• kattfisk@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    12 hours ago

    My experience organizing non-profit events have shown that most people actually have no problem doing dirty jobs for no material compensation. If the following things are true:

    1. They understand why the job is important
    2. They feel responsible for the job (usually comes from being given autonomy and trust)
    3. They get recognition for doing it (social rewards are actually very powerful)
    4. No one else is getting compensated either.

    I understand that this seems foreign to a lot of people, because this is not how work is generally motivated in capitalist society. You are used to your job being rather unimportant, with little autonomy, little trust, not much recognition from society and some people definitely profiting more than others. Your primary motivator is the threat of violence (via homelessness, starvation etc.), so it’s hard to imagine what would happen if that was removed.

    That to me is the core idea of Anarchism, to base your organization on volontary cooperation rather than coercion.

    An interesting side-note is that the people who do the dirty jobs in these circumstances often take great pride in it, forming an identify around doing what others are not willing to and calling attention to it as a way to get more recognition.

      • kattfisk@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 hours ago

        I assumed it was just a very dirty, tough job requiring some specialized equipment and skills. Are you saying it’s somehow fundamentally different from other human activities?