YARN
Fleet Captain
I mean "unhappy" like one who works at a crappy low-wage job to support their family.
Like I said, it's a continuum. Some families are in situations comparable to that of the coal miner or those women who worked in the match industry suffering from necrosis of the jaw (losing their lower jaws due to exposure to yellow phosphorus). If you literally have to choose between starving to death and doing that one crappy job, then yeah you're in a coercive situation.
If, however, you stay in a job because it's the devil you know or because it's too much work to apply for another job, you are under much less coercion and are much more free.
Where can we draw the line? I've already described that in terms of broad vs. narrow rational self-interest and violating one's core principles and dignity under severe duress.
CoveTom said:I have a good job. It pays good money and I enjoy the work. I am unhappy with the fact that it does not provide health insurance benefits, and I also dislike the fact that I have to drive an hour to get there. But it was the job that presented itself and, despite the couple of negatives, I took it. Was I somehow coerced into that job because of my lack of economic choices?
You've gotta read. Seriously. Words are your friend. There is a coercive aspect to all employment situations. What matters isn't whether you can tease out the coercive thread in your situation, but whether a given economic situation is manifestly objectionable given the level of coercion and the nature of the employment.
Is your situational objectionably coercive? Does it strip you of your fundamental dignity and humanity? Probably not.
Imagine, in detail, what your job involves. Got it? Good. Now imagine, in real-world detail (e.g., not Pretty Woman or The Happy Hooker, but you're average prostitute) what the prostitute's job requires. Got it? Can you see the difference? Can you see how that job is dehumanizing, humiliating, hazardous to one's health?
Michael Sandel (2009) raises the issue of cannabilism between consenting adults:
In 2001, a strange encounter took place in the German village of Rotenburg. Bernd-Jurgen Brandes, a forty-three-year-old software engineer, responded to an Internet ad seeking someone "willing to be killed and eaten." The ad had been posted by Armin Meiwes, forty-two, a computer technician. Meiwes was offering no monetary compensation, only the experience itself. Some two hundred people replied to the ad. Four traveled to Meiwes's farmhouse for an interview, but decided they were not interested. But when Brandes met with Meiwes and considered his proposal over coffee, he gave his consent. Meiwes proceeded to kill his guest, carve up the corpse, and store it in plastic bags in his freezer. By the time he was arrested, the "Cannibal of Rotenburg" had consumed over forty pounds of his willing victim, cooking some of him in olive oil and garlic.(pp. 73-74)
Where do you stand on this one? Would you have the government say "No" or "Yes" to this? It's consenting adults. It's their own property (their bodies). Suppose that Meiwes did offer financial compensation for this "service." Would you take this job?