Josie (6 years old), Bertha (6 years old) and Sophie (10 years old) worked regularly at the Maggioni Canning Company. Work began at 4 AM and the three would make from $9 to $15 a week. Sophie would do six pots of oyster a day and her mother who also worked with her said "She don't go to school. Works all the time."

Through such photos, Lewis Hine documented the harsh working conditions borne by thousands of children, who were sent to work soon after they could walk, and were paid based on how many buckets of oysters they shucked daily.

He covered around 50,000 miles a year, photographing children from Chicago to Florida working in coal mines and factories.

These photos helped to raise an outcry against child labor and made the American public become widely aware of the scope of the problem. This resulted in the establishment of organizations such as the National Child Labor Committee, in 1904, which led the fight against child labor.

@SrRochardBunson
And don't forget there are Republicans TODAY who think "Child Labor" should be made legal again, actually arguing "it BENEFITS poor families having that extra income."

Of course, none of them considers for a microsecond how "not being in school" or "lower grades b/c a child is too tired to learn" condemns these same families into a cycle of poverty. 🤬

@MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson

So many Republican policies can be seen through the lens of deliberate immiseration.

Keeping the poor as poor.
Thwarting social mobility.
Keeping people in their place.
Social stratification.
Class hierarchies.
Gender & racial isolationism.
Religious control.

Eroding the institutions that made the American middle class.
Homes. Public Education. College. Steady jobs. Living wages. Unions. Literacy. Public health. Libraries. Functional government. Voting.

@MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson

Oil industry billionaires are funding Republicans to conduct hostage negotiations over the debt ceiling.

The same billionaires frying the planet.

https://www.salon.com/2023/05/20/mccarthy-pushes-us-to-brink-of-default-to-appease-energy-donors--but-biden-has-an-ace-up-his-sleeve/

McCarthy pushes US to brink of default to appease energy donors — but Biden has an ace up his sleeve

GOP threatens unconstitutional and catastrophic move if Biden refuses to cave to McCarthy's Big Oil blackmail.

Salon.com

@Npars01 @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson Because they think they'll have air conditioning after the apocalypse.

No, really.

Their brains are so fried by money, they think they will remain rich even if civilization collapses. If they ever understood that civilization is what makes them rich, that understanding is long gone. They believe they'll still own stuff when the fallout settles.

It's like thinking gravity doesn't apply to you because you have a private plane.

@jwcph @Npars01 @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson

My apologies, but you are thinking locally. They are global and can go anywhere. Their actions suggest they've already spent a tiny fraction of their wealth to ensure they can live out their lives - perhaps another 30 years - in comfort and power. After that, they really don't care what happens.

@Frances_Larina @Npars01 @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson Oh, absolutely - I'm just saying that even if their actions drive the ENTIRE GLOBAL CIVILIZATION towards destruction WITHIN THEIR LIFETIME, they STILL think they'll come out on top. That's how deluded they are.

@jwcph @Npars01 @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson

I don't disagree, I just thing perhaps they have a different definition of, "come out on top".

@Frances_Larina @Npars01 @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson Perhaps so, but in a post-apocalyptic world, *nobody* "comes out on top" - not them, not anybody. Because there's nothing to be on top of.

@jwcph @Npars01 @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson

In a true post-apocalyptic world, they'll already be dead. They're like narcissists that way.

@Frances_Larina @Npars01 @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson Well, they do build these luxury shelters, so maybe they'll survive whatever downfall of civilization they themselves caused - the delusion is that when they emerge from those shelters, they will still be in charge.

@jwcph @Npars01 @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson

I think that perhaps, for some of them, being protected, self sufficient, part of a self-built culture and knowing they have it better than 99.999% of humanity will be very emotionally satisfying.

@Frances_Larina @Npars01 @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson - but that's just it; they're *not* self-sufficient, their culture is *not* self-built, and when civilization ends, everybody else who survived will be coming for their resources, which they can't protect because they can't exert power over anyone anymore.

@jwcph @Frances_Larina @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson

Republican billionaires need to read up on the history of the Roman Empire, especially about emperors & the Praetorian Guard.

Slave societies create groups of disengaged people who idly watch as the Visigoths sack estates on their way to pillage Rome.

Or more recently, Indira Gandhi & her security detail...

@Npars01 @jwcph @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson @Frances_Larina The #rulingclasses are buying up land in NZ & private islands. They may last a long time unless…

@marcibadwolf303 @jwcph @MugsysRapSheet @SrRochardBunson @Frances_Larina

Do you think an elderly white man, unused to manual labor, like Koch, Murdoch, or Barre Seid are equipped for total self-reliance?

Growing food, building & maintaining a home, & providing sophisticated medical care isn't feasible long term.

Most island societies become deforested quickly & become barren outcrops like Easter Island.

A constant resupply of fresh water, fuel, & food is necessary for even short stays.

@SrRochardBunson @Frances_Larina @jwcph @MugsysRapSheet @Npars01 Excellent point. I don’t expect Koch or Murdoch to do physical labor at all they’ll have laborers. Nor be cutting trees for fuel. We’re talking about billionaires who may hate green energy for us but are already using it themselves. The superrich super elderly may not live to go into their luxury bunkers. Their families? Who knows?

@marcibadwolf303 @SrRochardBunson @Frances_Larina @jwcph @MugsysRapSheet

Republican billionaire donors plan on having slaves to do the heavy lifting.

DeSantis's 1st book Dreams From Founding Father's whitewashes slavery & misrepresents the founders

Memory holing of slavery by the wealthy is deliberate & ominous

Gillian Brockell did an analysis on how this book was made to vanish from even the publisher's catalog. Her article is a must-read

https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2023/05/21/ron-desantis-book-founding-fathers/

https://www.msnbc.com/the-reidout/watch/desantis-book-dreams-from-our-founding-fathers-first-principles-in-the-age-of-obama-discussed-by-washington-post-s-history-blog-staff-writer-gillian-brockell-176246853816

Ron DeSantis’s context-free history book vanished online. We got a copy.

Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has attacked history lessons in Florida, dismisses slavery in his 2011 book as a “personal flaw” of the Founding Fathers.

The Washington Post
@Npars01 @marcibadwolf303 @SrRochardBunson @Frances_Larina @jwcph @MugsysRapSheet this person. This DeSantis will not be in the Oval. The winner will be the 1 who realises they have to be President of the whole USA. Not just the people that agree with them. Yes, he deserves every ounce of the best disinfectant. But he will not win anything. He is not who he believes he is. He's worse than we think he is though. That's why I applaud you.
@thecharmingcompany @Npars01 @marcibadwolf303 @SrRochardBunson @Frances_Larina @jwcph @MugsysRapSheet I suspect a lot of people said that about Trump, though, unfortunately.
@evilmicrowizard @Npars01 @marcibadwolf303 @SrRochardBunson @Frances_Larina @jwcph @MugsysRapSheet Actually it was my unfortunate experience to listen to conversations that pointed at Trump even during the 2012 race. Romney looked as though he was allowed to run as a sign of their "ahem" respect for him. Despite the forecasting that put his odds in Black Swan range, I witnessed analysts call his win as easy as the week before Election Day. Odds against that are that extreme are too often wrong. De Santis doesn't have the same pitch of extremism. Yet, I guess, is possible.

@thecharmingcompany @evilmicrowizard @Npars01 @marcibadwolf303 @SrRochardBunson @jwcph @MugsysRapSheet

"De Santis doesn't have the same pitch of extremism."

Have you seen what he's done to Florida? That's his pitch. He's selling the same thing as Trump, - the promise of granting power over others based on bigotry - but currently with the power to show he can make it happen. Trump has no current power, only potential. I think that makes a difference to a crowd willing to follow the leader perceived as most powerful that aligns with their values.

@Frances_Larina @evilmicrowizard @Npars01 @marcibadwolf303 @SrRochardBunson @jwcph @MugsysRapSheet While I see and understand your point he could be much worse. I went to high school in Reagan's Florida. I have lived in part, in Thatcher's Britain. What I see in De Santos is someone who would fall short of being extreme enough to take power. He isn't Braverman. He isn't Orban. Or Le Pen. I've just left Europe after 16 years. That's what I believe we are dealing with. A GOP staring at an electoral map where they have taken power. Inserting the candidate at their Convention. The 1 willing to know the power was taken.