• Eldritch@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    You’ve literally just described every job that exists everywhere. It’s a bullshit term to other and denigrate certain groups.

    • cynar@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      A lot of jobs can’t be learnt on the fly. They either need prior training, or significant on the job or prior to work training. Those jobs will, by their nature earn a premium (basic supply and demand).

      There will always be low skill jobs, and that’s ok. The issue is that they are now so poorly paid that you can’t survive on them.

      E.g. an office janitor is an unskilled job. It’s easy to get a new person up to speed on-the-fly. A janitor on a medical ward is low skilled. They require more training, but it can be on the job. Cleaning a surgery theatre is a skilled job. It requires a significant baseline of knowledge to do it right. This requires off the job training.

      None are bad jobs, and all should be paid well enough to live on. However, the more specialist roles should also earn more, since they have higher requirements.

      • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        So you’re saying training isn’t training? That’s a bold claim. Can you prove it?

        And if you think an office janitor is an unskilled job. You’ve never met many good custodians. It’s easy for anyone to go into any field and do a shit job. But whether or not you acknowledge it. Being good at something takes skill regardless of what it is. Even the migrants picking fruit in American fields are highly skilled. Or are you telling me that in less than a single season or week you could match or better them?

    • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      Lol sure. Are you ready to be an architect or a biochemist or an ironworker or a paramedic?

        • Turun@feddit.de
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          11 months ago

          No shit, the apprenticeship is the exact thing we claim makes a difference.

          We can argue where exactly we should draw the line: Is a two year apprenticeship required to qualify as skilled labor? Or is 6 months enough already? Maybe even a one month training course can be considered enough to learn a skill. But the fact is that some jobs require more training than others. And this distinction is worth making in some situations.

          I worked in unskilled Labor before, a few minutes teaching so I know what to do, maybe two hours supervised to make sure I don’t fuck up and that’s it.

        • SchizoDenji@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          An apprenticeship is enough to be a biochemist? Lmao go touch some grass.

          • Leela [it/its] @lemm.ee
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            11 months ago

            I don’t understand the need to dogpile on someone who is simply stating that jobs needn’t be divided by skill because all jobs need skills. Racking hay and stacking it up is a skill. Picking and sorting the good from the bad fruit or veggies is a skill. Interacting with mean and disrespectful people who couldn’t care less about your feelings and pretending to be friendly is a skill. Flipping burgers before someone yells at you for taking more than two minutes is a skill.

            Obviously, their argument with the biochemist was wrong, and they were misguided, but why the need to pray on their downfall? It’s useless to divide jobs, because they all have skills.

      • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        They literally used to apprentice them. They still could. They don’t but they could.

          • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            If I were in the 19th century? Sure. We could still train them that way today even with all the knowledge we now have. It’s only the knowledge that’s outmoded. Not the method of training.

            • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              The method of training has severe deficiencies including the absence of standardization. Also surgeons still have apprenticeship they just have to go to med school first

              • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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                11 months ago

                The current method of training has severe deficiencies as well. Often saddling people with 6 to 7 figures of debt. And in the medical field specifically having them work shifts defined by people originally hopped up on meth and cocaine. I’d take a well rested and healthy surgeon any day over one that’s sleep/stress/drug addled.

                Oh and there were literal trade groups that set basic standards most times. Listen it’s your prerogative if you want to argue training isn’t training. It isn’t a very defensible position however.

                • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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                  11 months ago

                  I don’t disagree that education should be free or at least affordable and at a reasonable pace, but I also stand by the position that an academic portion and institutional training are better than a training program without it.

                  But also you’ve moved from no such thing as skilled labor to adamantly defending apprenticeship which is a form of skilled labor training. Nobody who apprenticed is unskilled labor.