Trainee neophyte
Established Member
MikeG.":5zgajv61 said:Trainee neophyte":5zgajv61 said:........no one in the west has a job of any value.........
So nurses, doctors, dentists, charity workers, teachers, university lecturers, scientists, engineers, researchers, vets, farmers........none of these are jobs of any value. Interesting perspective you have there.
The full quote is:
The upside of globalism is that we can buy really cheap stuff. The downside is that no one in the west has a job of any value, which is about to be shown up by the mother of all recessions. Everyone currently working from home should consider their position - if you are capable of working from home, what are you actually doing, and does the world really care? Will the world notice if you didn't work at all? The middle class is about to be ram-raided.
We're taking about the future again - making predictions. By saying that the downside of globalisation is that no one in the west has a job of any value, I was (I had hoped) suggesting that all the value jobs that could be offshored, have been offshored. You then gave a list of jobs reasonably secure from off-shoring. As for the rest of it - if you work from home and no one noticed the difference, do you produce value? Some people almost certainly can say yes (I believe architects provide a valuable and very necessary service, for example), but others not so much. Once again, I have commited the unforgivable internet crime of a "logical fallacy". It's something that I do constantly - but not intentionally, I hope you understand. Paint pictures in black and white, and someone will always point out that blue could be another option.
So back to you - are you confident that middle-class life, with its wealth and security, and constant house-price inflation, and index linked pensions etc will continue unaffected by the global economic shutdown? A six week hiatus, and everyone back to normal, as if nothing had happened?