• fu@libranet.de
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    1 year ago

    @dirtmayor saying its easier for teenagers to find a job, particularly in the u.s. with an all-time high of teenage unemployment, sure sounds different when you call it “child labor on the rise.”

    • dirtmayor@beehaw.orgOP
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      1 year ago

      In February, the Labor Department announced that it had found more than a hundred children between the ages of thirteen and seventeen working in meatpacking plants and slaughterhouses, in eight states, for Packers Sanitation Services, one of the nation’s largest food-sanitation companies.

      Thirteen year old children working in meatpacking plants seems like a problem.

      • fu@libranet.de
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        1 year ago

        @dirtmayor I’m unaware of any state where that is legal, unless some states consider meatpacking agricultural work. Of course, being illegal doesn’t stop it from happening. Regardless, artificial age limits for particular practices is pretty silly. I know plenty of people under 16 who have no problem driving a car, and plenty of those over 30, and even more over 60, that have no business doing so. Competency knowns no age, anything else is just you being a busybody against your neighbor.

        • dirtmayor@beehaw.orgOP
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          1 year ago

          When I was 14 my parents told me that if I didn’t work on the family farm in Oklahoma they would cut off my water. So I did. That’s legal. Seems like a problem to me.