There's more than one way to make affordable tools. Taiwan makes them by employing state-of-the-art manufacturing technology.Theres a reason cheap tools are cheap!
I'm not sure if you intended it this way, but dismissing peoples' problems because their lives are merely a constant struggle rather than a waking nightmare is a bad take.By no means am I any sort of "bleeding heart", but you've really touched on something here. The majority of Americans have absolutely ZERO sense of what real poverty is. I haven't been there/seen that as you have, but I did learn a valuable lesson about this when I was a kid from my dad. He grew up during the Great Depression and often told me that his family and most families he knew were so poor, they had no idea that there was any "Depression". It was just life as usual for the area I came from. He was in the US Navy during and after WWII in the Pacific. Though he had many related tales, the one story that always stood out to me was the time his ship took a load of rice to some Chinese port to drop off for the locals. He literally witnessed starving people whose country had been devastated by years of Japanese occupation, with chopsticks underneath the pier picking up individual grains of rice that had slipped through the cracks in the wood and fallen on the rocks below. Not scoops full, not hands full...individual grains. That is real poverty, and sadly there is no shortage of it around various parts the world.
I guarantee they gave them those clothes for the video.I’m amazed. I can’t walk past a big battery like that without it eating pinholes in my pants or shirt. I don’t know how his clothes don’t look like they’ve been hit with a dozen shotgun blasts.
For 6 months. Then they get sick and die.So … a general comment on the **** workers in the videos. They seem to take pride in their product. And i bet they show up every day, on time.
I remember reading that book in high school.Much of started (in the US at least) after publication of The Jungle 1910 or thereabouts.
Important read..was part of my public school curriculum in the 80's. Wonder if it is now.
Much of started (in the US at least) after publication of The Jungle 1910 or thereabouts.
Important read..was part of my public school curriculum in the 80's. Wonder if it is now.
I had AP history in high school around 2005 and I remember learning about The Jungle and what happened afterwards. I'm assuming it's still taught in school but maybe not.
I remember reading that book in high school.![]()
Of course they do, if they dont they starve. No welfare checks there.So … a general comment on the **** workers in the videos. They seem to take pride in their product. And i bet they show up every day, on time.
No, neither I nor main client want cheap competitionBooger … can you post a picture of the product?