoon suggests that politicians don't really care about green energy, but are more concerned with providing jobs, whether they are really needed or not, which is where I came in.
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