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13 votes
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The bewildering architecture of skybridges
4 votes -
US requires airline lavatories to be more accessible for wheelchair users
42 votes -
How the ultrawealthy use private foundations to bank millions in tax deductions while giving the public little in return
37 votes -
The ESRB wants to start using facial recognition to check people's ages
44 votes -
US workers are dying in heat wave but Joe Biden administration is still working on federal standards for working in extreme heat
29 votes -
New US merger guidelines released this week - 60-day window for public comment
17 votes -
Cleveland: New city policy would eliminate mandatory parking near transit corridors
12 votes -
Parking laws are strangling America
49 votes -
Google is directing searchers straight to troves of nonconsensual deep fake porn, raising legal and ethical concerns
18 votes -
Amazon seeks to evade EU regulations by claiming it isn't a Very Large Online Platform
29 votes -
Meta's social media platforms will be temporarily barred from behavioral advertising in Norway after a ruling from the Norwegian Data Protection Authority
13 votes -
Diplomats missed a key deadline while negotiating rules for deep sea mining, allowing companies to apply for permits before rules go into effect
9 votes -
Why has Threads, Meta’s answer to Twitter, not launched in the EU?
33 votes -
The environmental disaster lurking beneath your neighborhood gas station
19 votes -
The questionable engineering of the Oceangate Titan submersible
51 votes -
Report - The increasing return of legal child labor to the US economy
Child labor is making a comeback with a vengeance. A striking number of lawmakers are undertaking concerted efforts to weaken or repeal statutes that have long prevented (or at least seriously...
Child labor is making a comeback with a vengeance. A striking number of lawmakers are undertaking concerted efforts to weaken or repeal statutes that have long prevented (or at least seriously inhibited) the possibility of exploiting children.
Take a breath and consider this: the number of kids at work in the U.S. increased by 37% between 2015 and 2022. During the last two years, 14 states have either introduced or enacted legislation rolling back regulations that governed the number of hours children can be employed, lowered the restrictions on dangerous work, and legalized subminimum wages for youths.
Iowa now allows those as young as 14 to work in industrial laundries. At age 16, they can take jobs in roofing, construction, excavation, and demolition and can operate power-driven machinery. Fourteen-year-olds can now even work night shifts and once they hit 15 can join assembly lines. All of this was, of course, prohibited not so long ago.
Legislators offer fatuous justifications for such incursions into long-settled practice. Working, they tell us, will get kids off their computers or video games or away from the TV. Or it will strip the government of the power to dictate what children can and can’t do, leaving parents in control — a claim already transformed into fantasy by efforts to strip away protective legislation and permit 14-year-old kids to work without formal parental permission.
In 2014, the Cato Institute, a right-wing think tank, published “A Case Against Child Labor Prohibitions,” arguing that such laws stifled opportunity for poor — and especially Black — children. The Foundation for Government Accountability, a think tank funded by a range of wealthy conservative donors including the DeVos family, has spearheaded efforts to weaken child-labor laws, and Americans for Prosperity, the billionaire Koch brothers’ foundation, has joined in.
Here is a Robert Frost poem related to the subject of the article. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/53087/out-out
I'm GenX and I worked as a teen, but my earliest jobs were babysitting, not industrial labor.
54 votes -
How we could stumble into AI catastrophe
12 votes -
GM food: EU rethinks rules on genetically modified crops
9 votes -
Iowa joins dozens of other US states in legalizing sales of raw milk
57 votes -
America's first law regulating AI bias in hiring takes effect this week
13 votes -
You may soon have to pay more to drive that SUV in New York
37 votes -
Big Meat just can’t quit antibiotics
22 votes -
Google risks forced breakup of ad business as EU alleges shocking misconduct
16 votes -
Europeans take a major step toward regulating AI
19 votes -
Denmark aims to raise the age limit for the collection of personal data from children by tech giants
27 votes -
Australian governments impose recycling rules after the packaging industry fails on waste
7 votes -
SEC sues Coinbase over exchange and staking programs, stock drops 12%
6 votes -
We’re about to kill a massive, accidental experiment in reducing global warming (2018)
15 votes -
Electric cars prove we need to rethink brake lights
9 votes -
Facebook owner Meta hit with record €1.2bn fine over EU-US data transfers
22 votes -
Norway's $1.4tn wealth fund calls for state regulation of AI – Nicolai Tangen says fund will set guidelines for companies it invests in on ethical use of AI
4 votes -
CFTC is suing Binance, CEO Changpeng Zhao
4 votes -
Child labor laws are under attack in states across the country
9 votes -
Sacramento recycle center shutters, blames California agency for ‘irate’ customers
8 votes -
Car safety and fuel efficiency improvements aren't driving up the cost of cars
4 votes -
Money laundering and AML compliance
5 votes -
SolarWinds and market incentives
8 votes -
US FDA moves to ease rules for blood donations from men who have sex with men
7 votes -
European Parliament votes to take action against loot boxes, gaming addiction, gold farming and more
8 votes -
eBikes face safety hurdles
7 votes -
Safe deposit boxes aren’t safe
8 votes -
The predatory US prison phone call industry is finally about to be fixed
15 votes -
Norwegian Jehovah's Witnesses no longer registered as religious community – due to exclusionary practices when someone breaks religious rules
7 votes -
The best Lao Gan Ma that you (probably) can't buy is a beef and douchi Lao Gan Ma. Here's how to make it at home.
7 votes -
As e-bike fires rise, calls grow for education and regulation
10 votes -
We look into the implications of a bill that could classify loot boxes as gambling, and what it could mean for the Finnish games industry
4 votes -
Valve's gambling problem
13 votes -
How the FCC shields US cellphone companies from safety concerns
6 votes -
Are billionaires a market failure? And if not market, are they social failure?
I was reading this text from the Washington Post (sorry for the maybe paywall): https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/10/06/xi-jinping-crackdown-china-economy-change/ The opinion asserts...
I was reading this text from the Washington Post (sorry for the maybe paywall):
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/10/06/xi-jinping-crackdown-china-economy-change/
The opinion asserts that in response to liberalization of Chinese life, driven by capitalistic economic growth, is the reason that Xi Pinjing "cracked down in every sphere imaginable — attacking the private sector, humiliating billionaires, reviving Communist ideology, purging the party of corrupt officials and ramping up nationalism (mostly anti-Western) in both word and deed."
My conspiratorial brain latched on to the humiliating billionaires line, and started thinking about a between the lines message along the lines that billionaires are good and should not be humiliated, a subtle warning-response to the progressive grumblings here in the U.S. that a failure to support capitalism will result in totalitarianism.
Then I started thinking about the questions, are billionaires good for society? I had always held the position that a billionaire is a market failure (in my econ 101 understanding of the term), much like pollution. It is improper hoarding and unfair leveraging of capital into disproportionate and un-earned degree of pesonal privilege.
It is certainly a by-product of euro-american capitalism, whereby the desires and welfare of the many are trodden on by those with the ability to fight and to shape the regulatory machine meant to protect the interests of the common-wealth.
I see a few possibilities. One, is that my understanding of economics is wrong, and producing as many billionaires as possible is the ultimate goal of capitalism and in fact good for everyone, even in theory.
Two, it is indeed as I suspect, a market failure. And the failure here is one of degree, it is not, in fact problematic to have some individuals with significantly greater wealth among us, and is, in fact, beneficial overall, but to have some with so much more than the rest of us (wealth inequaility) is a result of getting in the way of a clean functioning marketplace.
Three, economic theory is working as described, and economic theory/activity is an insufficient foundation for the maintenance and success of a whole society, and we need to find a way to constrain it to its own sphere, so that it provides us with what we need to be healthy and happy, but no more.
I turn to the bright minds of tildes: am I looking at this right?
16 votes