Chocolate factory workers on a break, 1920s, Sweden.
Tyra Ahlin, Vanja Carlsson, Agda Ekstrand, Signe Holmberg, Elin Krantz, and Ester Wiberg.

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Chocolate factory workers on a break, 1920s, Sweden.
Tyra Ahlin, Vanja Carlsson, Agda Ekstrand, Signe Holmberg, Elin Krantz, and Ester Wiberg.

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This whole "we have to bring manufacturing back to the US" is aggravating to me because the manufacturing we DO have in the US is grueling with bare minimum safety requirements where they train you to withstand 111°F temperatures any way you can so that they don't have to install AC.
"bring the sweatshops back home!!!" that's what these bitches sound like
Oh, shy pisser taking up one of the two toilet stalls in the entire factory where I work, I know itās not your fault.
You should be able to pee privately without prolonging the pain I feel as I stare at your feet under the stall, noting how they face the toilet.
In this moment, I hate the role you play in my life: a sapient obstacle whose social discomfort means I must wait and feel my colon threatening to detonate within me. On a broader scale, though, I hate the owners of this facility, who pit us against each other rather than give us adequate bathroom facilities.
Guy on his phone standing in front of the only functioning sink, however, you deserve no clemency and I splashed you on purpose.
Beyond remittances: A rare insight into the everyday lives of migrant workers
Commemorating Labour History MonthĀ Social anthropologist Shankar Ramaswamiās āSouls in the Kalyugā is a rich, multi-layered text that provides a window into workersā lives in India, including some hopeful strands within the destructive churnings of global capitalism.Ā Sapan BookshelfSouls in the Kalyug: The Politics and Cosmologies of Migrant Workers in Contemporary India By Shankarā¦

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Forever going to be stuck in the mentality that working at a factory isnāt enough. That working 40 hour sometimes more weeks, at a good paying factory, with benefits, will never be enough.
Forever going to be stuck thinking that I didnāt go to college, so Iāll never equate to anything worthy enough of working a ārealā job.
If youāve ever worked a production line in a factory, youāll know about the consistency, and the experience of having the same shifts over and over, again. Itās repetitive, itās routine, it becomes clock work, in theory you could do it in your sleep. Itās physically demanding, thereās not a muscle not being worked. Itās hard on your hands, feet and back, but itās also so rewarding. To go home at the end of the shift, being able to feel the effort that was put in. Itās enough to live a happy, comfortable life. It just sucks that when someone asks what you do, and you say āIām a production worker or machine operator at a factoryā their face says it all. Because why do I feel ashamed that I work at a factory, that Iām beyond content working at a factory. That doesnāt seem right to me.
America First.
Reports of lung disease, skin conditions and even cancer are rising in Panipat, which recycles 1 million tonnes of textile waste a year