But the economy's out of control. Money just doesn't need human beings anymore. Most of us only get in the way.

— Bruce Sterling

Electricity, shelter, and a safe place to sleep . . .Trump the need to preserve your credit score, orpurchase a new gizmo.

— John-Talmage Mathis

He picked up the paper and read the article; it was just one of many he had read lately that portrayed the poor in an awful light. The badge had now become the symbol of the unemployed, the sick, the disabled, and the most vulnerable. Badger had noticed that the media, just like that newspaper, swirled around anybody who they deemed too lazy or too stupid to work, and it seemed, people believed what they read.

— Paul Howsley

In some cases, you can tell how somebody is being treated by their own boss from the way they are treating someone to whom they are a boss.

— Mokokoma Mokhonoana

Don’t forget:Ruts aren’t that much different . . .From graves.

— John-Talmage Mathis

Religion is a subject which, if the believers used the same 'reasoning' to address problems at work as they use to defend their beliefs, they'd soon find themselves unemployed. And if they found their child applying that kind of 'reasoning' on a homework assignment they'd wonder what the hell was the wrong with their child.

— Dave Champion

Even if you love a lady, don't say you will take care of her while someone else is catering for your needs.

— Michael Bassey Johnson

When you are unemployed, weekends are seven days long.

— Mokokoma Mokhonoana

In books, coaching sessions, and networking events aimed at the white-collar unemployed, the seeker soon encounters ideologies that are explicitly hostile to any larger, social understanding of his or her situation. The most blatant of these, in my experience, was the EST-like, victim-blaming ideology represented by Patrick Knowles and the books he recommended to his boot-camp participants. Recall that at the boot camp, the timid suggestion that there might be an outer world defined by the market or ruled by CEOs was immediately rebuked; there was only us, the job seekers. It was we who had to change. In a milder form, the constant injunction to maintain a winning attitude carries the same message: look inward, not outward; the world is entirely what you will it to be.

— Barbara Ehrenreich

You know what? We need a recession in this country, because that would finaly weed out al the subnormal, underdeveloped, stupefied, puerile people in this workforce.

— Jen Lancaster