• @BertramDitore
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    1137 months ago

    The bill’s passage comes after the state’s most populous county, Miami-Dade, considered local heat protection rules that would have been among the most stringent in the country. That proposal would have required employers to provide shade, water and 10-minute breaks to workers every two hours on days over a certain heat threshold.

    The fact that that would have been among the most stringent protections in the country is incredibly sad. Those protections should be in place nationwide by default at a minimum. Nobody benefits from overheated workers, who are human beings by the way. I feel like it’s so much easier to just be decent and take care of peoples’ basic needs.

    You’re a monster if you don’t think your workers deserve to have a few minutes in the shade whenever the fuck they want. People will work harder if they feel like they’re safe and respected. Everybody wins.

    • @Adm_Drummer
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      447 months ago

      I’ve been told that the armies in many countries use sliding scales of work-rest cycles based on temperature and humidity. For example in Canada, above 35°C you may only have half the crew working 30 minutes on 30 minutes off. Meaning you have 50% of the work being done 100% of the time. Hydration and heat stroke checks are strongly enforced as well. The American army does similar if I’ve been told correctly.

      How American civilians and labourers are not allowed these very same standards is insane to me. People die because of this shit and unions are just okay with this?

      • Optional
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        227 months ago

        Most workplaces are not unionized, and most states are “at will” employment meaning anyone can be fired at any time for anything.

        TL;DR: Reagan

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        US DoD as a whole really, not just US army. There’s a whole color code “flag” system following wet bulb temperatures. Might just be if it’s on military installations though, not sure about places that are functionally just office buildings.

        • @Adm_Drummer
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          67 months ago

          Okay, sweet. Then that’s identical to the system I’ve been told about for Canadian Forces and similar to what I’ve seen with other militaries. Crazy how that works. Especially seeing American states that are so pro military and anti-labour fail to meet the basic criteria even the DoD follows.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            Maybe NATO related? Then again, the US military is fairly invested in keeping their troops functional. Cant dissuade too many people from joining up, it’s the biggest socialist program the country has to offer…

            • @Adm_Drummer
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              37 months ago

              It very well could be NATO doctrine. Militaries figured out real quick that you have to keep troops alive long enough to fight. Whereas it seems civilian workers are treated worse.

              Funny how the military, being an innately fascist system (meritocracy) also happens to be the most socialist system many countries have. Room and board, fair wages, a viable path to promotion, medical care all in return for your work and possibly your life.

              The military radicalized me to democratic socialism.

      • @force
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        127 months ago

        The Taft-Hartley act and Reagan almost completely fucking neutered unions. We should have listened to Truman…

        • @Adm_Drummer
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          97 months ago

          When I look at American politics it really seems like almost all modern problems can be blamed on Nixon and Reagan.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            It’s a shift in that era, you can’t just throw it all on them. Other crazy things are boiling in the background, there was weird Cali politics that don’t get talked about enough. It was also the era where conservative think tanks came into real power once they realized that you could just throw a ton of money at it, generate a shit load of paper and if you had enough paper people started taking you seriously, no matter if it was based in reality. As long as it was what people wanted to hear.

    • Flying Squid
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      7 months ago

      Nobody benefits from overheated workers, who are human beings by the way.

      Guess what? A significant number, if not a majority of the people affected by this will be immigrants. Republicans consider them both replaceable and not human.

      • @dogslayeggs
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        97 months ago

        This is one of those things that hurts the “right” people.

    • @ChocoboRocket
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      7 months ago

      I used to be like you, and ultimately I still am - but people seem to need this oppression if we’re ever going to make government work for us again.

      There is a very dangerous trend of voter apathy, mis/disinformation, and a near complete lack of understanding on the functions of government and democracy.

      Until people are actually willing to “work together” (decide we don’t need an orphan crushing machine - not actually work hand in hand with everyone else) we kind of deserve the governments we have.

      It’s plain as day that powerful interests are getting absolutely everything they want, while successfully convincing the general population they shouldn’t have job security, health care, social safety nets, education, and an environment that isn’t entirely poisoned.

      So many people are willingly voting against their interests to hurt someone less well off. Others simply don’t care to pay attention, vote, or refuse to apply logic to information if it suits their bias even though it hurts them.

      There are huge amounts of bad actors (media in general completely ignoring the obvious rise of facisim and ringing the dinner bell instead of the alarm) doing everything they can to obfuscate the truth and play on people’s bias/hate/fear are direct attacks on democracy.

      It feels like we’re literally experiencing how Hitler rose to power. People are aware of things like project 2025, J6, Christo facisim, bought and paid for supreme Court, outright lies and disinformation campaigns from most media sources, and billionaires dictating to governments.

      The general population mostly shrugs, does a finger wag, a head shake, and call it a day.

      The far right is organizing globally to allocate funds and think tanks, lobbyists, controlling media, having people of influence throughout government, military, and police. The response? everyone still treats them as disconnected fringe weirdos doing their thing, not something worth dedicating any time to.

      You hear Trump supporters saying J6 was an inside ANTIFA FBI job of fake actors - who are completely innocent American heros that are political prisoners and need to be pardoned? Such cognative dissonance shouldn’t be able to exist in nearly half the population, but does due to trusted sources experiencing 0 consequences for pushing obvious lies - so it must be true.

      When push comes to shove (shove comes to fist?) maybe the Lazy left will actually show up to resist their oppression, hopefully they unite before it’s too late.

    • @[email protected]
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      -267 months ago

      Companies provide all of these to workers already, it’s to illegal workers being exploited this bill would benefit and who Desantis wants to kill off.

      • @[email protected]
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        137 months ago

        It’s hard to understand how what you said - and a county mandating these changes - come together. A city actually voted on this issue, they don’t do that because there’s nothing going on; it means this is a pressing matter in their area. Companies clearly aren’t providing breaks if a city actually votes to mandate this.

  • @[email protected]
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    417 months ago

    Freedom for choice of transit? Nah

    Freedom for affordable housing? Nah

    Freedom to not provide safety to workers? Hell yeah! 🇺🇲🦅

    Glad to see my governor making great choices for my fellow Floridians. Really was an important issue to prioritize too.

    • @joneskind
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      107 months ago

      TBH I just don’t understand how this kind of human garbage policy can be popular anywhere. I mean, it must be popular if DeSantis has been elected right? Who are the people voting for this shit? And who are the people letting it happen?

      • @Chocrates
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        57 months ago

        I am guessing the folks impacted by this are not empowered to vote against him, either because they are undocumented or poor or what not. I’m sure some still vote for him, but I don’t know how anyone can pass this law. The earth is getting hotter and laboring outside in the hottest part of the day without protections is going to get people killed.

      • @unreasonabro
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        17 months ago

        It hasn’t been proven yet but I expect that the voting machines - invented during the George Bush era - don’t work right. It cannot be the case that americans are dumb enough to actually support the right wing to the degree they otherwise appear to. Then again I’m watching from an actually civilized country, in horror, as y’all cannibalize yourselves and your democracy over some retards, and ruin ours by proxy, so according to fuckmericans i can’t possibly know what I’m talking about…

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      Nothing says freedom like the freedom to take away other people’s freedom. Fuck fascists and all their supporters.

  • Flying Squid
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    327 months ago

    I guess since he’s never going to be remembered as the cruelest president in U.S. history, he’s settling on the cruelest governor. Although considering he hasn’t re-legalized slavery yet, he’s got some work to do.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      Him and Abbot are competing for the title.

      Also, I’m sure Florida’s prison system utilizes slave labor.

    • @andrewta
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      77 months ago

      Send him an email and suggest it to him.

      • Flying Squid
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        107 months ago

        I’d rather not. Besides, I’m guessing he doesn’t need the suggestion.

  • @dogslayeggs
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    197 months ago

    He’s just letting the free market decide. I mean, everyone knows that no company would buy a building where a worker died constructing it. And no workers would decide to work for a company without heat protections, right?

    • vortic
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      87 months ago

      I assume that Miami-Dade County had a reason to draft legislation like this. There weren’t political points to be gained here since this was a low profile issue until this bill made it high profile. The county wouldn’t have gone through the effort if there wasn’t a problem to be addressed.

      I could understand repealing a statewide mandate for protections if it was costing money to enforce and wasn’t seeing results. I don’t understand restricting local governments from implementing their own local protections. What harm would the protections have done?

      • prole
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        107 months ago

        They are blue areas doing good things to help their constituents. DeSantis couldn’t have that. It’s really not any deeper than that. The cruelty is the point.

      • @dogslayeggs
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        67 months ago

        Texas recently did something similar: they banned requiring water breaks for workers. It sounded like it was a political move to show they were helping businesses be more productive, even if it doesn’t really help much while still hurting the people they want to hurt.

      • @[email protected]
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        107 months ago

        I’ve seen too many crews encouraged to skip heat breaks, or not offered them. What part of the country are you in?

      • Neato
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        37 months ago

        Sure but those are usually backed by insurance and policy. If it’s backed by law that’s a whole other set of reasons to avoid breaking it that could be a lot more deleterious.

  • @andrewta
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    177 months ago

    So not just remove them but straight ban them.

    Just how stupid can you be?

    • @dhork
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      7 months ago

      The only thing they know about Jesus is that he trims hedges well, and is super cheap because you have to pay him in cash. Kinda tough to understand that accent, though.

    • Optional
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      27 months ago

      Was never; will never be.

  • @Raxiel
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    157 months ago

    Wonder if Louis Rossman will be as quick to put out a video defending this as he was the one in Texas

  • @[email protected]
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    157 months ago

    I remember being on a job site one time and everyone got sent home because the air quality was so bad it was a hazard to work. I kid, I kid… we got sent home because OSHA was going around town popping every job site for making people work in that weather, and a $5k fine was enough to panic all the foremen.

    Ah, good times.

  • @pyrate37
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    27 months ago

    This is just gonna lead to violence. Some petty tyrant boss is going to be killed and left at the work site over this shit. No one is going to tell who did it because the dead asshole took away the basics of life from them.