You could call this my first job in the sex industry. It could also be seen as not too different from jobs I’ve held in the past. I have waitressed, and been sexually harassed by bosses and customers. I have modeled for art classes, and watched students and teachers fuel their fantasies with my motionless body. I have worked in an office, and been stuck in a cubicle with a coworker who just could not grasp the fact that I preferred my woman lover over him. I have worked in the film industry, and felt myself a cog in a multimillion dollar machine that designs and markets “entertainment” around the sex-value of its stars. These all look like sex industries to me. I wondered: What is the difference between jobs within work systems that hypocritically deny the importance of sex to their smooth operation as opposed to those that exploit it as their very reason for operating? If capitalism was structuring my work experiences, and if sexism was structuring roles within capitalism, what had I to lose by facing overt rather than covert realities? I certainly had a choice of not doing this particular work, but I never had a choice of not dealing with its existence.
stfuconservatives:

dumbthingswhitepplsay:

baddominicana:

pow pow POOOOWWWWWW

seriously

When people are like “Wealthy people EARNED their money!” I’m just like “Do you really think a CEO works 100 times harder than their janitor?” If hard work made you rich, everyone working three part-time jobs would be doing GREAT. But they’re not. Capitalism fail. -Jess

stfuconservatives:

dumbthingswhitepplsay:

baddominicana:

pow pow POOOOWWWWWW

seriously

When people are like “Wealthy people EARNED their money!” I’m just like “Do you really think a CEO works 100 times harder than their janitor?” If hard work made you rich, everyone working three part-time jobs would be doing GREAT. But they’re not. Capitalism fail. -Jess

(Source: egyanarchist)

occupyallstreets:

Youth Unemployment Sky Rockets To Highest Rate Ever Recored
Youth unemployment in Greece is about 48%. In the US, youths 18-24 have an unemployment rate of 45.7%. The highest rate since the government began tracking such information.
Squeezed by a tight job market, young Americans are especially struggling. They have suffered bigger income losses than other age groups and are less likely to be employed than at any time since World War II.
An analysis by the Pew Research Center, released Thursday, details the impact of the recent recession on the attitudes of a generation of mostly 20- and 30-somethings.
With government data showing record gaps in employment between young and old, a Pew survey found that 41 percent of Americans believe that younger adults have been hit harder than any other group, compared with 29 percent who say middle-aged Americans and 24 percent who point to seniors 65 and older. A wide majority of the public - at least 69 percent - also said it’s more difficult for today’s young adults than their parents’ generation to pay for college, find a job, buy a home or save for the future.
Among young adults ages 18 to 34, only a third rated their financial situation as “excellent” or “good,” compared with 54 percent for seniors age 65 and over. In 2004, before the recession began, about half of both young and older adults rated their own financial situation highly.

“Young workers are on the bottom of the ladder, and during a recession like we’ve had, it’s often hard for them to hold on.
They are clearly less satisfied with their current circumstances than they were before the recession. This may be where some of the anger and frustration being expressed in the Occupy movement is rooted.
They have a long way to climb back, and a lot of displaced workers to compete with.”

said Kim Parker, associate director of Pew’s Social & Demographic Trends project. She noted that some have been heavily involved in the nationwide “Occupy” protests over economic disparity.
At risk of becoming a “lost generation,” many young adults are going back to school or scraping by on waitressing, bartending and odd jobs as they wait for the economy to slowly recover.
For instance:
The share of young adults 18-24 who are employed has dropped to 54.3 percent, the lowest level since the government began tracking such data in 1948. 
Young adults working full time have median weekly earnings of $448, about 6 percent less than in 2007 
About 19 percent of men ages 25-34 were idle in the weak job market, neither working nor attending school. That’s up from 14 percent in 2007. 
Fewer than half of young adults who are currently working say they have the education and skills necessary to advance in their careers. 
Although youth unemployment is at it’s highest, 43 percent said they were extremely or very confident that they could find another job if they lost or left their current one despite opposing statistics.
Source

occupyallstreets:

Youth Unemployment Sky Rockets To Highest Rate Ever Recored

Youth unemployment in Greece is about 48%. In the US, youths 18-24 have an unemployment rate of 45.7%. The highest rate since the government began tracking such information.

Squeezed by a tight job market, young Americans are especially struggling. They have suffered bigger income losses than other age groups and are less likely to be employed than at any time since World War II.

An analysis by the Pew Research Center, released Thursday, details the impact of the recent recession on the attitudes of a generation of mostly 20- and 30-somethings.

With government data showing record gaps in employment between young and old, a Pew survey found that 41 percent of Americans believe that younger adults have been hit harder than any other group, compared with 29 percent who say middle-aged Americans and 24 percent who point to seniors 65 and older. A wide majority of the public - at least 69 percent - also said it’s more difficult for today’s young adults than their parents’ generation to pay for college, find a job, buy a home or save for the future.

Among young adults ages 18 to 34, only a third rated their financial situation as “excellent” or “good,” compared with 54 percent for seniors age 65 and over. In 2004, before the recession began, about half of both young and older adults rated their own financial situation highly.

Young workers are on the bottom of the ladder, and during a recession like we’ve had, it’s often hard for them to hold on.

They are clearly less satisfied with their current circumstances than they were before the recession. This may be where some of the anger and frustration being expressed in the Occupy movement is rooted.

They have a long way to climb back, and a lot of displaced workers to compete with.”

said Kim Parker, associate director of Pew’s Social & Demographic Trends project. She noted that some have been heavily involved in the nationwide “Occupy” protests over economic disparity.

At risk of becoming a “lost generation,” many young adults are going back to school or scraping by on waitressing, bartending and odd jobs as they wait for the economy to slowly recover.

For instance:

  • The share of young adults 18-24 who are employed has dropped to 54.3 percent, the lowest level since the government began tracking such data in 1948.
  • Young adults working full time have median weekly earnings of $448, about 6 percent less than in 2007 
  • About 19 percent of men ages 25-34 were idle in the weak job market, neither working nor attending school. That’s up from 14 percent in 2007.
  • Fewer than half of young adults who are currently working say they have the education and skills necessary to advance in their careers. 

Although youth unemployment is at it’s highest, 43 percent said they were extremely or very confident that they could find another job if they lost or left their current one despite opposing statistics.

Source

stfuconservatives:

goodreasonnews:

theweekmagazine:

“Tell me why being rich is such a bad thing, why being successful is such a bad thing. Tex Richman, The Muppets name is, that is the American dream, is to work hard and be successful.”
Fox Business takes issue with the fact that The Muppets villain is an oil tycoon named Tex Richman. 
“Is liberal Hollywood using class warfare to brainwash our kids?”
“Yeah, absolutely.”
Watch

I love that he
A) Thinks the Muppets were never political before this.
B) Villainizes Captain Planet, the starving Muppet, and Nickelodeon’s “Big Green Help.”

The Muppets also want your kids to share and be nice to other people. SOCIALISTS!!!

stfuconservatives:

goodreasonnews:

theweekmagazine:

“Tell me why being rich is such a bad thing, why being successful is such a bad thing. Tex Richman, The Muppets name is, that is the American dream, is to work hard and be successful.”

Fox Business takes issue with the fact that The Muppets villain is an oil tycoon named Tex Richman.

“Is liberal Hollywood using class warfare to brainwash our kids?”

“Yeah, absolutely.”

Watch

I love that he

A) Thinks the Muppets were never political before this.

B) Villainizes Captain Planet, the starving Muppet, and Nickelodeon’s “Big Green Help.”

The Muppets also want your kids to share and be nice to other people. SOCIALISTS!!!

dariaspetgiraffe:

Smh, no education = no job = no money to pay for the education we need in order to get a good job. What a fucked up vicious circle us 99% live in.

nevver:

“$2.2 trillion (extrapolating over the coming decade to $5 trillion dollars) directly transferred from the American economy to the personal accounts of bank executives and their employees.”  – Occupy Wall Street

nevver:

“$2.2 trillion (extrapolating over the coming decade to $5 trillion dollars) directly transferred from the American economy to the personal accounts of bank executives and their employees.”
Occupy Wall Street

lifeinthemargin:

Occupy Wall Street
©GeneTaylor 2011

lifeinthemargin:

Occupy Wall Street

©GeneTaylor 2011