The REAL Conspiracy to Exploit Kids

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 ธ.ค. 2024

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  • @TheAdamConover
    @TheAdamConover  ปีที่แล้ว +273

    Get the facts with USAFacts: bit.ly/3t9HHjz
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    • @jessetorres8738
      @jessetorres8738 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      We've reached the point where paying adult workers minimum wage isn't cheap enough for businesses anymore, so now they're moving onto hiring child workers they can pay less than minimum.

    • @Shurehlm
      @Shurehlm ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Just to be clear, part of the impetus for eliminating child labour was the worker complaint that they got paid less and drove wages down. It wasn't altruism or an appreciation of children's rights that ended child labour - it was a labour strategy.

    • @catYourMom777
      @catYourMom777 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      How very much I love and appreciate you Adam! Thank you for your service speaking truth! ❤❤❤

    • @stevechance150
      @stevechance150 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      If AOC can do it, then Adam Conover can run for Congress too. Come on Adam we need you! Immigrant children need you!!!

    • @carlosrivas1629
      @carlosrivas1629 ปีที่แล้ว

      conservative want kid to be old enough to make wise decision and not be indoctrinated into a lifestyle as even Hitler knew you have to get them young.

  • @datoaster4991
    @datoaster4991 ปีที่แล้ว +1937

    "No one wants to work anymore" should be read as "No one wants to work for low wages and terrible working conditions so I can increase my bottom line"

    • @Anonyomus_commenter
      @Anonyomus_commenter ปีที่แล้ว +48

      Yeah- there was something about that on the radio in the Uk this morning. There is a segment of a bbc radio show- 5 live breakfast- that is called “in my opinion” where they get callers to give their opinions on a particular issue. This morning there was a guy trying to say that we should have sent people in to work during covid because “people are working less and being less productive”. While true, it’s largely because of the absurd amount of work we did before the pandemic- unpaid overtime was creeping up and up.

    • @TheWorstAmy-LegacyAccount
      @TheWorstAmy-LegacyAccount ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Anonyomus_commenter Even before COVID, though, younger Millennials and older Zoomers were already pushing back against these overtime/off-time narratives that poor work/life balance was both inevitable and expected to be acceptable. A boss calling an employee to tell them, "Someone called off today and we need all hands on deck,," was being responded to with, "Wow, that's crazy, good luck with that" so often that Americans gave it a name - "Quiet Qutting" which, surprise surprise, bootlickers used as a cudgel to call all of *US* entitled, but NOT the businesses that were increasingly exploiting us.
      They couldn't control us anymore, now they're controlling the kids. It's sad, it's fucked up, and I'm sick and goddamn tired about how it "hurts the economy" and how it'll "put us in another recession" for us to demand better. To hell with that, I'm the working poor and I've lived through three recessions already, don't threaten me with a good time just because the rich have farther to fall.
      Also, I understand your story comes from the UK, but here in America, any narrative of "being less productive" is patently false.

    • @amandahugenkiss2310
      @amandahugenkiss2310 ปีที่แล้ว +41

      Offer a decent wage and get no shortage of applicants. If people are working for a living then they are owed the living they work for.

    • @Gillsing
      @Gillsing ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Well, I really don't want to work. I did when I was a child, evause I wanted money for toys. But when I got to a working age I started having suicidal thoughts because work didn't seem worth the effort. I'm rather homeless than having to pay for housing. Life is boring, work is even more so. Why do something boring so I can do something _else_ that is boring? That'd be lose-lose. Sometimes ded is better.
      But hey, that's just me. People who find life worth living should be willing to work for enough pay. Even if work is boring that would still be lose-win.

    • @shionyr
      @shionyr ปีที่แล้ว +22

      There were two, three, maybe four generations of Americans for whom home ownership, wealth building, and comfortable retirement were well and truly expected from a full time job. The middle class was the majority of the population. Now full-time work nets most people barely enough to live in general, much less live comfortably in the area they need to work (so they don't need to commute 2-3 hrs a day)

  • @jessetorres8738
    @jessetorres8738 ปีที่แล้ว +4303

    We've reached the point where paying adult workers minimum wage isn't cheap enough for businesses anymore, so now they're moving onto hiring child workers they can pay less than minimum.

    • @aesthesia5023
      @aesthesia5023 ปีที่แล้ว +252

      I thought this dangerous level work was supposed to be replaced by machines... is investing in machinery to save long term also too expensive?
      This is what happens when entitled children inherit companies

    • @dissonanceparadiddle
      @dissonanceparadiddle ปีที่แล้ว +239

      ​@@aesthesia5023The moment it becomes more economically viable for these companies they will do it until then the children have gone back to the mines

    • @ReadThisOnly
      @ReadThisOnly ปีที่แล้ว +1

      yay

    • @dantemoose420
      @dantemoose420 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      yes. he literally said that.

    • @DimaRakesah
      @DimaRakesah ปีที่แล้ว

      Don't forget the women, the elderly and POC! I am sure they will try to pay us less, too, if they can get away with it. Honestly I'm pretty sure they just want to go back to everyone earning a fraction of what white able bodied young men earn, and to pay almost anyone barely a living wage.

  • @bajojohn
    @bajojohn ปีที่แล้ว +596

    The system isn’t broken, it’s working as designed. The US lost the war on labor. We’ve been rolling back all of the progress we won over the last 150 years.

    • @Sutherenth
      @Sutherenth ปีที่แล้ว +13

      it bleeds over to us in Canada too, half of our companies are american and we give many of our resources to you just so we can buy them back.

    • @Gordon_Freeman_PhD
      @Gordon_Freeman_PhD ปีที่แล้ว +16

      It isn't likely to get better I'm afraid.
      The only reason that capitalism and its bourgeois state installed social democratic programs in America during the great depression and in the rest of the first world after WW2 was because there was a twofold crisis. The first was that the great depression caused, among other things, a crisis of overproduction/underconsumption, where the working class literally got too exploited and hence too poor to buy products and keep the economy going. The other was the crisis of a possible revolution, where radicalized workers could have risen up and overthrown the system that exploits them. The New Deal, the first great social democratic program of this wave, was instituted to solve both of these - to give workers some bread crumbs to make them able to buy the products and keep the economy going, and to avert revolution. These programs of course cut into capitalist profits quite a bit, not so much from the rise in taxes, but purely because where these programs are instituted, it is harder for capital to make profits in the first place. Many big business leaders who saw beyond their short-term gain and instead valued their long-term preservation as a class actually supported FDR and his wave. Others who were not so long-term-thinking tried to do the Business Plot coup, but that's a different story...
      The point was, this social democracy that ultimately fully crystalized itself in the first world post-war... it saved capitalism... for a while. There is one thing that loomed tho... that is the falling rate of profit. When capitalism doesn't expand rapidly, there is a tendency for the rate of profit to fall. Now, the rate of profit was somewhat maintained in spite of this social democracy, first by the war itself, then by financial imperialism, where first world states paved the way for corporations to establish new markets or expand into them, which was very profitable. Some first world countries even imperialized other first world countries to a lesser degree (USA towards Europe). But even then, time was ticking... ultimately it only lasted 30 years, by which point, workers were literally getting "too much" for capitalism to cope with. When profits decline, you get capital strikes, withdrawal of investment, industry moves to more profitable markets in the third world, growth slows and all that is needed to make this go overboard is a spark, which is exactly what happened in 1973 with the Oil Crisis and the subsequent stagflation crisis. As growth slowed from all prior fall in profits, now production slowed too, and it could have led to an even bigger disaster. This crisis of underprofitability had to be averted, and capitalism found a way. It started to erode these social democratic programs and the previous class-collaborationist compromise and introduced austerity, we have neoliberalism, and we have been living under it for 50 years now. As time went on, the working class saw its slice of the pie decrease more and more, and now we are heading for a repeat of what happened nearly a 100 years ago, but this time, the rate of profit is generally much lower as it fell again, and this perfectly explains why all this shit is happening, child labor included. But this time, we cannot afford a repeat of social democracy for two reasons. One is that capitalism is finding it harder and harder to create new markets, so the rate of profit will trend downwards, and if these social democratic programs were introduced, we would see them cut into them severely, and capitalism NEEDS profits to keep going or else disaster for all happens. The other reason we cannot afford it is that we are running out of time. We are seeing wars return because they are profitable for the imperial powers that wage them, and we are seeing a worsening of the climate crisis that cannot be stopped under capitalism's framework, because doing so would require degrowth and the phasing out of fossil fuels, both of which would cut into profits severely. If social democracy came back by some miracle, maybe because the bourgeois class felt so threatened by an organized working class that they simply had no choice (like they did last century), this time, that cycle would be much shorter before we were back to austerity again, and it would have to be maintained by increased exploitation of the third world, or by war or... by capitalists trying to expand capitalism into space or something, idk... Oh yeah, not to mention we would be prolonging the pains of capitalism and of the climate crisis specifically.
      The solution therefore is not in reformist social democracy or in the marginally more substantial "state socialism", which in practice is just a much more militant and authoritarian version of social democracy and therefore just another strand of capitalism. What we need instead is a progressive revolutionary socialist movement. One that is rooted in the working class, that rejects bourgeois reformism, that is international in nature, anti-imperialist, anti-bigotry, and one that seeks the complete abolition of capitalism (the commodity-form, markets, etc.), and therefore the complete abolition of class society and of the state, to replace it instead with a democratically managed society and economy.
      It is either this or the bourgeoisie takes most of civilization and most of humanity out with them, either in a slow and painful decline from the climate catastrophe, or in a fiery blaze of nuclear war.
      It's either socialism or barbarism.

    • @DarDarBinks1986
      @DarDarBinks1986 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Gordon_Freeman_PhD Why did we as a species have to do capitalism instead of having socialism or communism from the beginning and leaving it at that? To hell with trial and error!

    • @Gordon_Freeman_PhD
      @Gordon_Freeman_PhD ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@DarDarBinks1986 It wasn't exactly a trial and error process. Capitalism emerged in Europe out of feudalism (a system primarily not based on markets or on profits), as there was a class conflict between the land-owning aristocracy and the newly emerging mercantile class, or bourgeoisie. Capitalism was a mostly natural progression out of this class conflict. As for why feudalism arose in the first place, and why class and state society emerged at all, that's a much longer and more complex story, but ig... ig what I'm trying to say is that it wasn't random, but it doesn't have to be this way and it won't always be this way.

    • @DarDarBinks1986
      @DarDarBinks1986 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@Gordon_Freeman_PhD Why couldn't people skip from feudalism straight to socialism? What did they think was going to happen?

  • @anathematic5083
    @anathematic5083 ปีที่แล้ว +620

    for anyone who still doesn't understand why they should care because they're super selfish, the use of child labor (and prison labor) keeps your wage down.

    • @AnonymousAnarchist2
      @AnonymousAnarchist2 ปีที่แล้ว +57

      There are other super selfish reasons to care.
      Child labor frees up labor for zero value added work.
      Thus helping us make everything cost more, making us all work more, and giving greedy slimey sorts more ways to take more money from the economy.
      And we are absolutly in a pickle of zero value added's makings. Actual productive work seems to be about 20-40% of work done by labourers.
      it does get fuzzy because this zero value added work usually does take hold of actual supplies and goods people actually need, they just do not change the actual product in any meaningful way shape or form instead doing things like just adding labels to shoes.

    • @bradspringer2372
      @bradspringer2372 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Thank goodness I am simply selfish and not super selfish then.

    • @millirabbit4331
      @millirabbit4331 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      As far as I understand, it keeps wages down in specific sectors. Not for everyone. For most people, itll probably lead to minimal change but higher prices. It should definitely still be illegal, though. Children shouldn't be working in dangerous jobs

  • @notmuchfortalk
    @notmuchfortalk ปีที่แล้ว +250

    Child labor destroyed my back and knees, working construction way too young. Now I'm barely 40 and I'm a hobbled old man that can barely walk some days. Children are not ready for work physically, and should not be doing it forced or not. We should be ashamed, as a country, for the failures that have led us here.

    • @shionyr
      @shionyr ปีที่แล้ว +20

      Thank you for calling this out. Human bone and muscle don't fully develop until 25-30. Teens are well cut out for athletics, but long hours of physical labor can damage the body. Healthy fully grown adults ironically do much better at it.

    • @Name..........
      @Name.......... ปีที่แล้ว +7

      ​@@shionyr its the mixture of lifting heavy things, trying to participate in sports not sleeping while your in your development years and still having to do a boatload od homework. Covid really fucked up how much homework aas given out as well. Because teachers werent there to make surd you were participating yhey started giving out like 70 problems on esch homework assignment each week for each class.

    • @shionyr
      @shionyr ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@Name.......... It's a longer term issue than covid, but I agree trying to give anyone any kind of physical labor while they try to balance sports with a full school schedule would be detrimental to their health. I stand beside my point that teens bodies aren't fully developed.

    • @OscarOSullivan
      @OscarOSullivan ปีที่แล้ว +3

      You should be at least 18 to work in a trade. Not even a 17 year old should be working as a builders navvy.

  • @sir.richardarmstrong3rd759
    @sir.richardarmstrong3rd759 ปีที่แล้ว +464

    My son wanted a job when he was 12 and, I found out real quickly that the Wendy’s and McDonald’s were I live would hire my kid to work for them if he was willing to drop out of school and work for them. So Yeah, us parents need to be vigilant on what our kids are doing.

    • @TheWorstAmy-LegacyAccount
      @TheWorstAmy-LegacyAccount ปีที่แล้ว +22

      I live in Northern Indiana, not too far away from Elkhart, where representatives of RV companies are known to visit that city's high schools to try and recruit upcoming graduates to work in their assembly lines instead of doing something practical, like going to college or learning a trade.

    • @BobertTheThirdson
      @BobertTheThirdson ปีที่แล้ว

      Wendy's is especially bad. They'll violate food safety as well by forcing employees to come into work sick.

    • @onidaaitsubasa4177
      @onidaaitsubasa4177 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I thought the age limit was 14, so I take it they lowered it in places then, actually a lot of jobs have certain safety requirements regarding children under a certain age, there are some equipment they're not supposed to try to use. A kid actually willing to work to make their own money is a good thing, especially nowadays when you see a lot of lazy 20 something year olds that don't want to work or they want an easy job. Probably the children want to work more than those lazy people do. What a sad condition the US has fallen into.

    • @jakebotallrich4055
      @jakebotallrich4055 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      ⁠@@onidaaitsubasa4177 did you watch the video or just made a comment bc he clearly talks about how people are getting smarter and are only working to make a living. He also said that our work rates were highly last year then ever. I also do not think it’s right for a 14 year old to work in a company that age is way to young they haven’t even really experienced the world or anything how is that fair for them in anyway?

    • @jj02mc27
      @jj02mc27 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      ​@onidaaitsubasa4177 did you watch the video

  • @monorail4252
    @monorail4252 ปีที่แล้ว +914

    Making children work reduces their ability to get an education that allow them to understand they deserve more.

    • @Praetor_Fenix420
      @Praetor_Fenix420 ปีที่แล้ว

      Child labor is brought to you by people who burn books.

    • @jesseorellana5339
      @jesseorellana5339 ปีที่แล้ว +48

      Exactly! Working early reduces education access in general. Working during the years you're supposed to be learning reduces one's ability to move up the economic ladder, and often results in those who are already higher up on the economic ladder moving down. Working during your child years is often put in the guise of "getting a leg up on income". "You'll make more money in the long run working minimum wage than going into debt for college". Often times this only sets up the child for a lifetime of struggling in the retail, food service, or whatever they can get in the gig economy.

    • @aycc-nbh7289
      @aycc-nbh7289 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@jesseorellana5339So what about summer jobs during high school?

    • @olnnn
      @olnnn ปีที่แล้ว +5

      It's not just about understanding - they may not always have much choice as they don't have much in the way of rights since they are immigrants due to all the "tought on immigration" bs that both parties are doing. You have the same thing with trafficking, people get stuck in horrible conditions in illegal activity but because the legal protection is so shit it's hard to break out because you risk making things even worse due to risk of yourself/friends/relatives getting deported/arrested to even worse conditions.

    • @Auguur
      @Auguur ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The war on education by the right has rendered "education" impotent and inadequate.

  • @kyoyameganebereznoff
    @kyoyameganebereznoff ปีที่แล้ว +278

    A note on the McDonalds jobs: this means we could have children as young as twelve being verbally abused by adult customers. I still struggle with that as an adult. I can’t imagine what it would feel like to a child who’s not even a teenager yet.

    • @denisemayosky1955
      @denisemayosky1955 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      I got mistreated at my job when I was younger by a couple of "ladies" who thought it was fun to verbally attack me for no good reason and make me cry. Thank God for this sweet lady who came out to see if I was all right and encouraged me. She was a *true* Christian!

    • @ScooterinAB
      @ScooterinAB ปีที่แล้ว +4

      True, but I don't even see teenagers working at McDonalds anymore. I don't think I've seen anyone under the age of 25 working in fast foot since I was a teenager more than dozens of years ago.

    • @elokin300
      @elokin300 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@ScooterinAB Wait, you haven’t? More than half the people at my high school worked at places like McDonald’s, Starbucks, etc. and I just graduated. Where on earth do you live that has no teens working at fast food?

    • @ScooterinAB
      @ScooterinAB ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@elokin300 I'm really not seeing kids working in fast food. It's a lot of adult ethnic workers (not that that's a problem). This is why I find complaints about wage increases so terrible. We're not talking about little Billy wanting more money. We're talking about a grown adult who may have a family and took this job because that's all they could get.

  • @Denidrakes69
    @Denidrakes69 ปีที่แล้ว +445

    My daughter was able to get a part time job (no more than 10hrs a week) in Australia at 13yo. She was super excited because she had her own money and I thought not much of it - UNTIL, her friend, who was doing a similar job, mentioned she had no money because the money she earnt had to go to her parents because her father had recently lost his job...
    And that's when alarm bells went off.
    My daughter was in a position to work a little for fun. She could quit whenever she wanted, and could speak up should she be asked to do something that felt uncomfortable or wasn't safe. It hadn't occurred to me that other kids her age might not be in her position - in fact kids, such as her friend, are in a prime position to be exploited by both those who employ them, as well as their own parents...

    • @brialapoint2608
      @brialapoint2608 ปีที่แล้ว +51

      Its a double edged sword. Kids need to learn responsibility and independence, by not at the expense of being taken advantage of by poor parenting

    • @TimeTravelerJessica
      @TimeTravelerJessica ปีที่แล้ว +70

      This is exactly the issue. Teens working a little for spending money is a great way to learn responsibility. Teens _having_ to work to support their families in potentially unhealthy conditions is unacceptable.

    • @Denidrakes69
      @Denidrakes69 ปีที่แล้ว +55

      @@TimeTravelerJessica AND, teens having to work because those same employers fired their parents to employ their kids at a much cheaper rate, is outright wrong.

    • @OscarOSullivan
      @OscarOSullivan ปีที่แล้ว +14

      In Ireland you can work from 14 but only in summer and for limited hours. 16 it increases but still restricted. 18 is when you can work adult hours.

    • @carolbaker2773
      @carolbaker2773 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@OscarOSullivan That was typically how it worked in 2010 for most "teenager" businesses (lifeguarding, umpiring, refereeing, maybe working retail clothing stores in the mall). They are dismantling these protections in the last 5 years or so. Im sure people have examples of this before then, but it wasnt widespread as it is now.

  • @TheAlpineProject
    @TheAlpineProject ปีที่แล้ว +707

    20 years ago, I was a 12 year old Tennessee roofer. Still one of the hardest jobs I've ever had. Kids don't deserve that.

    • @Acidfunkish
      @Acidfunkish ปีที่แล้ว +128

      Thank you for not doing the survivorship bias thing, and coming to the conclusion that, "Well, I did it, so the next generation should have to, as well." It's an easy trap to fall into, and I know all of us have, at some point.
      But, I appreciate you not doing that. ✌🏻

    • @madmachanicest9955
      @madmachanicest9955 ปีที่แล้ว +55

      I seen grown health men die of heat stroke doing roofing in Florida. I would not wish that job on my worst enemy. Ashley if you're doing torso in a commercial as that like litterly working in an oven all day

    • @Lukiel666
      @Lukiel666 ปีที่แล้ว +33

      Damn. I remember roofing in Canada. For lunch we would put hot dogs in tin foil and put them on the roof to cook them. Can't imagine Tennessee.

    • @colorbugoriginals4457
      @colorbugoriginals4457 ปีที่แล้ว +33

      @@Acidfunkishas a fellow survivor, i appreciate you calling that out. i see it with a lot of abuse survivors and suspect it is a coping mechanism gone too far. but it is one thing to deny one's own pain, and quite another to ignore another's. ❤

    • @jeffreyestahl
      @jeffreyestahl ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Acidfunkish
      I did heavy construction work starting around age 10 back in the 1970s. Back then, most states provided 'exemptions' for underage workers in construction. When 15, I had the responsibility of moving around 300 lbs stages (which BTW messes up an adult's back when it's fully formed, let alone what it does to a growing spine). I came from a poor family and believed it was my responsibility to help support my parents. In doing so, lost out of being a kid. (I did put myself through college and graduate school through multiple jobs and mindtearing loans which impacted my life for years, however the concept of student debt is extraneous to this discussion) I was lucky enough to hang out with a wonderful mentor when 18 who would say that in spite of problems we could experience in life, part of what made us human was we had the ability to change that. It's one reason why I've always believed that NO child (even those in high school) should feel required to work and if they do should be paid the same as adults. Finally, adults should be able to be paid a reasonable wage for their work, so they don't feel it necessary to ask their underage children for help. I find it atrocious that the wealthy like to blame the poor for supposed lack of discipline for being poor when the reality is the poor work at a level that would put most wealthy people in graves. My experiences have led me not only to advocate for the poor as much as possible, but I give to food banks and assistance programs as much as I can as well. My job takes up too much time for me to physically build houses, but I try to provide as much assistance as I can. This is my attempt to honor words from someone I trusted a lot as a child, "If we don't look out for one another, who will?"
      Successful companies are allowed to make profits, but a sacrosanct bottom line that cannot be touched for any reason is inhuman, not merely inhumane.

  • @CasualFox12495
    @CasualFox12495 ปีที่แล้ว +700

    Us: "Child Labor is illegal and immoral!"
    Uncle Sam: "I will Make it legal!"

    • @ironmammoth7
      @ironmammoth7 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Nice SW reference! Really works well here.

    • @minestar2247
      @minestar2247 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@ironmammoth7 what does SW stand for here?

    • @ironmammoth7
      @ironmammoth7 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@minestar2247 Star Wars Episode 1 Darth Sidious tells the trade federation, "I will make it legal!"

    • @minestar2247
      @minestar2247 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@ironmammoth7 oh Yeah, forgot about the trade deal parts, Palpatine should have done more evil things like that

    • @berkaltuglu8140
      @berkaltuglu8140 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      He will probably botch the Senate on the procedures

  • @Psyfio
    @Psyfio ปีที่แล้ว +102

    "When the penalty for a crime is a fine, then that crime is legal for anyone with enough money"... truth hits hard

    • @revanhart
      @revanhart 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Yeah, I’ve also heard it said as “If the only penalty for a crime is a fine, that’s just *how much it costs to commit that crime.*” Caught speeding down the interstate at 120MPH and get a $200 ticket? Okay, thanks officer, I’ll see you again next week!
      It’s honestly terrifying to think of how much the most powerful can-and DO-get away with because they can pay their way out of it.

  • @comosellama5287
    @comosellama5287 ปีที่แล้ว +340

    Profiting off child abuse is sickening. Strait to jail.

    • @lieffian
      @lieffian ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Well then you better go after the politicians that made it possible

    • @peterthegreat996
      @peterthegreat996 ปีที่แล้ว

      Straight into the meat grinder

    • @kenonerboy
      @kenonerboy ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Every tshirt u wore bro

    • @TaliaMellifera
      @TaliaMellifera ปีที่แล้ว

      No offends meant, because you did not decide that, bet currently your jails are occupied with children that lost it.

    • @ernie39
      @ernie39 ปีที่แล้ว

      Maybe if the politicians and execs who currently profit off of child labor went to prison to experience their own labor being exploited for little-to-no wages they might actually push for legislation to prevent child and prison (slave) labor

  • @Immudzen
    @Immudzen ปีที่แล้ว +309

    We have actually talked about this in Germany and I have seen it covered in the news also. Companies are laying workers off, claiming nobody wants to work, getting children's working laws weakened and then hiring children for even less. It is grotesque.

    • @katherinemclean1448
      @katherinemclean1448 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      God. It's happening in Germany too? 😮 Now I'm wondering what's happening here in Canada. 😢

    • @Immudzen
      @Immudzen ปีที่แล้ว +19

      @@katherinemclean1448 It is not happening in Germany. The German news has talked about it happening in the USA and Germans have asked me about it.

    • @quebeccityoliver4742
      @quebeccityoliver4742 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Quebec just passed a child labour law 14 is rhe minimum age with lots of restrictions. 16 is basically the minimum age, now.

    • @acacacacacacaccaca7666
      @acacacacacacaccaca7666 ปีที่แล้ว

      God damn after loosing the energy war Germany may actually employ children as coal miners

    • @JimmyScribbles
      @JimmyScribbles ปีที่แล้ว

      They reallly need to be on our workers wages 7.25 wont cut it and im on my own for the first time im having a hard time on one income and on 13.50 after 11 years working at the same place I cant really do to much my dates if i can have one is things like 5 below T_T

  • @aeoifjapefijl
    @aeoifjapefijl 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

    I tried chiming in about how messed up this was and I got shut down with people defending it because some kids don't have food to eat... that shouldn't be the responsibility of the child.

    • @seanmccabe5619
      @seanmccabe5619 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Amazing argument, huh? Blows my fucking mind.

    • @aeoifjapefijl
      @aeoifjapefijl 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@seanmccabe5619 ah thanks for reminding me of this lol

    • @josephfuller6229
      @josephfuller6229 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Those parents are the type that are probably selling the childs food stamps to buy meth​@@aeoifjapefijl

  • @kippgoeden
    @kippgoeden ปีที่แล้ว +1077

    I was a manager at Papa Johns for a little over a year, and saw this first hand. The company REFUSED to raise the pay for employees, but was completely ok lowering the age restrictions on new hires. We had a flood of early high schoolers join the team, and what do you know, they couldn’t keep up with the workload. Imagine that. Kids who are barely through puberty aren’t able to keep up with the monster that is Post-Covid food service work. Hmm. Almost like that was a no-brainer. I couldn’t handle the idiocy anymore. I had to quit. Was truly lucky to have found my current job. Fuck corporate America.

    • @RizzyGyatt
      @RizzyGyatt ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Who would define a pizza box chain as "corporate America" lmfao

    • @microvvaveoven
      @microvvaveoven ปีที่แล้ว +49

      ​@@RizzyGyatt How would u define America then?

    • @goreobsessed2308
      @goreobsessed2308 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      Yeah i was working at one when they hired 4 diffrent 16 yesr olds we had more teens than adults working night shift. Got my job in security and got out

    • @RizzyGyatt
      @RizzyGyatt ปีที่แล้ว

      lets step back a second, I would define the pizza box chain as literally bottom of the barrel, on the same tier as walmart and target. it isn't a "real job", it's literally skill-less slave labor that you get as a teen and/or in-between jobs or during schooling.@@microvvaveoven

    • @houndgirl7365
      @houndgirl7365 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@RizzyGyatt think about who OWNS those pizza chains? Ever heard of Blackrock? Yeah Blackrock owns MOST of every item in a grocery store, but oh its only a chain company...until you dig deeper~ our GOV is bought out just waiting for that back of the camel to break because OH BOY people are close!

  • @matthewg7228
    @matthewg7228 ปีที่แล้ว +485

    This is what happens when corporations can spend unlimited money on keeping politicians in office.

    • @terrific804
      @terrific804 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Somebody's catching on✔

    • @markwiedmer1555
      @markwiedmer1555 ปีที่แล้ว

      Dont worry, children will form a Child Labor union and fight for their right to work. #leftisbest

    • @collinfant5146
      @collinfant5146 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      This is what happens when you let mega corporation exist to begin with.

    • @dewdew80
      @dewdew80 ปีที่แล้ว

      it was the American people who started this in a functioning democracy. The market being flooded with cheats and abusers is after the fact. As usual you can blame this one on brat boomers who couldn't afford to fuel up their hippy van, so they voted in favor of inept authoritarianism because it came with a car-salesman like pitch to give them what they thought they were entitled to. Fucking Regan and a thousand fat and happy "me-generation" twats threw out a careful democratic and economic system because Saudis underproduced oil prices and made it harder for Americans to get into town and spend their money.

    • @Rills4040
      @Rills4040 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Lobbying

  • @skyboy49707
    @skyboy49707 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    I went to a restaurant this weekend and the host/server was somewhere around 8 to 10. He was going in and out of the kitchen and did not appear to be wearing non-slips. This was not some small family owned place where they just brought their kid in that day, this was chain restaurant. It was shocking.

  • @EclipseCrasher
    @EclipseCrasher ปีที่แล้ว +3049

    Adults woke up and started requesting more pay, and the company's basically said fuck that shit. Unchecked Capitalism in the US is absolutely disgusting.

    • @dfjab
      @dfjab ปีที่แล้ว +165

      Visited Seattle as a european, first time in the US. I was amazed at the amount of fancy buildings and homeless in the same area. Its just a different world. Yeah we got 2 homeless people in my city too but they kinda wanted to be. Idk why its so normal to have people on the streets

    • @AnarchoPunkChad
      @AnarchoPunkChad ปีที่แล้ว +32

      ​@@dfjab
      TWO??

    • @howwitty
      @howwitty ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah but Nestle has to outcompete Keurig by advertising eco friendly coffee pods to the Asian millenials by hiring a marketing firm to hire blackpink, so they can sell us clean drinking water when the microplastics invade us. How are they going to do that if you're not prepared to support an artificial basilisk intelligence which optimizes for biological human growth? The answer is make as many babies as soon as possible.

    • @adlerrapturian7472
      @adlerrapturian7472 ปีที่แล้ว +41

      @@dfjabholy shit… I wanna move to Europe now and be a counselor… at least then I could afford a home.

    • @BriannaLearning
      @BriannaLearning ปีที่แล้ว +129

      It's not unchecked capitalism it's just capitalism. If you have enough money you can make the rules and all the profits in our great system of ours and everyone else suffers the consequences

  • @erinmccreery9781
    @erinmccreery9781 ปีที่แล้ว +1462

    It's a lack of empathy. Those kids aren't *our* kids. They are not citizens and are less than people. It's so morally disgusting.

    • @natsudragneel-ir7sr
      @natsudragneel-ir7sr ปีที่แล้ว +95

      isn't that how it's always have been. Those who are outside our groups are not human and it's okay to exploit them. People might not say it but that's what they think and how they justify it to themselves.

    • @Bahr-im7pn
      @Bahr-im7pn ปีที่แล้ว +134

      @@natsudragneel-ir7sr Just like the infamous poem by Martin Niemöller:
      First they came for the communists, and I did not speak out-because I was not a communist.
      Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out-because I was not a trade unionist.
      Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out-because I was not a Jew.
      Then they came for me-and there was no one left to speak for me.

    • @squiddler7731
      @squiddler7731 ปีที่แล้ว

      As soon as he mentioned it was migrant kids it all made sense. Conservatives don't want to protect them, if anything they probably want to send them back to die in whatever country they fled from.

    • @BriannaLearning
      @BriannaLearning ปีที่แล้ว +34

      It's all about money and the bottom line. FDR was the only person to do something about it because he was for the people but every other president/politician just works for their corporate overloads. Regular people can see child labor is bad but if the people leading our country can be legally bribed by corporations then having all the empathy in the world doesn't matter

    • @alexcardosa8079
      @alexcardosa8079 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@BriannaLearning Blame the voters that why these things exist.

  • @jmrsdn6907
    @jmrsdn6907 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    When they say they want to protect children, they mean their children and children of people they like. They don’t actually care about kids in general.

  • @KimraLuna
    @KimraLuna ปีที่แล้ว +1005

    We’re going to have to stand up for children’s rights. Kids can’t start a lawsuit, they don’t have the same rights. Legislators across the country are trying to make the age of working younger and younger and hard labor jobs! It’s wild

    • @arcanondrum6543
      @arcanondrum6543 ปีที่แล้ว

      It wasn't that long ago when 18 olds successfully argued that "if they're old enough to fight a war, they should be able to Vote".
      That's a Constitutional Amendment, by the way. I don't recall which one because the people who want to hire children, also spend their Reaganomics Tax Cuts on hiring professors of failing colleges (like Hillsdale) to insist that we _"get back to the original Constitution_ (you know; the one without those pesky Amendments when Senators were appointed inside Washington instead of selected by Voters, for example)". Even fans of the 2nd Amendment have a dog in this fight.

    • @azpont7275
      @azpont7275 ปีที่แล้ว

      It’s normal. Capitalism working as intended.
      Most child labour/slavery is still exported, think of cocoa, cobalt or cloth production across the globe.
      If you want change, you need to get rid of capitalism...

    • @babybear0067
      @babybear0067 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      We should legislate the child rights thing a lot of UN countries have. Because they signed a treaty. But no.

    • @alexcardosa8079
      @alexcardosa8079 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      Child labor and child slaves are a very Christian thing lets not forget the dominant religion in these areas. Sure the corporation don't care about religion but those who send their kids to work do.

    • @madisondampier3389
      @madisondampier3389 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      @@alexcardosa8079 that's what I'm saying, this is a problem of how the church shapes our laws, including our labor laws. this is and has always been the problem of religious influence on legislation. our very founding document listing the rights of all people, is based on how those rights are given to us by God. God is cool with slavery.

  • @monorail4252
    @monorail4252 ปีที่แล้ว +368

    "No one wants to work anymore" has been a complaint of employers since the 1860s.

    • @cheeseofglass
      @cheeseofglass ปีที่แล้ว +76

      "They are sluggish, they are scarce, and they are grasping. For the very little they do they demand the highest pay." - poet John Gower describing laborers in 1349.

    • @blondbraid7986
      @blondbraid7986 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Wasn't the 1860s the same era that the US made slavery illegal?

    • @Echo81Rumple83
      @Echo81Rumple83 ปีที่แล้ว

      And the Confederacy fought for state's rights to not be oppressed by the North... In oppressing the slave population. Is it any wonder why people don't take these schmucks seriously?

    • @wilberwhateley7569
      @wilberwhateley7569 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      The reality is that no one wants to work for shit wages anymore - what’s the point of working 40+ hours a week for a job that doesn’t pay enough money to rent a one-bedroom apartment?

    • @denisemayosky1955
      @denisemayosky1955 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Not for the crap wages *they're* paying!!

  • @TrexelCat
    @TrexelCat ปีที่แล้ว +14

    "No one wants to work any more." No, they just don't want to work for you any more.

  • @StarTrek4Life
    @StarTrek4Life ปีที่แล้ว +789

    The corporations want slavery. Plain and Simple. However, they know they cant get away with that, so they do the next "best" thing for their pockets. Employing younger and younger children, and paying barley a fraction of any wage (if they pay them at all), all to just save a buck. Ive said this to all my friends. Extreme forms of capitalism encourages slavery.

    • @DoremiFasolatido1979
      @DoremiFasolatido1979 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Not "want"...
      "Need"
      They know they can't survive without it.

    • @TheAutobotPower
      @TheAutobotPower ปีที่แล้ว

      USAmericunts only want slavery. You stole half of Mexico only because slavery.

    • @natsudragneel-ir7sr
      @natsudragneel-ir7sr ปีที่แล้ว +100

      @@DoremiFasolatido1979 they can survive without it, they would just not make as much money, and that to them is worse than death.

    • @DoremiFasolatido1979
      @DoremiFasolatido1979 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@natsudragneel-ir7sr Nope, they really can't. They'd cannibalize one another at this stage. And a true global monopoly would crash with catastrophic rapidity.
      They cannot continue to exist even WITH slave labor. Eventually even that won't be enough. There's only one outcome for capitalism. It's just a question of how long it takes. But the end will be the same no matter what.
      The issue here, is that if they don't keep doing what they're doing with all this...that end might come within the tenure of the presiding CEOs and such. And they can't allow that. They don't really give a shit if it happens to their successors, though.

    • @brittonnevans2208
      @brittonnevans2208 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      I’m waiting for the return of company stores.

  • @imrustyokay
    @imrustyokay ปีที่แล้ว +964

    I find it ironic that the people who say "Nobody wants to work anymore" just can't accept that people are finding better paying jobs...a.k.a. the invisible hand of the free market.

    • @magnuslundstedt2659
      @magnuslundstedt2659 ปีที่แล้ว +103

      The free market is only suposed to make labour cheaper, when it is working the other way around it's something wrong.

    • @SleepyMatt-zzz
      @SleepyMatt-zzz ปีที่แล้ว +81

      That or people are just tired of being treated like crap

    • @op4000exe
      @op4000exe ปีที่แล้ว

      But the thing is, the "free hand of the market" is a concept that really only exists for those already rich and powerful in the capitalistic market. It's just another bullshit concept that supposedly will adjust the capitalistic system, but really is just a foil that allows grifting people at the top to keep doing awful things, while claiming to be doing the opposite.

    • @chengchin5073
      @chengchin5073 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@SleepyMatt-zzzThere's no protection for the workers in USA, in Texas my former employer stole money from me and I can't do anything against because Texas is a Right to Work state where he as a business owner hold all the cards and can deny me my work experience just because he dislike my attitude when I confront him about his misconducts.

    • @howwitty
      @howwitty ปีที่แล้ว

      @@SleepyMatt-zzz The invisible ass of the free market crapping out workers into higher paying jobs. No wonder they're surprised, it's invisible.

  • @ThoughTMusic
    @ThoughTMusic ปีที่แล้ว +46

    Its downroght depressing how quickly we forget history in order to repeat it.

    • @lllSASlll
      @lllSASlll 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I don't think it's a lack of remembering, its a lack of caring.

  • @ridgetopcrafts4441
    @ridgetopcrafts4441 ปีที่แล้ว +162

    I live in NH and was fined way more than that ceo was for permanently disfiguring a child, and all i did was go through an unmanned toll booth without an ez pass transponder.
    Fines are taxes for the poor, to keep us poor. They're nothing to these greedy ceos

  • @Gnefitisis
    @Gnefitisis ปีที่แล้ว +162

    So once again we come to the reality that corporations cant be charged felony charges for complacency but can buy political favors.

  • @transce
    @transce 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    "When the penalty for a crime is a fine, then that crime is legal for anyone with enough money." Well said.

  • @Baha.Alllyo
    @Baha.Alllyo ปีที่แล้ว +98

    I never thought about it, but corporations are actually paying adults a child's allowance and expecting us to just make it work. What's even more messed up is that our fellow adults will continue to perpetuate that its okay to do this because any job that doesn't require a degree should automatically never be paid a livable wage.

    • @carolbaker2773
      @carolbaker2773 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      But also, to criticize you for getting a "useless degree" and tell you to quit complaining about student loans.

  • @smughatkid3936
    @smughatkid3936 ปีที่แล้ว +245

    I used to watch this dude on tv when I was around 12-13 he single handily dragged me out of the alt right pipeline, and now i can’t feel anything but heartbroken when I see this man so pissed off about such injustice’s, I hope we can get out of this terrible future we’ve been stumbling towards. Also, thank you Adam, I loved the episode about copyright in the animation industry

    • @standout6595
      @standout6595 ปีที่แล้ว

      Well, if you want to avoid the exploitation of kids, don't get mixed up in the left (LGBTQ+ grooming, the backlash against The Sound of Freedom (anti-child trafficking's message), "MAPS" more honestly known as podophiles somewhat successfully seeking asylum in woke culture and trying to weasel their way into LGBTQ+).

    • @Echo81Rumple83
      @Echo81Rumple83 ปีที่แล้ว

      I heard Adam's show on TruTV, "Adam Ruins Everything," was cancelled by the new CEO the moment he took over. Methinks that scab was pjssed off by Adam's blatant audacity to speak truth against corrupted power.
      Which means they scared, and Adam is doing something right.

    • @matts1166
      @matts1166 ปีที่แล้ว

      Just remember, since 2008 Democrats have received more corporate funding than Republicans, and also more Dark Money.

    • @kevingriener7441
      @kevingriener7441 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      ​@@1BadAssArchAngelvs14learn how to write

    • @1BadAssArchAngelvs14
      @1BadAssArchAngelvs14 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@kevingriener7441 there i fixed my structure happy.

  • @gabbythegreat4962
    @gabbythegreat4962 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    When I tutored for ESL students in summer school, I had multiple children of migrant parents tell me they had to go to summer school because they had trouble keeping up while working third shift at local factories to help support their families. My heart broke and it really made me aware of how impactful the privileges I had really are.

  • @princess_ama
    @princess_ama ปีที่แล้ว +130

    I remember watching a report about migrant farm workers in the US. The investigators found children as young as 5 YEARS OLD working long hours in the fields, and the farm owners would simply pay them under the table to avoid getting penalized.

  • @evilsizer4428
    @evilsizer4428 ปีที่แล้ว +1352

    Fines shouldnt be a set number, they should be a percentage of the offender's net worth. Equitable justice for all!

    • @michaeldeyette567
      @michaeldeyette567 ปีที่แล้ว +172

      For child labor, 100% is a good start. A start.

    • @Monstrick1
      @Monstrick1 ปีที่แล้ว +98

      If a citizen will force a kid to work a dangerous job that will lead to a loss of a limb, it won't be a fkn fine, you will go to prison.

    • @derekstein6193
      @derekstein6193 ปีที่แล้ว +105

      Corporate fines should also include the calculated amount of profit the business made from whatever illegal practices they pursued.
      This would be similar to forcing thieves to return the money they stole during their crime. This means that whatever money the company saved by performing illegal practices (instead of acting legally), would disappear AND they would receive a fine as well. This would mean a net loss for the corporation, ensuring that it would be an actual punishment (instead of just an investment cost), and there would be no more money in breaking the law. Unfortunately, actually making sure this is properly implemented, as well as government inspections are frequent and properly done, are completely different hurdles to overcome.

    • @wdmc2012
      @wdmc2012 ปีที่แล้ว +33

      ​@@derekstein6193 Good idea, but it wouldn't work in practice. On paper, American corporations always lose money, so basing punishments on profit would just result in $0 fines. Not earning money is how they avoid paying taxes. It's how they magically go bankrupt whenever they get sued. All the money is just funneled into offshore accounts and holding companies.

    • @christophedlauer1443
      @christophedlauer1443 ปีที่แล้ว +33

      ​@@derekstein6193Too complex and too vague to be enforced.
      A fine of 25% the CEOs last pay, including options and benefits payed by the CEO / CEOs directly for the first offence, 90% for the second, 100% +2 years jail mandatory minimum for repeats.
      Not a fine to "the company", because that doesn't mean anything. A fine for the person(s) IN CHARGE. The ones responsible. They make the money in the end, they have to be bear the risk.
      if said fines are several millions - well, then the treasury might be able to afford more personel to enforce safety standards, audits etc.

  • @legendaryrat
    @legendaryrat ปีที่แล้ว +21

    If anyone ordered a turkey dinner from a Kroger affiliate last year, you may have noticed it didn't come with sides. This happened because the company that produced Knife and Fork packaged foods was found to be using child labor in their facilities.

  • @Zacian2.0
    @Zacian2.0 ปีที่แล้ว +279

    If a country is run by money, it leads to a bad future.

    • @MLBlue30
      @MLBlue30 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Then the entire world is fucked.

    • @CSwagRebelion
      @CSwagRebelion ปีที่แล้ว +2

      But capitalism is Liberty. Money is power and it protects my freedom.

    • @zugetzuzu
      @zugetzuzu ปีที่แล้ว

      @@CSwagRebelion If protecting your freedoms requires subjugating others, then fuck your freedom

    • @drawerkidviet9867
      @drawerkidviet9867 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      ​@@MLBlue30i mean given the situation, yeah the world IS FUCKED

    • @LifelovingAdventurer
      @LifelovingAdventurer ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Aren't all countries run by money?

  • @colorbugoriginals4457
    @colorbugoriginals4457 ปีที่แล้ว +140

    i grew up doing child labor. the most dangerous parts were stripping old buildings that had things like asbestos, on one case of an old dentists office there were lead slabs in the wall we removed and transported. we worked incinerators in two different places burning literally everything that would burn, i had a little brother who threw batteries and spray paint in for fun. some health issues i have today may have been caused or aggravated by these activities. i am 1000% against this and it's fully personal 😡

  • @BlizzardGhost
    @BlizzardGhost 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    it’s WILD that they’re okay with child labor but “omg gay people”

    • @deerkaiser9983
      @deerkaiser9983 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Almost as if they don't really care about protecting children but are just bigots

  • @JoshuaBenitezNewOrleans
    @JoshuaBenitezNewOrleans ปีที่แล้ว +114

    This is actually how my entire family made it to America. My great aunt immigrated as a child and worked for slave wages in a factory until one by one each family member was brought to the US. I hope that no other family has to deal with that ever again.

  • @TheOfficialTarynTots
    @TheOfficialTarynTots ปีที่แล้ว +274

    When I was a kid working my boss didn't care about child labor laws at all and I had no idea what they were and my parents were paying much attention to how much I was working. They did notice when I got home from work on a school night at 1am but never said anything to my boss.
    My boss was such scum that he even tried to short our paychecks. When I realized I should be getting more I said something. They said it must have been an error but it happened to everyone and I told them all to keep track of their hours. Also, if you weren't one of the first to the bank your check would bounce. He never put enough money in the account to cover all the checks. Some kids didn't have bank accounts and found out they couldn't cash them at the party store because they refused to do that for anyone who worked for him knowing they would bounce. Funny thing is, he had plenty of money and his businesses were doing well.

    • @Mugiwara2k
      @Mugiwara2k ปีที่แล้ว +17

      I’m sorry that you had to work as a kid like that.

    • @TheOfficialTarynTots
      @TheOfficialTarynTots ปีที่แล้ว +18

      @@Mugiwara2k Awww, that is nice of you to say. Other than the bouncing checks/not giving me the correct amount I didn't have a problem with it. I didn't know any better but it definitely made school a lot harder. I was getting about 3-4hrs of sleep after homework and I would sleep all day on my day off. I would sometimes fall asleep in class and teachers called on me more knowing I feel asleep often in class (Except for one nice teacher who knew I worked late).

    • @k8g8s8
      @k8g8s8 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      ​@@TheOfficialTarynTotsWhat was the job? Just curious.

    • @BriarBeeBenson
      @BriarBeeBenson ปีที่แล้ว +21

      @@TheOfficialTarynTotsyou’re literally describing exactly what my teen years were like! There wasn’t a single hour of my time that I owned, I didn’t even get to enjoy the money I earned, it went straight into my father’s pockets or paying for basic needs. My father forced me to work from 13 despite himself not having any money troubles, him and his wife were just being selfish.
      I was a teen girl and my boss was sexually abusing me and I wasn’t allowed to quit and didn’t even know what he was doing was wrong because I wasn’t allowed to say “no” to *any* adult, it never occurred to me that I had the option and I blamed myself for my abuse. I was terrified of my boss but even more scared of being fired and facing my father’s anger and having no money for period products or to pay for school uniform.
      It was a miserable 6-7 years of my life that I’ll just never get back, I mourn the future I could have had if adults hadn’t abused me in my formative years. My boss abused me, my father and his wife abused me, my colleagues brutally bullied me, I was treated like the worst child on earth when I tried so hard to please everyone and do exactly as I was told. It was NEVER enough! I was seen as a mini adult with bad intentions, a latent criminal and was hated for it. Everywhere I went I was mistreated and constantly working and in a state of perpetual misery and exhaustion.
      At 23 I’m now a broken adult who can’t work at all despite how hard I tried to get a degree. I ended up sick with an incurable illness brought on by years of being abused and I’ll be in pain for the rest of my life. I don’t even know who I am. I have no identity because I was never allowed to develop one. I never even got a chance to try.
      I cannot stress enough to anyone insisting teenagers should work to “develop their skills” or whatever how that’s such a catastrophically bad idea that is! Especially if that teenager is a girl, adults will be vile towards her. It’s something that will benefit no one but greedy adults wanting to exploit children.
      You learn nothing but how to accept abuse from authority and that you deserve it and that you own none of your time and fighting for your own rights is futile and wrong. I don’t care if a teen is getting work experience (won’t help them in the future either, getting a career is mostly done via networking) or learning new skills or getting a little bit of extra money, it’s just never worth that risk. No amount of money or experience is worth risking subjecting a teenager to abuse that will take a life time to heal from. Never.

    • @tohrurikku
      @tohrurikku ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Other than the child labor I had an employer like that. When my paycheck bounced the first time my boss pretended that it was the first time it ever happened. When my bank refused my paychecks the payday places told me that my work was blacklisted. I had to get my boss to pay me in cash after that.

  • @AsteroSloth
    @AsteroSloth ปีที่แล้ว +53

    The craziest part about banning gay books from libraries to protect kids is that they’re forgetting to teach them how to even sit down to read any book

  • @jfmangano
    @jfmangano ปีที่แล้ว +230

    "Would someone please think of the children?"
    "We think they're a real credit to the U.S. workforce."
    "Wait, what? No, not like that."

  • @Tayvin4042
    @Tayvin4042 ปีที่แล้ว +224

    This is beyond indefensible. Anyone who think this is a good thing or tries to make excuses for it is a monster. Full stop, a monster.

    • @BriarBeeBenson
      @BriarBeeBenson ปีที่แล้ว +13

      No, both situations are bullshit. Being the legal property of adults and not being allowed to say no to them is bullshit. I don’t care if it’s clocking in at work or a child being a live-in maid, neither child here has a choice. It’s not about who has it worse or “but one of them is done out of love”, I don’t give a shit what the intention is or how gentle the coercion was, it’s still children being forced into labour against their will which is indefensible. It’s about how children not having basic human rights like autonomy and agency, the right to say “no” to adults, is abhorrent and disgusting and is how shit like this happens.
      Children should have the freedom to do labour for themselves, to do things, like chores, because they deserve care! Not because authority said so, not because “or else”, not purely for the convenience of selfish adults. For THEMSELVES. Because they are humans and deserve to be treated as such!
      No ifs and no buts, human rights aren’t up for debate. Humanity should not be conditional. You cannot put little exceptions into place because that is exactly how this happens! Because the greed of adults cannot be kept in check.
      If children are property and aren’t allowed to say no or leave in response to their parents ordering them like a dog to do chores, then they’re not going to be allowed to say no to their parents forcing them to do labour they or other adults can monetise for no compensation either. It needs to be a hard ban, you do NOT own these people. Owning a human is violence. No exceptions.
      All children should have the freedom to say “no, I don’t want to do that” without the threat of being subjected to violence, humiliation, having their possessions stolen or being isolated. I don’t care if saying “no” has negative natural consequences, they should be allowed to experience them then. Leaving should always be allowed. Saying no should always be allowed. No exceptions.
      Any child “agreeing” to do any of kind of labour an adult orders them to do are not consenting, they’re *complying.* That’s why kids can’t consent! They know their needs or wants just fine, but they’re not allowed to give an answer that adults view as unfavourable, because adults will hurt them otherwise.
      One way or another they will be coerced into barking “yes sir” like a trained animal and scurry off to do their task that only benefits authority. Authority which have done nothing to earn their position as a leader. It doesn’t matter how gentle a parent is about it, it’s still oppression and exploitation. That’s what happens when a human has no choice but to rely on someone for their survival and don’t have the option to just leave and choose who they associate themselves with.
      That’s what happens when children are viewed to be objects their parents own who purely exist for the convenience and enjoyment of adults. Who don’t exist purely for themselves. If they did then they wouldn’t need to be threatened into doing labour, they’d just do it without prompting. If they can’t then that’s a different problem that can’t be solved with coercion or violence.
      Contrary to bullshit popular beliefs humans are not inherently lazy, we actually LIKE work and doing little tasks, just not at the expense of our wellbeing and just not purely for someone else. You do not need to coerce or threaten a human into learning or doing care tasks, we do that on our own. There is no reason that will justify treating children in this way. It’s indefensible.

    • @julietfischer5056
      @julietfischer5056 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      A monster or incredibly naive and ill-informed (which helps the monster). Poor kids know what work is, and know people who work their butts off. Migrant kids also know what work is. What both sets of children need are safe homes and decent educations, followed by jobs that pay well. Anything else is utter bollocks.

    • @aturchomicz821
      @aturchomicz821 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@SlothShower Well the problem is that Children _aren't_ in any Unions, no?💀💀

    • @parrot998
      @parrot998 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@julietfischer5056A monster by choice or a monster by ignorance. The results are the same. And both deserve the same fate.

  • @beth8775
    @beth8775 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    As an Illinois resident, I did not expect us on that list, and I am p*ssed that I didn't know about it. Thanks for the info so I can contact my reps.

  • @Volumixen
    @Volumixen ปีที่แล้ว +102

    I have said this, and will say it until I die: Even IF people weren't trying to find work, and employers can't find people who want to work? You don't throw children at the problem!

    • @dewdew80
      @dewdew80 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      the people saying they can't find good workers absolutely do. They can't find even people to interview because their wages combined with their absurd expectations turn everybody away. If they had decent expectations then people would show up and they wouldn't have the justification they want for chipping away at child labor laws.

    • @Midala87
      @Midala87 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That's the American way. Man child for US President.

    • @minestar2247
      @minestar2247 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Midala87 no, the American way can't be this disappointing, can it?

    • @backpacker3421
      @backpacker3421 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Right. You pay more until you get the workers you need. Where I live even Walmart and McDonalds are hiring at around $18/hr (20% over minimum) so they can get the workers they need. Of course, my state still has solid child labor laws and actually enforces them, so the companies have no choice. But they also seem to have no problem staying in business.

    • @Volumixen
      @Volumixen ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@minestar2247 Not only is it just disappointing, but it is geared to actively harm those who are unable to pay the wages of the people in Washington who tend to screw the population over more than they ever seem to help.

  • @richardthompson8666
    @richardthompson8666 ปีที่แล้ว +354

    Cutting grass and taking out trash for family and neighbors is one thing. Clocking in for the man is BS.

    • @RilianSharp
      @RilianSharp ปีที่แล้ว +9

      forced labor is forced labor, even if it's your parents forcing you to do it.

    • @carpeXnoctem12
      @carpeXnoctem12 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      I was raised on a farm. My parents had kids so they didn't have to hire employees. It's not like I ever had the option to call in sick or quit.
      It was an obligation, it was hell. It also sucked to grow up and not have time to spend with friends outside of school, or see lazy brats that had infinitely more than me.

    • @RilianSharp
      @RilianSharp ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@carpeXnoctem12
      my dad was in the same situation as you and he hated working on a farm. he likes being a city person now.

    • @kellymurphy1098
      @kellymurphy1098 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@carpeXnoctem12I was going to point this problem out myself, when I read the comment by @richardthompson8666 . It's a flaw in our child labor protections that people are allowed to employ their own children, but children aren't allowed to work for an actual wage. So effective child *slavery* is legal, it's only employment we frown on, apparently. Basically, all of that needs to be banned equally. Forcing your kids to labor for hours on the family farm is no less abusive and exploitative than employing other people's children in a factory.

    • @KindredBrujah
      @KindredBrujah ปีที่แล้ว

      @@RilianSharp Ehh, not so sure I agree there. Dangerous jobs should only be undertaken by competent people. Children are still growing and learning so by nature are not competent.

  • @hollo0o583
    @hollo0o583 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I wouldn‘t be surprised if some of these orphaned children end up in criminal secswork. They have NO ONE to protect them. What the hell?!?!

  • @scottcoon232
    @scottcoon232 ปีที่แล้ว +69

    YOU ARE AT #7 .. heading for #8
    1. Oliver Twist
    2. Anti-child labor laws and education requirements
    3. Build the best public schools on Earth (literally)
    4. Convince people to defund their kids' future
    5. Use the failing defunded schools as excuse to privatize
    6. Jack up price of the private "free" school
    * 7. Make child labor legal again *
    8. Make education optional again
    9. Make education a privilege available to a few
    ...and back to 1. Oliver Twist

  • @cherrypopscile3385
    @cherrypopscile3385 ปีที่แล้ว +208

    To put it into context: I pay more in property taxes yearly than that factory owner got for blending a kids hand.

    • @JonathanKayne
      @JonathanKayne ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I pay more in rent than that fine was. That's pathetic.

  • @RikuIshmaru
    @RikuIshmaru ปีที่แล้ว +10

    This is gut wrenching for me… I worked in a meat factory, I saw someone lose an arm to a grinder - and the thought of that poor kid just breaks my heart…

  • @Sashin9000
    @Sashin9000 ปีที่แล้ว +201

    We should provide the basic needs to all children so that they cannot be exploited like this.

    • @Theomite
      @Theomite ปีที่แล้ว +15

      That's precisely why that WON'T happen.

    • @ScooterinAB
      @ScooterinAB ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Who are companies going to exploit then?

    • @dewdew80
      @dewdew80 ปีที่แล้ว

      their parents are already legally obligated to provide what they need. Don't frame this as children taking jobs to make ends meet, that is not what is happening. They take the jobs because their loser parents make them take them. The jobs exist because swindlers are allowed to rule the roost in an unregulated market. Lack of market regulations is even grounds only for cheats and liars.

    • @moroteseoinage
      @moroteseoinage ปีที่แล้ว

      I’m sick of this liberal lie that gainful employment is somehow “exploitation.” Real exploitation is the grooming committed by the liberal media.

    • @mwfmtnman
      @mwfmtnman ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Why just for children?

  • @PoesRaven1984
    @PoesRaven1984 ปีที่แล้ว +92

    I am literally on the verge of tears. This whole situation is wrong on so many levels. Child labor in and of itself it disgusting. Worse yet, these kids were sent alone from a horrific situation by desperate parents who just wanted to know that their children were safe. Now the kids are stuck here with no one to defend them and no choice what happens to them. What kind of monster can look at this and think that any part of it is okay? Have they forgotten where we came from as a nation and how much we have grown and overcome? We still have such a long way to go, but now we are backsliding on the progress we've made.

    • @clgr1323
      @clgr1323 ปีที่แล้ว

      yankeeland was made out of ruthless exploitation of slaves, no matter the color of their skin or if they were "free". Until the mass strikes and labor laws, Now white people (and blacks to some extent) are on a better place. (latin) Americans? nope, nobody cares. Everyone is too entertained to notice

    • @mwfmtnman
      @mwfmtnman ปีที่แล้ว +4

      You seem to be under the assumption that it is only unattended immigrant kids.

  • @ant3t3
    @ant3t3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    This is disgusting. I can't believe so-called "people" could do this. Just reinforces my belief that money erases all humanity that someone could have and replaces it with pure corporate greed.

    • @eldritchtouched
      @eldritchtouched 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think it's the reverse- people who are so willing and eager to do this awful shit to people are the ones who rise to the top in this kind of fucked up system because money is the only metric corps care about and they know they can exploit children way easier.

  • @dusklvr
    @dusklvr ปีที่แล้ว +45

    As soon as I heard that hundreds of thousands of kids were missing from the border detainment, I knew that these ghouls are going to put them in the factories

  • @InterruptingOctopus
    @InterruptingOctopus ปีที่แล้ว +124

    the cruelest thing about all this is that the people who say "oh we need to protect our kids!" is that they probably whisper to eachother "just not THEIR kids."

    • @puredank6317
      @puredank6317 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Let's be real, not even our own kids

  • @twilightgeneral777
    @twilightgeneral777 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    This country truly is a despair inducing hellhole.

  • @NoName-ik2du
    @NoName-ik2du ปีที่แล้ว +111

    I noticed a bunch of the child labor laws change in my area maybe about a year ago. I was pretty disgusted by it.
    I had no idea children from other countries were just being dumped into the U.S. without their parents to go work for peanuts. I am utterly horrified now.

    • @ryanj610
      @ryanj610 ปีที่แล้ว

      You just learned about illegal immigration? Not trying to make this political, but ALL these kids were undocumented migrants using stolen ID's at staffing agencies (which provided them).
      The solution is to create a foolproof verification system or mandatory finger printing; can't fine companies that use a staffing agency but legally can't check ID without violating the law.

    • @OllamhDrab
      @OllamhDrab ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Sad part is, in some of the places these people are fleeing, it seems a better option.

  • @GuillerMak37
    @GuillerMak37 ปีที่แล้ว +122

    People don’t really want to protect all children. They wanna protect the children of their community.

    • @Echo81Rumple83
      @Echo81Rumple83 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      Replace the word "community" with "the elite offsprings."

    • @maxi1ification
      @maxi1ification ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@Echo81Rumple83that's their community, his point still stands

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      That's why there's no political backlash for abusing immigrants. Joe Average Voter grows very angry if they see 'their' people being abused. But someone else, someone distant and who isn't like Joe, there's just not that much empathy.

    • @TheGallantDrake
      @TheGallantDrake ปีที่แล้ว +11

      We’ve been trained to think like this. We need to keep working to untrain ourselves.

    • @darkstarr984
      @darkstarr984 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      And only the children in that community who conform to their expectations.

  • @Krain420
    @Krain420 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Me and my siblings went through this hell for years after we were adopted and forced into working on a farm and construction. Even though the county was aware of the abuse we were going through they didn’t do anything to stop it because they were profiting off of it under the table through select ‘projects’. Never forgive, never forget.

  • @coolcommcollect
    @coolcommcollect ปีที่แล้ว +81

    Im 16 and i just quit my job in Georgia because my company kept assignming me work hours where they didnt have to give me a break

    • @JackedSchoomves
      @JackedSchoomves ปีที่แล้ว +8

      When I was 16, I worked at a place that never gave me a break. This was a sit down locally owned restaurant.

    • @mnirwin5112
      @mnirwin5112 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Good on you for refusing to put up with that!
      My workplace (in Canada) is not heaven but we do have a union (albeit a weak one) and so we definitely get our breaks. Sometimes they're late in the shift but we get 'em.

    • @JackedSchoomves
      @JackedSchoomves ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mnirwin5112 I don’t even know if I fully quit or not. I would take breaks in the restroom since it would be weird to force a worker out of one. They would not even be that long. Ten minutes at max! One of people that owned the joint just started knocking at the door and said for me to go home for the day. I then chose to not go back. I was either fired or I quit. I honestly don’t know, nor do I care to know. That was an awful workplace.
      Also, good on you for making sure you got your breaks.

    • @matts1166
      @matts1166 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@JackedSchoomves Oddly enough, in most states, most jobs for people over the age of 16 have no mandatory break laws. There might be company policy, but no laws. They can work a 17 year old 16 hours in a day without a break and it's legal most places.

    • @JackedSchoomves
      @JackedSchoomves ปีที่แล้ว

      @@matts1166 that’s shitty. I think Virginia has a law that mandates that minors that are 16 or 17 to be given breaks if they work long hours like 4 pm to 10 pm, but I could be wrong.

  • @BrieyaSilverweb
    @BrieyaSilverweb ปีที่แล้ว +55

    I remember telling my folks back in the 90's the USA didn't exist any longer. It was incorporated and run by CEO's. It is disturbing to see how this keeps screaming louder and louder each decade.

    • @MrMagnaniman
      @MrMagnaniman ปีที่แล้ว +3

      It goes back much further than that. 1789 is the point at which people lost the last bit of control they had over government in this country.

    • @MLBlue30
      @MLBlue30 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@MrMagnanimanAmerica was never great.

    • @MrMagnaniman
      @MrMagnaniman ปีที่แล้ว

      @@MLBlue30 "Great" is a pretty subjective term. Are you fishing for conservatives to have a pointless internet argument with?

  • @richardspillers6282
    @richardspillers6282 ปีที่แล้ว +268

    Simple, start calling it what it is. Trafficking and exploiting.
    Its no different from child sexual abuse.

    • @PraiseTheFSMonster
      @PraiseTheFSMonster ปีที่แล้ว +24

      Well it is different, because SA is a traumatic experience that affects your life, relationships, and mental stability from that point on until you die. Labor is nothing compared to the pain of SA

    • @richardspillers6282
      @richardspillers6282 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      @@PraiseTheFSMonster fair enough. Poor phrasing on my part. I still view it as abuse.

    • @PraiseTheFSMonster
      @PraiseTheFSMonster ปีที่แล้ว +23

      @@richardspillers6282 Definitely still abuse

    • @austinjackson2574
      @austinjackson2574 ปีที่แล้ว

      Child labor in factories that break you over 12 hr continuous shifts while you're neglected, abused, and denied your basic human rights in exchange for a meager salary (if a salary at all) is also a traumatic experience that affects your life, relationships and mental stability- probably until you die.
      You know, due to the fact that it's all happening because they aren't white children with "good american families".
      Saying that it's no different from sexual abuse isn't saying it's worse than sexual abuse or vice versa.
      It's saying they are both things that can ruin you as a person, from an age where everything that happens to you is permanently etched into your mind and body.
      @@PraiseTheFSMonster

    • @MrZoomah
      @MrZoomah ปีที่แล้ว +18

      ​@@PraiseTheFSMonsterAs a child protection worker I would like to point out that the actual sexual abuse doesn't cause most of that. Psychological abuse that goes with it is the main culprit. In terms of long term damage to a child's life it goes neglect, physical abuse, emotional/psychological abuse, sexual abuse.
      This is why so many of us campaign for as much recognition be given to the damage of hitting kids as to sexual abuse.
      I don't know where child labor would fall but I would think there would be emotional and physical abuse associated with it

  • @xwhateverx666
    @xwhateverx666 ปีที่แล้ว +196

    Sometimes I think these people who shout the loudest about "saving the kids" from boogeymen such as the "trans agenda" or are obsessed with abortion are really just distracting us from their support for real issues like this. They only care about kids when it's useful for them politically. More people need to hear about what's really going on in their country.

    • @RizzyGyatt
      @RizzyGyatt ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Why do you "think" that? It's obvious that it is the truth lol. Just because someone doesn't say the quiet part out loud doesn't mean their fondling of the quiet part is magically not true.

    • @alysemarie8313
      @alysemarie8313 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      These political issues we’re divided on are red herrings to keep us divided. Divided we fall. We don’t see the real problems. Where I live I bought a very nice home in 2008 for $50k. Wages are still very similar. Houses are now $400k and being bought by corporations to be rented out. Or bought by our rich seasonal residents. The best jobs here are supporting the rich. Building their houses, supporting their infrastructure and with those jobs you can barely scrape by. We can’t address those issues while we’re arguing over whether a mother can get a lifesaving abortion or whether trans people can exist. We’re being fed propaganda to keep us divided and nobody cares because we love the drama.

    • @bitterbonker
      @bitterbonker 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Considering that many children have been given puberty-blocking drugs which will permanently alter their physiology, or been subjected to disfiguring surgeries such as having their breasts removed, I don't see it as a "Boogeyman", but a subject of sincere concern.

    • @RizzyGyatt
      @RizzyGyatt 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      concern trolling @@bitterbonker

    • @bitterbonker
      @bitterbonker 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Knee-jerk dismissiveness@@RizzyGyatt

  • @quinnfarris
    @quinnfarris ปีที่แล้ว +598

    Starting at age 14 I was illegally forced by my parents into back breaking dairy work. I have permanent injuries across my body due to a few years of this forced labor. I was never paid for it, it interfered with my school work, and the pain i experience to this day is horrific. Thank you for speaking out

    • @BriarBeeBenson
      @BriarBeeBenson ปีที่แล้ว +60

      Reading this shattered my heart because I had a very similar adolescence. It hit so close to home. I’m so angry for anyone who has been a victim of shit like this, I’m so, so sorry. You did not deserve it, at all! You do not deserve to be in pain, the injustice of it all is rage inducing.
      At age 12-13, after my mother had died and wasn’t there to protect me, I was forced into working by my cruel father. He didn’t need the money or anything, him and his new wife just didn’t want to pay for anything for me. The took the money I earned in the form of charging me rent. They used it to jet off on luxury holidays.
      My work wasn’t necessarily back breaking labour, I was a waitress and barista working 10-12 hour shifts in a cafe in flat, flimsy shoes on hard concrete that fucked up my feet. I wasn’t allowed to sit down. I had onset symptoms of my at the time undiagnosed chronic illness that put me in terrible pain every day that got exponentially worse due to stress, injury and abuse. I wouldn’t be anywhere near as immobile now as an adult if people had just given a shit back then. Instead I was seen as a silly teen girl, lying for attention.
      What I actually was, was a teen girl with undiagnosed “high functioning” autism and adhd who was terrified of people due to a life time of brutal bullying and abuse. Who was grieving the death of her mother. Who was still a little girl being sexually and psychologically abused by her boss. I wasn’t allowed to leave my job. The signs were there, adults just ignored them out of convenience.
      For 6 miserable years there wasn’t a single hour of my day that I owned, people who didn’t go through something like this don’t quite understand how much that fucks with a person. I did my homework during my breaks at work. I barely ate or slept. If I wasn’t working or studying I was doing chores and getting mistreated at home.
      I had no friends, no hobbies, no clubs or extracurriculars. I didn’t know who I was as a person. I was such a lonely and scared little girl and I was in a constant, perpetual state of exhaustion and misery. I unequivocally wished to no longer exist by age 14. On the way to work I would fantasise about lying down to die in a patch of peaceful forest that I could see from the window of the bus.
      I want to stress to anyone reading this that barely anyone noticed and if they did notice then they made excuses to not care. I share this so other people become aware of how much being raised like this destroys a person, that what tiny amount of money I made from this, the skills I got? It simply wasn’t worth what it cost me.
      I finally escaped and clawed my way out of there at 17 and my life has been definitely a LOT happier but it was all just too little too late. I struggled immensely those first few years and my illness went undiagnosed until I was 21. It’s incurable. I’ll be in pain forever. I need to take opiate based painkillers to walk around my home. I’d be dead if I hadn’t gotten really lucky and made incredibly generous friends at uni who helped me and now live with me. I never finished my degree due to becoming sick, I now live on disability and have no future.
      My abusers get to enjoy their lives though. They got to have their dream wedding, jet off on luxury holidays and go travelling. They own their home, a home I partially paid for, and it will never be taken from them. They’ve paid it off, they get to renovate it. They do work that they’re proud of and are beloved in their community, surrounded by endless love. These are things I don’t have, some of them I can’t have.
      I didn’t get to enjoy my life as a teen, now as an adult who will be in pain forever from an incurable illness, I will never get the chance to even try. My siblings got to enjoy their lives, my mother protected them and now they’re flourishing as adults. I didn’t get that. Not at all. They don’t understand why I’m so sad and angry.
      People don’t realise that abuse victims rarely get happy endings. Especially disabled ones. They don’t realise that abusers have great lives in comparison because it was built off of the backs of the people they exploited.
      They don’t realise that victims of abuse are often punished by society for our shortcomings. That’s just the reality of things. I wish it wasn’t. It doesn’t HAVE to be this way, I wish I had the power to fight to change it. In the meantime I’ll use the last drops of my energy to aggressively fight for children’s rights. I refused to have what happened to me happen to another young soul. This needs to stop! I’m so glad people like Adam who have such a huge platform are speaking out to prevent more children from having their futures snatched from their hands and burned in front of them. I hope something changes soon. It has to.
      I really do hope your life is good in spite of your parent’s abuse and in spite of your pain. A good life full of love is what you deserve. I hope your parents encounter grievous amounts of misfortune and pay immensely for what they did to you. What they did was unforgivable, don’t let anyone tell you that you shouldn’t be angry about it. That you should even express gratitude about it. There is nothing good about what happened to you.

    • @denisemayosky1955
      @denisemayosky1955 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@BriarBeeBensonAgain, 🫂, gently. What your parents and other adults did to you is unforgivable. They may be living it up now, but I believe that they will answer one day for all the evil they did to you, and as much luxury and good things they had in this life, it will all be forgotten with the suffering they will be made to endure for eternity. You, my friend, are like Lazarus in Luke 16:19-31. God sees and He *will* avenge! Believe it! I'm praying for you to be healed, but thank God you have kind friends who are helping you out. That's God working to heal you from the abuse and to help you with giving you a desire to fight for others. Don't lose hope or faith, sister. You are not forgotten!!❤ Okay? Love you!

    • @denisemayosky1955
      @denisemayosky1955 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Quinn, hugs to you, honey! You didn't deserve the abuse and horror you went through. You're a precious individual, never forget that! Praying for you! Hugs🫂❤️

    • @DrTssha
      @DrTssha ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Goddamn. That just ain't right. Parents need to stop acting like they own their kids, and need to wise up to the fact that they are their kids' guardians. It's a duty that can (and should) be taken away from them if they demonstrate that they aren't able to perform it acceptably.

    • @sandermez3856
      @sandermez3856 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      same for me but at 12 years old. my boomer parents said kids now a days are lazy and it was for my own good. Found out they did NOT work like this when they were 12. The lazy kids, that was them!

  • @tinkergnomad
    @tinkergnomad ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I've honestly been wondering why this isn't being talked about more. This literally makes me sick to my stomach.

    • @hekewika
      @hekewika ปีที่แล้ว

      Im always worried Adam is going to be shut down somehow for speaking out against the government

  • @davidt3563
    @davidt3563 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    This makes me rage. I ranted for like 20 minutes to my friends about this. At the end they asked me why the rant, because nobody is trying to bring child labor back. I started showing them all the stories and deaths.

  • @maamham
    @maamham ปีที่แล้ว +32

    These kids are going to be so jaded by the time they are young adults. I can attest to that, I've been working since I was 14. I remember the soul crushing anxiety I felt my sophomore year when I realized that I was preparing to work everyday for the rest of my life. No break or rest in sight.

  • @Kashimana
    @Kashimana ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I am so enraged at the fine amounts in this country. 1,000 for a hand that doesn’t even cover the medical bills, loss of wages over their lifetime. WTF

  • @brookebolduc7573
    @brookebolduc7573 ปีที่แล้ว +36

    I started working when I was 6 years old (2000). I worked at my mom’s child aftercare everyday when I got home from school. I literally worked for free taking care of babies and children. I started my first job when I was 12. In summers I worked 60 hours a week at two jobs and I had a mental breakdown because it’s not normal! I’ve had to process this in therapy. I can’t imagine working in a factory. 6:33

  • @maka6000
    @maka6000 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    Thank god somebody finally talks about this. I'm done of hearing "what about the children" and then voting on a guy that wants little Timmy to work instead of learning and being a kid. That's one of the great points about why two party political system is so shit.

  • @bristroyer1723
    @bristroyer1723 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This is sickening. What can we do to help?

  • @onlirier2993
    @onlirier2993 ปีที่แล้ว +76

    "Fighting crime" is not about preventing injustice. It's about maintaining order and preventing the appearance of chaos. It's a story I've seen time and time again, from the moderation on internet communities to, well, this. No matter how many victims a crime has, when the only visible effects are an executive getting a public court case, it feels clean. Sterile. Nowhere near as bad as, say, gang violence, or someone doing drugs. Except for some reason they can't crack down on school shootings. Odd.

    • @acacacacacacaccaca7666
      @acacacacacacaccaca7666 ปีที่แล้ว

      It's about putting dangerous people in a tiny room were they don't get to injure themselves or others

    • @onlirier2993
      @onlirier2993 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@acacacacacacaccaca7666 The question is, who is considered more "dangerous?" a teenager with a harmful addiction, or a megalomaniac with practically unlimited wealth, the ability to sway their own public image, and the ability to lobby the government to change policies?

    • @acacacacacacaccaca7666
      @acacacacacacaccaca7666 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@onlirier2993 the person who has already committed a crime

    • @onlirier2993
      @onlirier2993 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@acacacacacacaccaca7666 Well, that's the entire point, isn't it? My claim was that the justice system is ill-equipped to prosecute the actual committed white-collar crimes, which are deprioritized by the "fight crime" narrative pushed by the media, which instead focuses on "disorderly" crimes such as drug use and shoplifting rather than crimes of true injustice such as, say, promoting and using child labor on a systemic scale. The people who have already committed the more dangerous crimes are not being dealt with effectively.

  • @bmay282
    @bmay282 ปีที่แล้ว +287

    I had to work with a child as a coworker once, she was 12. It was a small family owned diner, there are exceptions to the child labor laws for small businesses, the owner put her kids to work.. but she had them out front waiting tables and made sure their sections were always full... they were taking orders, entering orders into the computer, everything... taking money away from the adult workers for her parents. This isn't "teaching them the value of hard work" .. this is exploitation. Customers thought it was cute, but it was truly terrible. No one tipped these kids very well either.. they're not taken seriously. The mom told her daughter she was earning money to audition for American Idol. Who knows if that was even true.. I was angry every day I worked there.. I left that place as soon as I could. No child labor!!

    • @whitewinterresorts7679
      @whitewinterresorts7679 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Dunno man, if you can be outperformed by a child, or a robot, you're probably going to struggle in life.

    • @andykerr1263
      @andykerr1263 ปีที่แล้ว +64

      @@whitewinterresorts7679 Its not about performance. Its literally about paying people less. They couldnt care less if the child does less work, when they pay a fraction of the wages, they can hire more kids.Kids are also generally more easy to exploit in the workplace because they dont know what should or shouldnt be happening to them. This is one of the reasons child labour was gotten rid of to start with!

    • @robertt3715
      @robertt3715 ปีที่แล้ว +53

      @@whitewinterresorts7679 OR it's that using their children as employees, and not having to hire an adult and pay them properly and provide benefits is the issue, not whatever your poor reading comprehension led you to.

    • @TwistedRootsMelody
      @TwistedRootsMelody ปีที่แล้ว +18

      It is sad to see kids overworked in the family business. I've seen many a farm kid that's missed school because of work. But at least in those cases there is investment. The child is being exploited yes but with the promise of more. They will either own that business one day (which makes it like old school apprenticeships) or at least the family will put them through college with the money saved by their labor.
      What these companies are doing is like slavery, verses the kid working the register at dads shop being an endentured servant.
      This topic doesn't get enough attention, glad for this video

    • @whitewinterresorts7679
      @whitewinterresorts7679 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@robertt3715 My statement "if you can be outperformed by a child, or a robot, you're probably going to struggle in life" works on its own, regardless of context or perceived comprehension skills. I'm genuinely interested in who child labour laws are for. Aside from egregious examples (chimney sweep, cobalt miner, child soldier etc) I am far from convinced it is in children's best interest to not be participating in the labour force. Take the OP's example. Running a small business is tough and the hours are long. Most fail because most people grossly underestimate what it takes. If you also have a family, having kids join you in the work is one of the few ways you get to spend time with your children. The quality of that time comes down to the idiosyncrasies of the family and the business, and while government can certainly put up broad protections against exploitation, every situation will be different. Children working part time from a young age is an integral part of a broad and meaningful education serving to both enhance their other academic, cultural and social growth, and give them experience in making a valuable contribution to a community and society.

  • @floralfancy7814
    @floralfancy7814 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    This is horrifying. Rich, privileged and grown adults that profit off the hardwork and deprivation of children are despicable.

  • @user-pd8mi7ng7s
    @user-pd8mi7ng7s ปีที่แล้ว +36

    There is also children working overnight shifts in meat packing plants in Iowa also. Instead of punishing the companies they made it legal and claim it's educational

    • @billtomson5791
      @billtomson5791 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Bible Belt.

    • @millirabbit4331
      @millirabbit4331 ปีที่แล้ว

      It is educational. Now they know the truth about the US child labor system.

  • @adntigger71015
    @adntigger71015 ปีที่แล้ว +126

    This is one of the "great" things MAGAts are talking about. Kids are "soft" these days, "don't want to work", and need to learn what it's like in the "real world". They're not only totally fine with this, they encourage it. Many of them who own rural farms talk about how their kids already work on the farm as soon as they learn how to walk. Yet another example of how effective the rich/capitalistic propaganda machine truly is.

    • @Bman32x
      @Bman32x ปีที่แล้ว +25

      Keep the masses poor & uneducated. Kids who are educated “tend” to recognize the bad situation they’re in and don’t stand for it.

    • @DmDrae
      @DmDrae ปีที่แล้ว

      And you *still* found a way in your rotten tribal mind to bring it back to party lines. You are part of the problem - this is a bipartisan issue.

    • @Abicated
      @Abicated ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Working small jobs on a farm with your family who care about you is not the same as child labor for a corporation that does not know your name. Please do not act like the two are remotely the same.

    • @1BadAssArchAngelvs14
      @1BadAssArchAngelvs14 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      My friend people on the side of red never said kids younger than 13 should be working they said teenage kids who are 16 of age do not want to not work for a living since the work paid hours for the price of living is not enough to go by today's standards.please learn to fact check.

    • @MarylandFarmer.
      @MarylandFarmer. ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@AbicatedAgreed and the data for average farm kids is surprisingly safe. Where the data turns is when you factor in all the Amish and Mennonite kids doing things they have no business doing but sadly their parents don't know any better either sometimes. My parents made sure I had school work done and enough sleep and that I wanted to help, never expected me to. I took safety classes and was only given age appropriate tasks too.

  • @myronidasvestarossa
    @myronidasvestarossa ปีที่แล้ว +23

    The love of money truly is the root of all evil.

    • @anju5124
      @anju5124 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      It sometimes make me think what if there is a limit on how much maximum money that you can have. What do you think?

    • @parrot998
      @parrot998 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      No, power is. Money is just one expression of power. One that has become dominant in the modern era with the rise of capitalism. But before that you had kings and feudal lords, as well as religious institutions... All of this nonsense is because some insecure weak antisocial POS really need to believe they are better than everyone else, by having the power to crush them. The money isn't the point... Stuff like this.. Forcing children to suffer, forcing people to bend to their whims or die... That is the point. It's disgusting and it needs to end.

    • @Davenzoid
      @Davenzoid หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@anju5124then entrepeneurs won't stay in a country that imposes that rule, and consequently not stimulate the economy. No businessmen means no business. We should just tax them what they deserve and disallow legal loopholes to evade taxes.

    • @anju5124
      @anju5124 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Davenzoid Oh yeah, true. My idea can limit innovation as well.

  • @corey2232
    @corey2232 ปีที่แล้ว +88

    This is insane!
    Any politician who voted against child labor protections & increased punishments for those guilty of it, should be ASHAMED.
    And they better not ever speak another word about "protect our children" when they vote against it themselves.

    • @michaeldeyette567
      @michaeldeyette567 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Not ashamed, removed from their position and convicted.

    • @Gabriel_Blair
      @Gabriel_Blair ปีที่แล้ว

      the politicians arent the problem they're just scumbags playing the game, the system is the problem, a system that lets us put kids in labour for capital

  • @christraven
    @christraven ปีที่แล้ว +26

    "Did a kid drown in a river of GoGurt?!"
    WHY ARE YOU GIVING THEM IDEAS, ADAM.

  • @phoenixprimus
    @phoenixprimus ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The reason the politicians are okay with this in particular is that when they say they want to protect the children, they mean their children.

  • @ericduan19
    @ericduan19 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    Back when my country was in bad shape, my mom used to work as a part-time child factory worker. That sh*t was really bad.
    Thank you Adam for making this topic.

  • @roshnipatel2000
    @roshnipatel2000 ปีที่แล้ว +36

    My heart absolutely breaks for all of these children. Especially for that teenager who lost his hand 😢 that is a life-changing injury! The factory owner should be embarrassed and ashamed for allowing child labor in his factory.

  • @keifsimon1549
    @keifsimon1549 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was 11 when I started working at a local general store after school for a couple hours and on weekends I worked at a farmers market unloading trucks for 10 hours every sat and sun. I worked non stop until I turned 52 when i was forced to retire due to an aggressive camcer. My brother 2 yrs younger then me started working when he turned 13 on weekends at a gun club and is still working. We did it to help with the family household. We still went school but gave up a regular childhood..we have no regrets but wouldn't want other kids to go thru it...

  • @KaiseaWings
    @KaiseaWings ปีที่แล้ว +33

    When you're the only UN member who has not ratified the UN Rights of the Child...
    It wouldn't solve everything but it would be you know, a good look at least.

    • @MrMagnaniman
      @MrMagnaniman ปีที่แล้ว

      The UN doesn't do anything. It's just a place where people go to lie about how great they are and how awful their enemies are.

  • @wyvern723
    @wyvern723 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    The fines punishing it are pathetic as well. They aren't enough to discourage anything.

  • @JustinAZ
    @JustinAZ ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Damn Adam, I miss your energy, especially being poured into topics that matter. This may not have a TV budget, but I enjoy it more. Just you, a camera, and some facts (and supporting crew!). Keep at it!

  • @renatocorvaro6924
    @renatocorvaro6924 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    I live in Canada and I truly have no idea if this is also happening here, but given how much we tend to follow suit with America... I don't have high hopes.

    • @BalthusHomewood
      @BalthusHomewood ปีที่แล้ว

      If you have farms, then I can almost guarantee you've got child labor. 😕

  • @monsterlovesactivities783
    @monsterlovesactivities783 ปีที่แล้ว +89

    This is what a 3rd country looks like but in the wealthiest country on the planet. It's insane how evil this is.

    • @Emiliapocalypse
      @Emiliapocalypse ปีที่แล้ว +18

      Someone said America is a third world country in a Gucci belt, I believe it

    • @exosproudmamabear558
      @exosproudmamabear558 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@Emiliapocalypse There is nothing to be believed it is true. There is nothing better to describe what america is

  • @AnimeFreak40K
    @AnimeFreak40K ปีที่แล้ว +44

    Remember kids: nothing is more egregious, nor terrible or unequivocally toxic to a politician than a problem solved.

  • @kuno3336
    @kuno3336 ปีที่แล้ว +70

    Feels weird to say it, but this also feels like a byproduct of not taxing the wealthy/corporations. As long as we keep letting them keep all that wealth, they will keep finding more and more ways to cut corners to keep as much as possible while still maintaining production

  • @GhengisJohn
    @GhengisJohn ปีที่แล้ว +22

    I have a friend who has been moving more conservative over the years and it sometimes isn't enough anymore to point out that something is wrong or that people are suffering. But it is a really effective way to get him on side with any issue to find the way that it effects _him_ , spell that out very clearly and hammer on that directly. And I know he can't be alone in that way of thinking. I know you touched on it around the five minute mark, but I feel like it can't be said strongly or plainly enough how this is being done to undercut the labor market.

  • @captainnightwisp6925
    @captainnightwisp6925 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I remember going to a restaurant and being served by a kid that couldnt have been older than 10. That was possibly one of the most heart breaking things ive seen. This was in California.

  • @thisguy8106
    @thisguy8106 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    The most fkd up part is that everyone just believes that nothing can be done.

    • @rahcollier7006
      @rahcollier7006 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      We're too used to the expectation that one person will fix everything. That's what overwhelms us. That's what keeps us from trying.
      That's what kills movements in the cradle.

  • @karastover6218
    @karastover6218 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I remember when the child labor laws changed in Florida from 12-13. I started my first paid job at $5.15 an hr on my birthday at age 13 because I couldn’t bare working at the “Family owned business” any longer. That Plant Nursery hired a lot of illegal migrants and illegal migrant children. Atleast I went to school but had to work immediately after till 8pm. Everyone knew in the area from cops, to teachers, customers and other employees. They still to this day praise that monster “business owner” but since she couldn’t get illegal migrants anymore she moved onto children still in high school.
    I’m thankful I was able to work at 13 because I needed it to survive with extremely violent and abusive parents.
    The child labor laws with agricultural family businesses (it’s not just big corporations) to this day is sickening and the government departments in charge of protecting children failed and have been failing for decades.
    Adam, Thank you for covering this!

  • @ztsottles
    @ztsottles 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Companies are liable for any injury on the job for an adult, they should be liable for child negligence as well if they're guilty for child labor violations especially if that child was injured.

  • @allseason3400
    @allseason3400 ปีที่แล้ว +41

    TY for exposing this issue. Corporate slavery must end.

  • @czmAvery
    @czmAvery ปีที่แล้ว +171

    Adam ... I wanna fix it. What can we as non-leaders do, other than vote? We need to do more!

    • @joshuahere5097
      @joshuahere5097 ปีที่แล้ว +85

      Unionize

    • @RevShifty
      @RevShifty ปีที่แล้ว +65

      Don't give the businesses exploiting children any money. Spread the word. Advocate for unions on their behalf.

    • @whysocurious7366
      @whysocurious7366 ปีที่แล้ว +51

      Make friends, build community, organize your local government. If everyone changes their local governments, it will culminate in state/federal government changes.

    • @redkingrauri3769
      @redkingrauri3769 ปีที่แล้ว +46

      Find out what places are doing this, protest outside, draw attention to it, write all the legislators you can to draw attention to the exploitation (I mean use a physical letter, print it out and mail it so they have to see it and have everybody you know send a dozen) and be loud about the hypocrisy and people clearly paid off to turn a blind eye to this. Get it known that jail time must be a mandatory sentence and a fine must be proportionate to the company's value/revenue and be painful, not 2 month's pay for the maimed kid.

    • @tmmaster6904
      @tmmaster6904 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      coup

  • @FabulousKilljoy917
    @FabulousKilljoy917 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    My spouse is a teacher in an inner city school (in NJ), which has a very high immigrant population (a lot of times unaccompanied minor-type situations) and there’s kids working 12 hour overnights in PA and coming to school the next day or not showing up because obviously they’re exhausted. There’s also kids working Part-times at fast food places being bullied by their supervisors to skip out of school and go to work instead. We’re living in an absolutely devastatingly bleak time and it feels like we’re just screaming into the void and no one’s doing anything! It’s fucking disgusting!

    • @konstancemakjaveli
      @konstancemakjaveli ปีที่แล้ว

      Thats what happens when schools are for intoctrination and not educating of their civic rights. Those kids should sue, or file for CPS