this post was submitted on 14 Jun 2026
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Working on curing childhood cancer is emotional because it's something that we as a society value collectively but clearly aren't compensating the work enough. Why should we pay a pittance to people who have 5+ years of training under their belt? Is it simply because they'll make more in the future? That sounds like a pretty exploitative system to me.
I offer myself as a case study. I've been on DSP for nearly 10 years, and could go back and do a biotech or digital forensics PhD - I have a first-class science honours, and could easily get an ART grant on that basis.
However, because of my disability I struggle with basic stuff around the house, keeping it clean and having clean clothes and good etc. My hot water system broke over a month ago and I've been having cold showers for 6+ weeks because I'm making slow progress organizing an electrician and plumber to get it fixed. Adding PhD work to that would only be worthwhile if the grant was well paid.