David Graeber

Bullshit Jobs

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  • Lida Mondragónhas quoted17 days ago
    more obviously one’s work benefits other people, the less one is likely to be paid for it.
  • Lida Mondragónhas quoted3 months ago
    Given the choice between less hours and more toys and pleasures, we’ve collectively chosen the latte
  • Lida Mondragónhas quoted3 months ago
    did not need to be performed—that was simply a waste of time or resources, or that even made the world worse?
  • Lida Mondragónhas quoted3 months ago
    very familiar in academic contexts) who spend their time staffing committees that discuss the problem of unnecessary committees.
  • Lida Mondragónhas quoted3 months ago
    Could there be anything more demoralizing than having to wake up in the morning five out of seven days of one’s adult life to perform a task that one secretly believed
  • Lida Mondragónhas quoted3 months ago
    anyone who would rather be doing something useful with themselves.
  • Lida Mondragónhas quoted3 months ago
    we also hanker after meaning’
  • Aaahas quoted9 months ago
    Over the course of the last several thousand years there have been untold thousands of human groups that might be referred to as “societies,” and the overwhelming majority of them managed to figure out ways to distribute those tasks that needed to be done to keep them alive in the style to which they were accustomed in such a fashion that most everyone had some way to contribute, and no one had to spend the majority of their waking hours performing tasks they would rather not be doing, in the way that people
  • Aaahas quoted9 months ago
    Over the course of the last several thousand years there have been untold thousands of human groups that might be referred to as “societies,” and the overwhelming majority of them managed to figure out ways to distribute those tasks that needed to be done to keep them alive in the style to which they were accustomed in such a fashion that most everyone had some way to contribute, and no one had to spend the majority of their waking hours performing tasks they would rather not be doing, in the way that people
  • Aaahas quoted9 months ago
    All these are examples of what I like to call “compensatory consumerism.” They are the sorts of things you can do to make up for the fact that you don’t have a life, or not very much of one.
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