I imagine it's a subjective thing.
Most teachers, social workers, and nurses are women, and those jobs are full of challenges and interest.
Many women run small businesses.
I think plenty of men also work in boring jobs, such as in factories with conveyor belts, fruit picking, monitoring the quality of ball bearings, etc.
I'd have to see the statistcs from around the world to get an accurate sense of what the reality is.
With the prospect of robots and AI taking over all repetitive work within our current lifetimes, I wonder how humans will find work and meaning in their lives.
Most teachers, social workers, and nurses are women, and those jobs are full of challenges and interest.
Many women run small businesses.
I think plenty of men also work in boring jobs, such as in factories with conveyor belts, fruit picking, monitoring the quality of ball bearings, etc.
I'd have to see the statistcs from around the world to get an accurate sense of what the reality is.
With the prospect of robots and AI taking over all repetitive work within our current lifetimes, I wonder how humans will find work and meaning in their lives.
rinkydinkydoink · M
KingofBones1 · 46-50, M
Yeah in India and Mexico or illegal Chinese sweatshops
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KingofBones1 · 46-50, M
@rinkydinkydoink well if we wanted to quote the past I could go back and talk about the time where the Egyptians had slaves the British had slaves even the Incan Empire and Mayans had slaves if you want to start throwing that word around we can do it all throughout history give it the Greeks or the Romans
rinkydinkydoink · M
@KingofBones1
You want a fight - that's clear. Google "do sweat shops exist in the U.S." and read what you get.
Workers are exploited ALL over the world, buddy. Always have been and always will be.
You want a fight - that's clear. Google "do sweat shops exist in the U.S." and read what you get.
Workers are exploited ALL over the world, buddy. Always have been and always will be.
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