Personal finance personality Dave Ramsey has never been one to sugarcoat his opinions, and his latest take on workplace loyalty is no exception. If you think your employer is crooked, incompetent, or underpays you, Ramsey has a simple solution: leave.
In a video message to his followers, Ramsey acknowledged that corporate America isn't exactly known for treating workers like family. Companies downsize, cut benefits, and make decisions that prioritize shareholders over employees all the time. But here's the twist in Ramsey's logic: he still thinks employees owe their employers loyalty as a matter of "personal integrity."
"If you don't like them, if you think they're a bunch of bozos, if you think they don't have integrity, if you think they don't pay enough, this is a free country," Ramsey said. "Quit, get out, stop, why do you keep working for someone that you think is a crook and that mistreats people? That says more about you than it does about them."
It's classic Ramsey: take personal responsibility, stop complaining, and if you don't like your situation, change it. But the argument gets more interesting when he digs into what loyalty actually meant to previous generations.
When Aluminum Foil Was a Family Betrayal
To illustrate his point about old-school workplace loyalty, Ramsey told a story about his grandfather, who spent 38 years working at Alcoa Corp. (AA). The level of devotion wasn't just about showing up for work. It was tribal.
Ramsey recalled how his grandfather once discovered Reynolds aluminum foil in his mother's kitchen cabinets. Reynolds was a competitor to Alcoa at the time, and his grandfather didn't take it well. He pulled the foil out, scattered it across the backyard, and purged every Reynolds product from the cabinets.
"He took the Reynolds wrap and pulled it all out all over the backyard, went through her cabinets and threw out everything that was Reynolds wrap in her cabinets and said, 'Alcoa Aluminum has supported this family for decades and you will not dishonor that,'" Ramsey recounted.
Even Ramsey admits that reaction was "a little overboard." But he thinks a "little dose" of that mindset would benefit today's workforce. The idea that your employer puts food on your table, pays for your kids' education, and clothes your family seems to be "missing" from modern workplace culture, according to Ramsey.
When God Is Telling You to Move On
That said, Ramsey isn't advocating that people stay miserable forever. He made it clear that if you genuinely hate your job or have lost respect for leadership, it's time to go. He even framed it in spiritual terms.
"When you no longer trust leadership and you're no longer proud of it, that's God speaking to you, he's yelling at you, he's saying I have something else for you," Ramsey said. "Leave, go do something else."
Ramsey noted that plenty of people who work at his own company have taken breaks or left to start their own businesses, and he's fine with that. The key, in his view, is not to stick around badmouthing your employer while cashing their paychecks. That's where the integrity issue comes in.
It's a perspective that will resonate with some and irritate others. On one hand, staying in a job you openly despise does create a certain cognitive dissonance. On the other hand, not everyone has the financial cushion to quit on principle, and corporate loyalty often feels like a one-way street in today's economy. But if nothing else, Ramsey's message is consistent with his brand: own your choices, stop playing the victim, and if you're unhappy, do something about it.