Anonymous wrote:I am an RN that works as a Case Manager. I do only desk/ telephone work. Am I blue collar?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trump is a gold collar but he needs a dog collar--he's rabid.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Trump is a gold collar but he needs a dog collar--he's rabid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No, just wanted to be a little provocativeIn the old days, doctors and lawyers, and all the "professions", were considered inferior to the landed aristocracy.
You need to separate the money from the actual work involved. My husband is a doctor. I'm a research scientist. We are all blue collar in the sense that we work with our hands. I agree that job descriptions sometimes straddle the line and that someone might work in a research lab or a surgery but then, with the same diploma, switch to policy or management.
This is akin to saying that Wall St. investment bankers and stockbrokers are "working class" because they "work."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No, just wanted to be a little provocativeIn the old days, doctors and lawyers, and all the "professions", were considered inferior to the landed aristocracy.
You need to separate the money from the actual work involved. My husband is a doctor. I'm a research scientist. We are all blue collar in the sense that we work with our hands. I agree that job descriptions sometimes straddle the line and that someone might work in a research lab or a surgery but then, with the same diploma, switch to policy or management.
Yup. You and your DH aren't artisans either PPP even though you "work with your hands". Blue collar implies working class.
This is akin to saying that Wall St. investment bankers and stockbrokers are "working class" because they "work."
Anonymous wrote:
No, just wanted to be a little provocativeIn the old days, doctors and lawyers, and all the "professions", were considered inferior to the landed aristocracy.
You need to separate the money from the actual work involved. My husband is a doctor. I'm a research scientist. We are all blue collar in the sense that we work with our hands. I agree that job descriptions sometimes straddle the line and that someone might work in a research lab or a surgery but then, with the same diploma, switch to policy or management.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Blue collar, just like doctors. Very respected, though.
In what world are doctors blue collar workers? Are you nuts?
In the old days, doctors and lawyers, and all the "professions", were considered inferior to the landed aristocracy.