Ever since the cancellation of Discovery Channel’s hit show Dirty Jobs, former host Mike Rowe has been spreading his message more directly, challenging Americans on how they approach work and success.
As Jordan Ballor has already noted, much of Rowe’s critique centers on the current state of higher education. In a recent appearance on The Blaze, Rowe offers a bit more color on this, pointing to the growing disconnect between skills and needs and wondering what it says about our larger attitudes regarding work:
As Rowe explains:
College needed a PR campaign in the mid 70s. It did. We needed more people to actively use their brain. But like all PR campaigns, it went too far, and we started promoting college at the expense of all those vocations I mentioned that my grandpop did. And suddenly, those things e vocational consolation prizes.
“Vocational consolation prizes”may strike some as a touch too cute, but it seems to me a rather helpful crystallization of mon sentiment we see today. It challenges us to reconsider our view of work itself, certainly. But further,it prods us to consider the fortablepossibility that we may, just may, be viewing our achievements as some sort of “prize” in the first place — in which our vocational pursuits are primarily about us, rather than the glory of God and the love of neighbor.
One of the primary challenges of economic change is orienting one’s goals, hopes, and dreams within the economic habitat of human needs. The disconnect Rowe points to indicates plenty of disorder when es to how we approach or view certain jobs or vocations, but any such perspective may itself indicate another bit of disorder in how we approach the self in relation to God and man.
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