Are We Working Too Many Hours?

Jeff & Susan • August 31, 2022
A construction worker is sitting on the ground with his head down.
A construction worker is sitting on the ground with his head down.

Why does it cost so much in time and money to live? Have our markets made “staying alive” a commodity that is sold to each of us?

“Why am I the only one that sees a problem with working 8 to 9 hours a day then going home to have about four hours to yourself, which includes getting ready for the next day? This is not a life…” Shelby, Twitter.

Renew the Earth sees this also and we are proposing the creation of a parallel economic system that provides Worldwide the basic needs of  living; food, shelter, education and healthcare.

Consider abandonment on a deserted island. Our first concern is food and shelter and the most efficient way to do this in energy, time and conservative impact on limited resources. These same dynamics are the most important on our earth/island, but the scale is so huge that this basic truth has been obscured from view by the multitude of distractions we face. Things that markets have persuaded us are more important. Our “wants”.

David Graeber addresses the time wasted by certain work in his book, “Bullshit Jobs”. 

“37% of Britons said their job does not make a meaningful contribution to the World. 40% of Dutch workers believe their jobs have no reason to exist.” What are these jobs? “Most of them involve administrative, managerial, clerical service and sales functioning such as telemarketing: sectors of the job market that combined, ballooned from a quarter of total employment in 1910 to three quarters in 2000.”

If machines can do the job, let them. You are not displacing people, you are freeing them to use their time and intellect on other things. Quality of life will improve and that is the goal. Basic needs jobs will expand and the efficient, economical accomplishment and distribution of them will evolve continually. There will be no shortage of workers for these important, meaningful jobs because so many have been freed by automation from the BS jobs. Job sharing and the resulting fewer hours will be the norm. Money earned can be used for ‘wants’ because basic needs are met for each person as a right. Their right to life.

“In a more humane civilization, machines would be used to shorten the workday, increase the availability of goods and services and lengthen vacation time.” “Repetitive work activities that can be done by machines will free up the most important aspect of being human which sets us apart from other animals, our intellect.” Jacques Fresco “The Best that Money Can’t Buy”

A parallel currency dedicated to basic needs worldwide makes it possible for everyone to have the same benefits as our Senators, Congress people and Supreme Court Justices. These are our real human rights.

January 13, 2026
Medical emergencies all have a similar feeling. Intensity, urgency, a changed perception of time; only events and human encounters progress, time seems warped, unimportant. After several sleepless nights because Jeff was having difficulty peeing and he was beginning to have pain, he went to the onboard clinic to get catheterized. There were three attempts with successively larger catheters. This was painful and distressing for him, though he kept joking about it, “this is not good sex!” The attempts were unsuccessful. He was given pain killers and an ambulance met us at the dock for a 10 minute ambulance ride to the hospital. Jeff is an 80 year old man with an enlarged prostate so he normally has trouble peeing. But this time it stopped altogether and there was blood. We are waiting at the hospital for the urologist. Nurses and a general practitioner have spoken to us in English. Very kind, polite, casual and patient. The urologist arrives and talks with Jeff. He is going to get the operating room ready and put Jeff out. Then he can do the operation. We wait in our curtained off cubicle Jeff is lying on a bed. A woman who came with her husband, who has high blood pressure, is behind the curtain to the left of us. He had collapsed. She is reciting the Lord's Prayer and Hail Marys over and over in an emotional whisper. She is crying. A young man is in the cubicle to our right. He seems to have broken his arm. It is all wrapped up in white gauze. Earlier a man had been stung by something and ointment was applied. A pregnant woman has come in. This is a modest hospital, very basic, two floors. They have what they need. A few flies buzz lazily around, but most are killed by the electric device on the wall. A very slight smell of urine is in the air. We arrived here about 8:30. It is now 2:00. Jeff has had an ultrasound, blood pressure checks and an EKG. Now he is in a wheelchair waiting for the nurse to take him to an operating room. The waiting room has about 10 people waiting. About 50 chairs in all. Not terribly busy for a Saturday. Light and darker coffee colored skin, attractive, rounded features and large expressive eyes set apart the native population. They are only a little curious about us. There is no rushing here.
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