a) the forebears did the hard work 'cause they had no alternative*relevant parts bold-ed for your convenience per your post on forum manners*
Personally, I believe hard work has a lot of value, be it physical labor or something that commands monetary rewards. If we base value solely on how much money a certain act brings we are missing all of the soft dollars that add in.
b) their hard work barely provided for them and their family's subsistence- they got very little for all the work they put in. They were lucky if that little output sustained them.
OK, so I was dismissive about house cleaning. But are you going to tell me that you need special training (beyond...maybe 30 minutes listening to directions and advice) to know what you have to do to clean a house? From mopping to getting rid of parasites. Do you really want to claim that?A good housekeeper does more than keep your place tidy. They keep you healthy. Think about all the dust mites and allergens that would build up if your place wasn't dusted properly. Let's say you do the "bare minimum", you don't move anything out of place, only clean around it. Think of all the mites that could fester themselves under your love seat. Sure you never see it, but you would notice eventually when you have more respiratory infections, which lead you to need medical attention, which costs that hard cash you seem to think is the only measure of value.
And what about cleaning the oven, is that a bare minimum? If not those drippings will attract bugs. Roaches can cause stomach ailments before you even know they are there. Which again means more trips to the doctor and more use of hard dollars.
So if you are speaking solely in hard dollars, you're missing the point of value. Value considers the soft dollars. Profit and loss considers soft dollars. A hard worker is valuable.
Yes, what you do is important, but it can be done by most of humanity. Whereas only a few people can make computer software, or put together a car, or fix that car, or cure you of your disease, or entertain you for two hours straight, or whatev'. That's the point I'm making. The work is important and hard, but most people should be able to do it. That's what drives down its ultimate value. Nothing's missed anywhere be it soft or hard or crunchy dollars.
I didn't address the hard work part: You're right, a hard worker is better than a lazy worker. Absolutely. But what exactly is stopping one from working hard to clean a house- from floor to ceiling, kitchen to bathroom, roaches to dust mites?
ETA: to put an even finer point on it: housecleaning is unskilled labor. Now, before you bite my head off saying that it takes skill or whatever, all I'm saying is that it would take very little time to find someone to do the same job, train them to do it, and they might do it for less than you are willing to accept as a fair wage. That's all I'm saying. Yes, you've learned your tips and tricks and know what cleaning agent works best where, etc. But it'd take very little to get someone else to know all that stuff. Would they be as competent as you? I dunno. But why assume they'd suck?
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