tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7380804.post111179387042499813..comments2023-09-19T19:45:50.854+12:00Comments on Spanblather: when is a job not a "real" jobSpanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16896745511007816190noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7380804.post-1112250297387523652005-03-31T18:24:00.000+12:002005-03-31T18:24:00.000+12:00I have gone to her blog and lol she is WRO at Vic...I have gone to her blog and lol she is WRO at Vic, and very right wing. How unusual. <BR/><BR/>She appears to suffer from the same intolerance of opposing views that I have seen many on the left exhibit.<BR/><BR/>I side with Span in that of course working for a union is a real job. People are free to collectively organise and contract advocates in the marketplace. You would think even someone on the right would appreciate that. <BR/><BR/>Unions are an important free market mechanism to ensure a balance between capital and labour, of course as long as they aren't compulseory.<BR/><BR/>Freedom is ChoiceAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7380804.post-1111879996105022812005-03-27T11:33:00.000+12:002005-03-27T11:33:00.000+12:00Why is it not real work X? I wasn't referring to ...Why is it not real work X? <BR/><BR/>I wasn't referring to the other jobs student politicians work, if that's what you mean, just trying to point out that the student political part of being a student politician does seem to be a case of getting something flash on the CV for some (particularly those on the right in my experience). And that the very nature of being a student is that you are biding your time, to a certain extent, until you can do what you are studying to become (or something else entirely).Spanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16896745511007816190noreply@blogger.com