Prometheus said:
but that's not the case with jobs such as factory workers or unskilled labor, where managment views workers as fungible commodities.
If my whole argument was about good employees being safe and bad employees being at risk for termination, then how can you attempt to refute that with examples of factory workers and unskilled laborers? If a job requires no skill, how can someone be "good" at it?
Isn't it possible that management views such workers as fungible commodities because they ARE fungible commodities?
fungible - "being of such a nature that one part or quantity may be replaced by another equal part or quantity in the satisfaction of an obligation"
Assume that your job is to put a big stamp on something as it comes down the assembly line. The assembly line moves in such a way that any speed or efficiency beyond a certain point will not improve the way the job is done. (i.e. if you can stamp 2000 things an hour that doesn't matter because the conveyor belt doesn't move that fast) Also assume that the conveyor belt moves slow enough so that even granny can stamp things.
Given the above, please tell me how anyone working that line is not "fungible?"
If you want job security, get a job that requires skill, and do it well. Factory jobs? "Unskilled labor" jobs? I can walk in there today and do the job just as good as anyone else with little training. Can they do my job? Probably not in this lifetime. Now think about a doctor or a chemist. Can I waltz on in and do their jobs? No, hence the reason they're still employed.
Not trying to be a dick, just stating fact. If you're going to refute an argument, use a valid counterexample.
-Warik