Anonymous ID: 772cf4 June 6, 2023, 8:57 p.m. No.18964762   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18964723

>In that case, don't you think men should have to pay an equality tax to make it FAIR for everyone?

typical backasswards logic, KAREN.

it's WOMEN who should have to pay an "equality tax" since it's men who shoulder the lion's share of the workload.

Anonymous ID: 772cf4 June 6, 2023, 9:10 p.m. No.18964808   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18964756

>Long story short, it's Mercury. Big pharma

mercury and it's compounds have been used as medicine since before recorded history. it's still used in Ayurvedic medicine, and is considered SAFE.

in the west, it was widely used long before there was a "big pharma" or an FDA.

the effect on the brain to which you refer is a specific COMPOUND of MERCURY, methyl mercury, which is a clear liquid.

IT is a devastatingly destructive compound and ridiculously dangerous to handle.

there is a case of a female chemist who accidentally got ONE DROP of it on the latex glove she was wearing in the lab.

she immediately removed the glove. although it never touched her unprotected skin, the tiny amt that penetrated the latex killed her.

the autopsy revealed that half of her brain was physically destroyed and shriveled.

the MERCURY COMPOUND in vaxxes is not good for humans, but only a tiny fraction of a percent of people suffer major damage.

when anyone says "mercury" as a blanket term to refer to elemental mercury as well as all compounds of mercury, they expose their illiteracy and stupidity.

Anonymous ID: 772cf4 June 6, 2023, 9:17 p.m. No.18964841   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4856

>>18964767

>Voodoo (the most vile practice in the Universe)

so… it's worse than burning witches at the stake or death by slow torture meted out by the spanish inquisition (all GOOD Christians)?

Anonymous ID: 772cf4 June 6, 2023, 9:21 p.m. No.18964868   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4884

MAN…. the fucking shills are getting more and more LAME by the day. it's not even fun sparring with them anymore.

it's so unsportsman-like to engage in a battle of wits with an OBVIOUSLY unarmed adversary.

Anonymous ID: 772cf4 June 6, 2023, 9:24 p.m. No.18964885   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4888

>>18964867

>My bones are made of calcium and magnesium not Carbon moran.

so… you're a robot, then. calcium and magnesium are METALS, fuckwit.

 

Bone is not uniformly solid, but consists of a flexible matrix (about 30%) and bound minerals (about 70%) which are intricately woven and endlessly remodeled by a group of specialized bone cells. Their unique composition and design allows bones to be relatively hard and strong, while remaining lightweight.

 

Bone matrix is 90 to 95% composed of elastic collagen fibers, also known as ossein,[6] and the remainder is ground substance.[7] The elasticity of collagen improves fracture resistance.[8] The matrix is hardened by the binding of inorganic mineral salt, calcium phosphate, in a chemical arrangement known as bone mineral, a form of calcium hydroxylapatite. It is the mineralization that gives bones rigidity.

 

Bone is actively constructed and remodeled throughout life by special bone cells known as osteoblasts and osteoclasts. Within any single bone, the tissue is woven into two main patterns, known as cortical and cancellous bone, each with a different appearance and characteristics.

Anonymous ID: 772cf4 June 6, 2023, 10:49 p.m. No.18965151   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5177 >>5265 >>5683

>>18964656

TY baker kitty

Get a job: After 100 years, states loosen child labor laws

 

a SURE sign the economy is healthy and the nation is on the right moral path… legalizing child labor exploitation of the poor…

 

Since America’s rise as a global industrial power, the nation’s use of child labor has only moved in one direction: less of it. Strict regulations and requirements around the jobs and hours minors can work have become the norm in a country where, a little more than a century ago, millions of children labored daily in fields and factories.

 

Led by state governments, a nation that saw children as necessary participants in the household economy shifted to a nation that saw children as valuable democratic citizens in need of education. And while child labor has never completely disappeared, it has diminished to a supplement of American childhood, not its defining feature.

 

But is that now beginning to change? For the first time in history, the United States is engaged in a nationwide discussion over relaxing rules around children’s work. States are again leading the way, with legislatures in red and blue states alike debating – and passing – laws expanding the hours and kinds of settings minors can work in. Similar bills have also been proposed in Congress.

 

An Arkansas law, passed in March, eliminated age verification and governmental permission requirements for employers hiring minors.

A New Jersey law, passed last year, extended the number of hours a minor can work per week to 50.

In Iowa, a law enacted earlier this year permits children age 14 and older to use non-power-driven tools, and to work in kitchens and have “momentary work” in freezers and meat coolers.

A Washington state law, passed in April, permits 18-year-olds to work in certain 21-and-older establishments, such as bars.

 

What does it mean to have a childhood? As both red and blue states loosen child labor laws, Americans are debating questions that last came up at the beginning of the 20th century.

 

While there is nothing to suggest children will be moving en masse from schools to factories and slaughterhouses, the current push to relax those regulations has historical echoes. Today is not the first time there’s been a moral panic over parents’ rights or a U.S. Supreme Court skeptical of regulations in general. What will happen next is unclear, but the historical record is informative as America wrestles with questions it hasn’t debated for over a century.

 

There was “a shift around, ‘what is childhood?’” in the early 1900s, says Beth English, executive director of the Organization of American Historians.

 

“It was, you have to be a participant in the household economy, and it shifted to, you have to be educated and able to participate in democracy,” she adds.

 

“We’re at [another] pivot point right now, and which way are we going to go?”

 

Citing a post-pandemic labor shortage and, in some cases, a desire to strengthen parents’ rights, the wave of legislation in recent years ranges from eliminating youth work permit and age verification requirements, to allowing minors to work longer hours during the school year, to allowing teenagers to serve alcohol. Some laws increase the penalties for violating child labor laws – typically a civil violation punished with fines – and indeed, the effort to relax child labor regulations comes as the Department of Labor has reported a significant increase in federal child labor violations in the past decade. The federal government is also investigating reports of widespread and unlawful use of unaccompanied migrant children in workplaces around the country.

Letter from Moscow: When war suddenly explodes over your roof

 

Critics say the trend reflects a desire to hire more low-wage workers, at the short-term risk of children’s health and safety and the long-term risk of poorer educational outcomes. There’s a reason child labor regulations haven’t been touched in over a century, they argue, and it’s because they work.

 

https://www.csmonitor.com/Business/2023/0606/Get-a-job-After-100-years-states-loosen-child-labor-laws