P
phoenixrrt62
Guest
When you dictate the terms for payment, as you have done, you do a serious injustice by inventing a fiction in opposition to reality.
]I’m not dictating anything. Market forces are. Hell, if I were, it wouldn’t have taken my current job 3 weeks to decide what to pay me…I would have told them what I wanted and we could have negotiated from there…
My best friend paid 20% less in car insurance the moment he said, “I do.” Why ? I felt cheated ! I felt robbed ! Why should he pay less insurance than I do ? It took a long time, but I realized why : my best friend is now far less likely to stupidly jeopardize his life, far more likely to drive with care, especially when his wife (who might be pregnant) is in the car with him. It makes perfect sense.
That’s a different ball of wax and you know it. The insurance companies are looking at the chances you will be injured, etc. Just like life insurance will raise rates the older you are. THAT makes sense. It does NOT make sense to pay a (same age, same training, same experience) married male RRT 35.00 an hour, and me 30.00 an hour, simply because I am female. What risk do I pose that the male does not?***
Married men are more stable, in general, than unmarried men. Married men have a reason to subject themselves to the world of work ; unmarried men see the world of work merely as, at most, a means of opportunity and self-gratification, whereas married men need and respect it. This is no insult to either party : unmarried men must work to survive. This debases their natural sense of human dignity. It lacks human fulfillment and value in that sense for them. For them, it is a pure imposition on their time, their liberty, their freedom. The only benefit is the material dainties that it might provide : hardly a motivation to immerse yourself mind, body, and spirit into the world of work. It is a civil dictate from their perspective. For married men, work is the sustenance of their families, of their dearly beloved. Work allows them to have and keep and provide for their families, and is no longer purely an imposition on their freedom, but a means of expanding that freedom. Work is fundamentally different for family men than it is for bachelors, because they relate to it and engage in it for vastly different reasons.
Ok. Just say that that’s all true (personally, some of that I really take issue with) even so…WHY does a single man not deserve the same pay. HE"S DOING THE SAME THING!
Who cares if he doesn’t respect it as much? He’s performing a service…the same service the married man is.***
Your railing against the system is akin to my anger at my friend’s 20% car insurance discount for being married ; nonetheless, you at once and firstly mentioned your child. I am curious : how much do you work for your child ? Are you only “sometimes” working for the child, “most” of the time, “all” of the time, or none of the time ? Something tells me you consciously and actively work for your child, and when you want to throw off the chain of work, the one thing that ultimately prevents you is your child ; therefore, because you have a child to love and provide for, are you more or less likely to willy-nilly quit your job, to ruin your chances of opportunity at that job ?
rolls eyes
I work to provide for myself and my son, who I am responsible for raising…as the single male/female is responsible for themselves. So, because I am responsible for a child, I should get paid more? How unfair is that to a single person? Who’s to say they aren’t supporting their parents? Even if they are NOT, and they use their paycheck to buy the latest Prada bag, why should I care?
You are less. You possess something the single, childless man does not : a reason to work or rather someone to work for. You bring love to your work, the love you have for your child, the single, unwed man does not …
-yeah, I have a REAL problem with this. Just because a man is single, he doesn’t bring importance and joy and love to his work? And why not? So, you want to tell me a single doctor or nurse doesn’t have love of service and devotion to the healing arts? I don’t buy that mess for a second…
…however, for the sake of the chance of having a wife, a home, a family, then a single, childless man may imitate the wed family man, and behave like him, merely for the hope and opportunity of having his own one day. This, too, makes him more valuable than the man who could “care-less.”
***Yeah, I see men and woman who go to work for the paycheck, and don’t give their all to their work…male, female, straight, gay-and I see the converse-I see people who are insanely devoted to their work…don’t MATTER.
They are performing a service, and the service they provide should be paid no matter what they are, married, single, straight, gay, male, female. Don’t matter.***
]I’m not dictating anything. Market forces are. Hell, if I were, it wouldn’t have taken my current job 3 weeks to decide what to pay me…I would have told them what I wanted and we could have negotiated from there…
My best friend paid 20% less in car insurance the moment he said, “I do.” Why ? I felt cheated ! I felt robbed ! Why should he pay less insurance than I do ? It took a long time, but I realized why : my best friend is now far less likely to stupidly jeopardize his life, far more likely to drive with care, especially when his wife (who might be pregnant) is in the car with him. It makes perfect sense.
That’s a different ball of wax and you know it. The insurance companies are looking at the chances you will be injured, etc. Just like life insurance will raise rates the older you are. THAT makes sense. It does NOT make sense to pay a (same age, same training, same experience) married male RRT 35.00 an hour, and me 30.00 an hour, simply because I am female. What risk do I pose that the male does not?***
Married men are more stable, in general, than unmarried men. Married men have a reason to subject themselves to the world of work ; unmarried men see the world of work merely as, at most, a means of opportunity and self-gratification, whereas married men need and respect it. This is no insult to either party : unmarried men must work to survive. This debases their natural sense of human dignity. It lacks human fulfillment and value in that sense for them. For them, it is a pure imposition on their time, their liberty, their freedom. The only benefit is the material dainties that it might provide : hardly a motivation to immerse yourself mind, body, and spirit into the world of work. It is a civil dictate from their perspective. For married men, work is the sustenance of their families, of their dearly beloved. Work allows them to have and keep and provide for their families, and is no longer purely an imposition on their freedom, but a means of expanding that freedom. Work is fundamentally different for family men than it is for bachelors, because they relate to it and engage in it for vastly different reasons.
Ok. Just say that that’s all true (personally, some of that I really take issue with) even so…WHY does a single man not deserve the same pay. HE"S DOING THE SAME THING!
Who cares if he doesn’t respect it as much? He’s performing a service…the same service the married man is.***
Your railing against the system is akin to my anger at my friend’s 20% car insurance discount for being married ; nonetheless, you at once and firstly mentioned your child. I am curious : how much do you work for your child ? Are you only “sometimes” working for the child, “most” of the time, “all” of the time, or none of the time ? Something tells me you consciously and actively work for your child, and when you want to throw off the chain of work, the one thing that ultimately prevents you is your child ; therefore, because you have a child to love and provide for, are you more or less likely to willy-nilly quit your job, to ruin your chances of opportunity at that job ?
rolls eyes
I work to provide for myself and my son, who I am responsible for raising…as the single male/female is responsible for themselves. So, because I am responsible for a child, I should get paid more? How unfair is that to a single person? Who’s to say they aren’t supporting their parents? Even if they are NOT, and they use their paycheck to buy the latest Prada bag, why should I care?
You are less. You possess something the single, childless man does not : a reason to work or rather someone to work for. You bring love to your work, the love you have for your child, the single, unwed man does not …
-yeah, I have a REAL problem with this. Just because a man is single, he doesn’t bring importance and joy and love to his work? And why not? So, you want to tell me a single doctor or nurse doesn’t have love of service and devotion to the healing arts? I don’t buy that mess for a second…
…however, for the sake of the chance of having a wife, a home, a family, then a single, childless man may imitate the wed family man, and behave like him, merely for the hope and opportunity of having his own one day. This, too, makes him more valuable than the man who could “care-less.”
***Yeah, I see men and woman who go to work for the paycheck, and don’t give their all to their work…male, female, straight, gay-and I see the converse-I see people who are insanely devoted to their work…don’t MATTER.
They are performing a service, and the service they provide should be paid no matter what they are, married, single, straight, gay, male, female. Don’t matter.***