Child Labor And Tobacco Farming

Log in

SmokingPipes.com Updates

24 Fresh Barling Pipes
12 Fresh Dunhill Pipes
48 Fresh AKB Meerschaum Pipes
18 Fresh Rossi Pipes
156 Fresh Peterson Pipes

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

Drucquers Banner

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

Status
Not open for further replies.

scloyd

Lifer
May 23, 2018
5,953
12,082
I listen to a lot of talk radio when I'm driving. Today I heard a story/interview about children getting nicotine poisoning while working on tobacco farms. I'm not a farmer, never have been, never will be and I don't know the first thing about tobacco farming. I thought others might want to read or listen to the program. You can listen to the 11 minute story by clicking the red play button.
http://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2018/07/12/child-labor-tobacco-farming
What are your thoughts?

 

aldecaker

Lifer
Feb 13, 2015
4,407
42
Whew, I haven't cut a rug like that in quite a while! I'm exhausted after all that dancing around the subject of illegal aliens. It must be tough, having to reconcile in your head that it's okay to have an unregulated, underground economy on one hand, and desperately wanting some regulations to apply to the participants of it on the other hand! :rofl:
EDIT: To clarify a bit, I just see much irony in the hand-wringers crying, "We can't enforce the law on these people! They're just trying to make a better life for themselves!" at the same time that they're crying, "We need to enforce the law to protect these poor people!".

 

tbradsim1

Lifer
Jan 14, 2012
9,100
11,058
Southwest Louisiana
This may not be a good example, few years back, I met a Walmart greeter going out she checked my purchase and receipt, we started a conversation she was in her late 60s, said she was from Kentucky, worked in her Dads Tobbaco farm, her job was gradeing the leaves as to Quality, then it was striped from the stalk which she did also, her health looked glowing, I told her about my farm work, and she told me they came to Louisiana after Tobbaco season and worked in the rice fields, also picked watermelons. If she was poisoned, nicotine,or otherwise she did a good job of hideing it. We got a nation of crybabies, blameing everybody and anything to get attention or money. :puffy:

 

lawmax3

Can't Leave
Jan 18, 2013
405
12
Oh good grief! As a teenager, I have planted, hoed, suckered, topped, cut and put tons of tobacco in the barn.

If you don't use common sense and wear enough clothes to keep the tar off of your skin it can make you sick.

Hard work won't kill ya'.

 

olkofri

Lifer
Sep 9, 2017
8,048
14,666
The Arm of Orion
Well, whatever helps their anti-tobacco jihad. :crazy:
Same ol' appeal to emotion fallacy: if you smoke, you're killing the children, one way or another. Quit NOW!!

 

warren

Lifer
Sep 13, 2013
11,722
16,314
Foothills of the Chugach Range, AK
Hard work won't kill ya'.
Of course it can. That's why, up here, we refer to a big snow dump as a "widow maker."
Sorry! Most everyone knows I detest unsupportable generalities or clichés. Back to the, surprisingly, slow to develop "train wreck."
I'll leave
We got a nation of crybabies
for later if the thread survives. I won't mention the kids in various hot spots around the world, volunteers all, getting blown and shot up. I guess I will. This isn't a nation of any one type, we got heroes, bums, successes, failures and probably no more than our fair share of any particular type.

 

lawmax3

Can't Leave
Jan 18, 2013
405
12
Warren Haha, no need to be sorry, but everyone knows its the heat stroke or heart defect etc. that kills ya' not the work!!! :nana:

 

Chasing Embers

Captain of the Black Frigate
Nov 12, 2014
43,431
109,327
That's like saying it's not the bullet that kills you, it's the bleeding out afterwards.

 

warren

Lifer
Sep 13, 2013
11,722
16,314
Foothills of the Chugach Range, AK
Yup! That tiny pinhole in the heart, a clot floating around, a thin wall in a vessel to the brain, all undetected and unknown, triggered by over exertion. Without the hard work the defect probably would never be a problem or even detected.

 

prairiedruid

Lifer
Jun 30, 2015
2,005
1,135
I was driving tractor and the stick shift pick up truck when I was 12. Work had to be done and if I expected to eat dinner I was expected to help out. No tobacco farming but I picked rock, detassled corn, and there always was firewood to haul, split, and stack. Also got to do a lot of fishing, work and play were balanced. Welcome to rural life and the lessons I learned as a kid served me well as an adult. Do that nowadays and some social worker would be screaming bloody murder.

 

pitchfork

Lifer
May 25, 2012
4,030
606
My mom and her siblings primed tobacco in the summer when they were kids. So did my first cousin. So did lots of kids...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ijp13lk7zG0

 

lawmax3

Can't Leave
Jan 18, 2013
405
12
Good memories.

I would sure hate to have to put in a days work in the tobacco patch now!

 

lazar

Can't Leave
May 5, 2015
445
3
Yeah, I hate it when children whine about getting sick from the manual labor they're forced into! What a bunch of crybabies! And to hell with any regulations that might protect them - that's for the snowflake bleeding heart liberals! Tobacco sickness was good enough me, it's damn well good enough for kids.

 
Status
Not open for further replies.