Justin from Queens wrote:You will be dead probably 50 years from now. Maybe 60.
Between now and then the one thing that you will probably spend more time than any other is the work that you do. If not the top, then close to it.
Ethics shouldn't represent the minimum standard to be met in deciding what to do with your life's work. Ethics should be the fundamental drive behind that decision. If not, what the hell are you really doing with your life? I'm not asking this from a judgment perspective - it's a question of the purpose of your life. When your life is over and you look back on it, what do you want to say you've done with your drive, gifts and talents?
As for the strict subsistence argument being the reason to work for Nike - that's bullshit.
= Justin
Absolutely! If I had a buck for every bang-on-perfect post Justin made, I'd have a shiny new bicycle for me, and a little circus tricycle for my screwy Taiwanese cat.
Although I might complicate Justin's post in 2 ways. First, this ethical approach to work is in some sense a privilege of a middle-class upbringing. A lot of working stiffs are born into circumstances that preclude this attitude from attaining. I'm thinking of people who never have the opportunity to develop their gifts and talents in a work-related context at all. Like the 55 year-old guy I worked with on a construction site last summer (Mark), who worked in a lumber mill for 30 years before getting laid off. Ethics probably factored no more than his personal gifts in his "life's work." Which is to say, not much.*
David Graeber had a
fantastic article in
Harper's last year addressing the relationship between altruism, work, and class in America. Can't recommend it enough. It's also a compelling account of why working-class Americans gravitate to Republicans and resent liberal intellectuals. It's online here:
"Army of Altruists: On the Alienated Right to Do Good."
The second thing I'd add is that I know a lot of creative people who look at working this way: either you can find a line of work that allows you to pursue your passion and/or ethics directly, or you find a line of work that allows you to pursue your passion and/or ethics on the side.
My beef is with the idea that the second option absolves people of complicity in the shady operations of their employer and their daily work. Sometimes I wonder if this is an overlooked element in the gentrification and de-politicization of underground rock. People work for shady employers but think it's all cool because they run an indie label on the side. The label or the music becomes an ethical/artistic supplement to the ethically/artistically bankrupt day-job. It's the hipster version of corporate executives who put on chaps and roar around on their Fat Boys on weekends--unless your music/art/writing is *fucking awesome*. In which case you get to continue spying on family farmers for Monsanto, with a secret smile. You really do.
Most people work for assholes though. That's not an ethical failing: it's just being employed. That said, I hate working for capitalists of any stripe, and I wouldn't take a *long-term* position in the private sector unless my goal was to agitate and organize. Would never work for a nefarious State agency either. Once you know better, you should do better.
*
Mark's father and grandfather were both miners, so working in a mill was a step up. Here, workplace organizing and workplace ethics override any appeal to ethical work in-itself. The most inspiring, committed people I've met have been progressive/grassroots workplace organizers and agitators.