Is it okay to continue to work for a (non-defense) federal government agency under an administration hostile to my own moral and ethical beliefs?
Is it okay to continue to work for a (non-defense) federal government agency under an administration hostile to my own moral and ethical beliefs?
Should I be looking for a different job?
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Unfortunately, that's a question only you can answer. But goes without saying for any job.
Ask yourself:
- Will you be able to sleep peacefully at night knowing what job you're doing and who you're doing it for?
- Are your morals stronger then job security you're getting?
- Can you stay on the job and inact change from within?
- Can you refuse certain tasks you don't feel comfortable with?
- Can you steer / influence the work that you and/or the agency does?
Edit: typos.
4 0 ReplyThe first Trump presidency is known for the longest government shutdown in US history.
Job stability is not a given for federal employment anymore.
Other than that, I would say non-defense jobs are certainly worth maintaining institutional knowledge.
7 0 ReplySo long as you have some savings, a government shutdown is more a vacation than anything. Back pay has always been given to employees.
2 1 ReplyI would not be surprised if this was repealed (if only as an effort to further purge government employees):
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_Employee_Fair_Treatment_Act_of_2019
Prior to this, my understanding is that back pay was given in good faith, not by actual requirements.
2 0 Reply10s of Thousands of people motivated by not getting a week or so of pay because you couldn't get your act together is bad for reelection prospects.
1 0 Reply