The conversations are amazing

  • @Idreamofcheesy
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    3616 hours ago

    I didn’t think child labor still existed in China, just harsh labor conditions and low pay.

    China’s government’s strict control of the media did, however, lead to me not questioning the social credit score thing.

    • @[email protected]
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      1714 hours ago

      Pretty naive to think that child labor dosen’t exists in China tbh. Maybe not at the scale of child factory workers that some western media like to depict, but at a smaller scale, in farming, family owned business and small isolated factories.

      • @DarkSpectrum
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        16 hours ago

        As a parent, I would prefer this to modern western environments for children that include TVs, video games, phones and no idea what I do for a profession.

      • Phunter
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        1013 hours ago

        According to a couple news stories I’ve seen pop up from time to time, we have child labor in the US too. It’s not legal and the children are usually the children of illegal immigrants. Maybe it’s sort of the same deal over there i.e. desperate people doing desperate things despite the norm.

        • @[email protected]
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          1613 hours ago

          we have child labor in the US too. It’s not legal

          A lot of child labor in the US, is in fact, very legal.

          From the age of 10-15, working papers can be issued allowing children to deliver newspaper, hawk products on corners, and do limited farm work.

          From 15-17, working papers can be issues allowing children to pretty much do any job, with some limitations on hours, and tooling they can use (ie, no automatic sharp tools, like slicers).

          Now, these are for my state. Some states are far more exploitative, such as Georgia, where kids as young as 13 can work a fast food joint.

          • Phunter
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            712 hours ago

            Now that you mention it, I was a soccer ref when I was 15. You’re right, it probably varies by state. I guess “child labor” is a pretty broad term that could include delivering newspapers and processing chicken on a factory floor.

        • @[email protected]
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          411 hours ago

          Yes, this is not something exclusive of China, or the US, basically everywhere, except maybe some countries in Europe, still have some kind of child labor in a lesser or greater degree. I don’t think China is the worst place on that respect, but blinding believing to someone who lives in a big metropolitan Chinese city that child labor dosen’t exists is pretty dumb.

        • @Feathercrown
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          11 hours ago

          So is the US, and we still have farms, small businesses, and small factories

            • @Feathercrown
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              111 hours ago

              I mean, the US has that too. My point is that a nation being rich really doesn’t prevent having those businesses or using them for child labor at all.

              • @[email protected]
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                110 hours ago

                I got it, but it’s sounds like the US have small (in size) businesses and factories, not that small business and factories use child labor.

                • @Feathercrown
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                  110 hours ago

                  Both are true. What’s your point?

                  • @[email protected]
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                    110 hours ago

                    So is the US, and we still have farms, small businesses, and small factories

                    I think it should be “and we still have child labor in farms, small businesses…”

                    Without the “child labor in” the comment sounds funny to me.

      • @[email protected]
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        711 hours ago

        US media loves to go on about the horrible working conditions in China, claiming 11-hour days and all kinds of other sweatshop working conditions because nothing sells like a good tragedy, but nobody talks about the working conditions at home and talking amongst ourselves is often made difficult, either by cultural or business practices. It’s illegal to punish employees for talking about how much they make with each other, but that doesn’t stop businesses from doing it anyway, because people here simply don’t know their rights as a worker and companies love to take advantage of it. So we think we have a clear grasp of how the Chinese live while still believing that people here work 40-hour weeks and somewhere in the cultural zeitgeist is still the belief that people can afford a house with a white picket fence, a dog/cat, and 2.5 kids on one person’s salary.

    • @TwoBeeSan
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      515 hours ago

      Same.

      Not hard to believe when there’s camps for uyghurs.

      Happy to be wrong.

    • @Sgt_choke_n_stroke
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      213 hours ago

      I mean america has wage slavery. I just think the detail are just different

      • @[email protected]
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        7 hours ago

        USA have literal slavery, and it’s even straight up called slavery in 13 amendment to constitution. Which also makes US afaik the only country that did enshrined slavery in constitution. Land of the free my ass.

    • @[email protected]
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      112 hours ago

      labor conditions actually aren’t very bad at all. equivalent to first world countries. pay is relative