Josef K wrote:ubercat wrote:If you're an ethical person, you bring it with you to work. Ethics don't start and stop when you cross a threshold.
Perhaps you really aren't an ethical person.
I find it incredibly difficult to forget my ethics, and even more difficult to compromise my morals for fucking money.
How far do you take your ethics? Would you consider it unethical to allow your taxes to be used for the purchase of armaments?
come on, now. that's not even in the same ballpark. what the gov't does with my tax money is really not up to me. It's my responsibility to pay the pittance they get so that I don't have to deal with the audit. although I don't make enough where they'd wanna come after me, anyway.
I've yet to have a job I couldn't get behind ethically. It's non-negotiable as far as I'm concerned. I don't think this applies to everyone's case, of course (like the nike story (btw-could your friend get his 3 year old a job at nike? it'd up the income! (I kid))) I feel fortunate that I haven't had a job that made me question my own ethics. not everyone has that luxury, though.
I don't think property ownership or settling down is the answer. it's barely an answer. it doesn't solve anything, it just gives you a new set of circumstances. I just recently bought my first piece of land (in India, no less! (wtf)) with my brother and my cousin, but it has yet to change my day to day. I guess it's because it's so far removed from me. I digress.
I still try to live like an artist an an honest person as much as I can. I do so cheaply and frugally and am much happier for it. I don't think that investing in an unknown (like property or marriage) will change the way I want to actually enjoy living. I hope that when I do go that route it just makes life different in a positive way and not a negative one.
gluck.