• usualsuspect191@lemmy.ca
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    21 days ago

    Depends what you mean by “unskilled labour”. Literally no skills? Yeah that doesn’t exist, and is impossible to exist as even the most simple of motor tasks like walking are learned and therefore “skills”.

    If by “unskilled labour” you mean jobs that require no formal training and your average person could be trained up well enough to not need to be constantly trained/supervised in a week or two? Then there’s lots of those. Maybe “low skilled labour” is slightly better but still a bit misleading (you still develop skills and improve in those jobs, it’s just you’re “good enough” at it in a relatively short period of time).

    Because capitalism, when you’re easily replaceable it means the employer can shop around more and find people willing you did the job for less so the pay is low. You aren’t paid by how hard you work, but by the “value” you bring and how hard it is to find someone else.

    • thetreesaysbark@sh.itjust.works
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      21 days ago

      Yeah, I’d argue ‘unskilled labour’ or ‘low skilled labour’ doesn’t necessarily mean you should be paid poverty wages.

      Imo that’s a regulation/policy issue, not a capitalism issue, but I’m happy for someone to talk me through why that isn’t the case.

    • Soup@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      The problem is that you aren’t paid by the value you bring. We have to fight tooth and nail to get even a fraction of what we’re worth, even in skilled jobs, and there are many executives that realized that they’re better off instilling fear of firing into people than they are worrying about whether or not someone can be replaced. Hell, most of them don’t even have the barest respect for senior workers and will happily replace them with a less skilled, but also cheaper, worker to save a buck in the short-term.

      The concept of supply and demand in jobs has died because we lack the ability to enforce it. It’s completely fucked up. I heard someone say recently that it shouldn’t be a “job market” but a “labour market” and I fully agree. They need us, most executives are just dead-weight with money, so why the fuck do they get to be the beggars and the choosers?

      Ultimately, if we were paid based on the value we bring then CEOs wouldn’t be getting millions of dollars of bonuses while laying people off to try to keep their own worthless jobs for just one more quarter. If we were paid based on the value we bring then millions of essential workers would be in a much better position but instead they can’t even get raises that match inflation. Like, if your workplace doesn’t, at the very least, give you an inflation-based adjustment to your salary before ever even getting to a true raise then that place is taking you for a ride.

      • BluesF@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        Like, if your workplace doesn’t, at the very least, give you an inflation-based adjustment to your salary before ever even getting to a true raise then that place is taking you for a ride.

        Do places actually do this? Pay rises in line with inflation first? I’ve never heard of this :(

        • Soup@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          Basically never! My roommate’s did, which is super nice to hear, but when I asked my last place they told me “that’s not how inflation works” because they’re dumb as rocks and half as useful.

          In reality there’s no “cultural difference” nonsense, it’s just basic math, but most managers and executives are fragile, selfish men who never had to learn how to communicate their feelings or recieve even the lightest, most gentle criticism.

          • BluesF@lemmy.world
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            21 days ago

            It absolutely should be how inflation works. The cost of everything has gone up, right? That includes the cost of my labour. Or, well, it should.

            • Soup@lemmy.world
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              21 days ago

              Precisely. Even in our broken system pay is directly associated with the lifestyle we believe that said job should merit and yet when that lifestyle gets more costly our salaries do not increase. It’s like, it doesn’t work in any fair manner and the way it claims to work is just there as an excuse to slowly erode the dignity of the people who just keep getting poorer each year while never actually doing anything in line with that claim.

    • Uruanna@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      That’s the point, the myth is always about “unskilled labour” and that’s specifically what pro-capitalist people believe - that low skill is the same as unskilled and low wages workers are “unskilled” and that’s why they deserve to stay where they are because they are brainless. And I am obviously above that, so you better not raise the lowest wages to the same as my level, it would be an insult to my skills that I totally have and they don’t. That is specifically the message and the brainwashing.

  • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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    21 days ago

    There’s jobs you can fake after an hour of training and there’s jobs that need six years to not kill people.

    Minimum wage is supposed to be enough for one income to comfortably raise a family.

    But we have to have this conversation, from scratch, every fucking time someone reposts this image. I’m beginning to understand why Socrates hated writing. You can prove a book wrong, and the book’s still there, being wrong.

    • DebatableRaccoon@lemmy.ca
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      21 days ago

      From a government perspective they are. If you ever try to immigrate to one of the “desired countries” you’ll quickly find out how worthless the average worker is in the eye of a pen pusher.

        • DebatableRaccoon@lemmy.ca
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          21 days ago

          Try to immigrate to the US and see how true that is. I’m also in a profession sources like that state as being skilled work but come application time, I was deemed worthless due to my profession, despite there being an outcry for workers.

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        Because countries don’t generally need average workers. What they most often lack is educated workers skilled in one thing or the other.

        What do you expect?

        “Hi! I’m merely average. Can I come in?”

        • DebatableRaccoon@lemmy.ca
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          21 days ago

          The answer to this point is in a comment further down. But the point you’re missing is how often professions are downplayed as unskilled. Someone messes up in my field and someone dies, but that’s considered unskilled despite it being a profession where there’s constantly an outcry for more workers.

      • zigmus64@lemmy.world
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        22 days ago

        I’ll give you farm-hands, and there are plenty of manual labor jobs that fall under the unskilled category, but bricklayers certainly are not among them. Simply a poor example in that specific case. The rest of the graphic is fine.

      • ikidd@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        A lot of farmhands operate million dollar combines and tractors pulling additional millions in implements. If a heavy duty equipment operator is “skilled” then you might have to rethink that one.

          • ikidd@lemmy.world
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            21 days ago

            Sounds like you’re saying all farmhands are “unskilled”. I’m offering a counterpoint.

            • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPM
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              21 days ago

              I am saying nobody is “unskilled”. You need to work on your reading comprehension and not just look for an online argument

              • ikidd@lemmy.world
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                21 days ago

                Comment you replied to:

                Not sure farmers and bricklayers are considered unskilled

                Your reply:

                Very certainly farm-hands and manual laborers are (unskilled).

                Maybe read that again and see if you can understand why I came to the conclusion you were agreeing with that poster. I don’t expect you will change your mind, but in my experience, you modify the adjective to what you would want your statement to agree with, and in the absence of changing it, you’re just carrying on with that adjective.

                Edit: I’m not here to make an argument, but explain why I thought you were saying the opposite. I’m not going to reply to anything here, because you’re apparently thinking the worst of anyone that comments in a way you take to be adversarial. So, carry on.

    • EldritchFeminity
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      21 days ago

      Did you know that aircraft mechanics were considered unskilled labor until the job was “reclassified” during the Cold War due to the demand for laborers?

      From a cultural sense, both farmers and bricklayers are absolutely considered unskilled by the general public. The average person makes no difference between the generic construction labor usually done by illegal immigrants (in the US) and a bricklayer.

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        In college I finally understood the quadratic equation. We had to use it to calculate the optimal amount of fertilizer to spread per acre.

        The masonry field is skilled in design, engineering, etc. Bricklayers, not so much.

  • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    20 days ago

    This has been posted before, but it’s still very very relevant.

    I’ll note that a bricklayer isn’t “unskilled” to anyone. Apart from that, I think this is fairly accurate overall.

    In addition, I’ll note that “class” is also a myth. “Upper”/“middle”/“lower” classes don’t actually exist. It’s just a term to refer to people who are seen to be more/less affluent, and has no bearing on reality.

    The only “class” I care about is the bottom 90%, struggling to make ends meet. The top 1% can go fuck themselves. As far as I’m concerned, it’s not a class war, it’s a 90% vs 1% war, and we have the numbers.

    • IntrusiveThoughtsWon@lemm.ee
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      20 days ago

      I’ll note that a bricklayer isn’t “unskilled” to anyone. Apart from that, I think this is fairly accurate overall.

      I lay a few bricks in the toilet every day. Doesn’t take any skill to do that.

  • PiousAgnostic@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    I mean, how much you get paid is usually related to how hard you are to replace. If it takes 1 week, 3 months, 1 year training, or a PHD in biomolecular engineering with 2 years of training.

    They should make different amounts of money. It’s an investment in people, and you have to pay them more to keep them.

    • SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      It’s just supply and demand. It doesn’t matter how long you have to be trained or how many PhDs you have. Like it takes years to become a decent 3D animator, but those guys get paid peanuts compared to many other jobs that require the same amount of training. Since there are thousands of desperate fresh grad animators looking for a job every year. For every job at Pixar there is a line waiting for someone to get fired.

      Also why for example plumbers and electricians get paid really well nowadays sometimes more than people with advanced degrees. Since there is a shortage of plumbers and electricians.

    • ZMoney@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      I have a PhD and this isn’t true unfortunately. Most of my friends with PhDs struggle to find work relevant to their field.

      I’d also like to know how much time it takes to train a CEO who makes half a million dollars a year.

  • lugal@lemmy.ml
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    22 days ago

    Is it? There are mind numbing jobs invented by capital but they do exist

    • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPM
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      22 days ago

      Bullshit jobs often tend to be better paid however. No paper pusher is getting paid minimum wage iirc

      • lugal@lemmy.ml
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        22 days ago

        From my own experience I can tell you that bullshit jobs are paid quite good but that’s beside my point.

        Unskilled labor is less a myth but rather a strategy of capital. In the past you needed skilled masons to build a house or what ever. Now you rather use concrete, a material anyone can learn to work which makes the worker expendable. Same with factories where skilled craftsmen were replaced by production line workers, reduced to barely more than extensions of the machine. This is really happening, it’s not a myth, it’s a way to take away our dignity. Bullshit jobs are a similar but different phenomenon.

        • ShareMySims@sh.itjust.works
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          22 days ago

          Can you build your own house, concrete or otherwise? No? That couldn’t possibly be because there is skill involved in building a house even from concrete, could it? 🤔🙄🙄🙄

          No job is “unskilled”, no matter how much better it makes you feel about yourself (literally the point - to divide the working class further and give people an easy high horse to jump on to so they can punch down at their peers).

          • lugal@lemmy.ml
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            22 days ago

            I’m not punching down. Giving unskilled jobs to skilled people is wrong. It takes away their potential for personal growth. And even these unskilled jobs contribute more to society than my academic bullshit job.

            Where we disagree is, you say calling a pipeline job unskilled is doing injustice to the person performing the job. I say giving the job to someone is already doing injustice to them.

        • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPM
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          22 days ago

          I am not sure if we’re even disagreeing here. “Removing our dignity” and “poverty wages” are two sides of the same coin.

          • lugal@lemmy.ml
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            22 days ago

            My problem is the term “myth”. It implies that unskilled labor doesn’t exist. It argue it does exist because of capital and shouldn’t

              • lugal@lemmy.ml
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                22 days ago

                That’s a different question and I disagree with the implicated identification of people and their occupation. You can put a shoemaker skilled to produce shoes all by themself and sit them on a pipeline with one simple task. They, as a person, are still skilled even though their skill isn’t wanted anymore by capital, and still their job is unskilled.

                Putting skilled people into unskilled jobs is taking away their dignity. And since nobody is unskilled, unskilled jobs shouldn’t exist.

                • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.comOPM
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                  22 days ago

                  Even then, I disagree. Even in the simplest of task, one can get very skilled at it. You can easily tell the difference between a newbie and a veteran on a production line.

                  I also disagree that these sort of unskilled jobs shouldn’t exist. There’s benefit to this sort of separation of duties. If people want to organize to do it on their own, without hierarchical coercion, I don’t see a problem with it.

    • desktop_user
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      21 days ago

      I am honestly curious if there’s a list of jobs that more or less only require a pulse.

  • swab148@lemm.ee
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    21 days ago

    Amazon dude just casually flashing society. Can’t blame him, though, that’s what I’d do.

  • bamfic@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    All labor is skilled. It is possible to fuck up even the simplest job if you don’t know what you’re doing or don’t give a shit. If you have a job and you’re not getting fired for incompetence then you are skilled at it