I dunno how we started, but im jumping in*
On the whole, nobody wants to perform labor for someone else. People put up with it largely because it is impossible to change. However, I am consistently shocked that people think there is some kind of moral imperative to continue working hard or perhaps even harder the worse a situation gets, whether it's the usual shtick of industrialists and capitalists making lives worse because they can or because there is some natural disaster doing it for them. We do not live in war economies, our labor (on the whole) does not go towards any great or noble goal, simply the perpetuation of the successful creation and sale of mundane goods and services. While these things are nice, I see no reason to invoke anxiety, risk ill-health, or potentially our lives and ability to enjoy life for a select few individual's bottom lines. Working hard does not make you a good person, it does not define who you are, and I'm not sure why people take such pride in their ability to produce in the name of others.
First of all, if you are in a bad situation and can get out of it easily, why would you not? That doesn't make any sense. If conditions deteriorate to the point where people will leave regardless of whether or not they can immediately support themselves, why is the blame on the workers??? The workers are there to do a specific job, not to care about some authoritarian owner's dream of a successful company, no matter the human cost. Talk down to me about economics all any of you want, but at the end of the day it boils down to unregulated greed. People who do nothing demand a larger cut from the people who do something because they invested in the company or bought the shares, etc. In the modern economic environment there is no good faith to be had between owners and workers--even good owners could eventually be forced to exploit their workers unfairly, because success demands it. If you want to torture yourself, if you want to be the "this is the way the world is" guy and eat misery for a chance at more physical resources later, go ahead, but don't think you somehow deserve those things more than the people who said no, I won't do it.
Second, I will reiterate that your ability to work, your drive to work, and ultimately the amount of work you actually do is not a measure of your worth as a human being... in fact, I see it as the furthest thing from it. If you live in a world where you only accord humanity to those who are productive, shame on you. No one should have to earn their right to exist. If you are born, you deserve a good life, end of story. We will all naturally <<<do things>>> there is no reason to poke and prod and whip people into action, there is no great human endeavor to somehow "be better" or advance civilization, the most any of us should hope for is a good life full of expression and action meaningful to us, to go about it responsibly, and help each other along the way.
Finally, this modern economic idea of permanent growth is fucking insane. Let the world relax. Do it responsibly, but it let us all relax. Yea there will be problems we need to solve, individually and societally, but what are we all working for? Very little I can see beyond what should have always been our right to do, but is now (and has been for a long time) locked behind economic and political barriers.
rant over.