• glasratz@feddit.org
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    1 day ago

    See, that’s the whole point. This was a discussion about people being able to live on seasonal, menial and easy to access jobs like unloading goods or waiting tables. They weren’t living very good of it, but it was possible without sleeping on the street.

    A doctor is a very bad example indeed, because most doctors have fixed jobs they can’t easily leave for longer time periods. No, it’s actually a very similar example to yours. Contract work in the medical industry has been becoming extremely common over the last decade or so. Hospitals need to pay premium to fill their short-term staff shortages and doctors and nurses get higher than average pay combined with a lot of flexibility. Work half a year and earn enough for the rest? Absolutely possible, if you’re willing to move on short notice.

    So both examples show jobs that are difficult to get into with years of certification and training. Both have nothing to do with the initial point of the discussion.

    • poVoq@slrpnk.netM
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      1 day ago

      Commercial scuba diving is difficult to get into but it doesn’t take many years, and for sure nowhere near as long as becoming a doctor takes.

      But I get the feeling you are just trying to argue for the sake of arguing and this has long moved past the original point.

      • glasratz@feddit.org
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        22 hours ago

        I just emphasized what the original point was and how my argument was connected to it. You just chose to ignore that.

        It is completely beside the point how long it takes exactly to become a offshore scuba diver or a physician. (Where I live you need to have at least a three-year vocational education before you can start commercial diving training at all. I’d estimate it takes you about four to four and a half years all in all. Becoming a doctor takes six.) The point is that both are jobs that are difficult to get into and require specialist training. They are not “unskilled” labour, the kind ob jobs the original argument was about.