Mother Jones published an alarming report about the revival of child labor, based on the work of the Food and Environment Reporting Network. Promoted by Republican governors despite federal law, child labor has become increasingly dangerous. Children are hired to replace adult immigrants and to keep costs low.
If you’ve eaten a burger and fries recently, there’s a chance that the potatoes were picked by middle schoolers, working through the school day in a field in Idaho. The steer that became the beef patty may well have been killed at a slaughterhouse where teenagers work, and the bone saws used to process the meat could easily have been cleaned by a 13-year-old, wearing a bulky hard hat and oversized gloves. It’s also quite possible that the burger was grilled, flipped and assembled by a child working at McDonald’s on a school night, far later than federal law allows.
This sort of child labor—culled from thousands of examples in U.S. Department of Labor investigations—has been mostly illegal in the U.S. since the 1930s, but that hasn’t stopped a surprising number of companies from engaging in it. In February, the department announced that the nation is experiencing a sharp rise in child labor violations across all industries; since 2018, the agency has documented a 69-percent increase in children who were employed illegally.
A FERN analysis of investigation data released by the Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division (WHD)—which is tasked with enforcing federal child labor laws—found that more than 75 percent of recent violations were committed by employers in the food industry. The agency uncovered more than 12,000 child labor violations in the nation’s food system—out of 16,000 total violations across all industries—between Jan. 1, 2018 and Nov. 23, 2022, the most recent date for which data were publicly available. Investigators found minors working illegally at vegetable farms in Texas and Florida, at dairy farms in Minnesota and New Hampshire and at poultry plants in Alabama and Mississippi. Children are involved in every step of the food supply chain, working illegally from farm to table…
Supermarkets and other food and beverage stores were well represented, too, responsible for 7.7 percent of the violations. In one particularly egregious example, from 2021, a 16-year-old supermarket worker in Clarksburg, Tennessee, was tasked with cleaning out a meat grinder, even though federal law prohibits employers from having minors clean or operate them. As the boy reached into the machine, the grinder switched on and ripped off half of his arm.
Who could have imagined that states and employers today would be rolling back protections for children enacted in the 1930s?

It’s worth noting that child labor is often used in the foreign countries we rely on for our cheap goods. Nestle and other chocolate makers, for instance, have routinely been caught knowingly using beans harvested and processed by child laborers (among many other atrocities by Nestle – a truly evil company). Lithium used in EV batteries is also often mined by children. Neither party seems to care much.
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That’s what happens when unions are weakened and the political party purported to represent them fails to do so.
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Nothing will improve in this country when both parties are more afraid of alienating their wealthy donors instead of doing what the public wants. Unless we have stricter campaign finance laws, the needs of people will take a backseat to the will of the wealthy.
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It is not hard to imagine children working in factories, fast food joints, etc. No hard at all. Until the general public really starts standing up to make these illegal actions impossible then nothing will change and only get worse. Until Mothers and Fathers are paid are reasonable wage so they can support their families without their children going to work then nothing will change. Until companies and corporations decided that the welfare, health, and education of children is more important that their profit and loss statements nothing is going to change. Only get worse. Legislators are not going to do a damn thing about child labor until the rest of the adult population does something to make them make the necessary laws. Also, until the police and the courts do their jobs to uphold the laws already on the books then nothing is going to change. Just get worse.
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We desperately need a universal minimal livable wage based on COLI.
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Yes, Bob, a minimal living wage would go a long way to help solve the problem but as you know companies and corporates always can find a way around this solution. In forcing the laws on the books and hold companies/corporate accountable for failure to follow the laws will, I believe, do more good. Hold the leadership of this outfits accountable with jail time and hefty fines could help. Walmart and corporates like them have all kinds of tricks for getting around paying people a living wage.
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Another poverty pipeline. Forced to abandon an education that could help them escape poverty to work poverty slave-wage jobs with little or no benefits just to survive on the edges.
My older brother was funneled into the school to prison pipeline and ended up working slave wage jobs.
I, on the other hand, escaped the poverty by joining the Marines out of high school.
That’s the short story. My older sister married her way out of poverty. Her husband a long haul, coast to coast trucker.
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At the age of nine, I ran a little bicycle repair operation for neighborhood kids. I also mowed lawns and had two paper routes. After I finished those, I would go to a local barber shop and shine shoes until 9:00, when the proprietor of the shop would take me home. When I was 14, my mother lied on a worker’s permit application to say that I was 16 (if I remember correctly), and I went to work full time as a carhop. By the age of 16, I was the night manager of this fast-food restaurant with car hops.
I do not recommend any of this except, perhaps, the bike repair.
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I thought it really criminal when comic books went from 10 cents to twelve. Those rats!
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This, along with the Walmart/ big-box store post and Goyal’s new book, are all tell-tales that we live in an increasingly poor society.
I remember thinking, back in the 70’s– when legal betting [off-track, casinos, big$ lotteries] began proliferating in the Northeast– oh my god we’re getting more like Mexico (where I’d spent an eye-opening summer in late ‘60s for Spanish immersion).
Big box stores arrived next; I remembered thinking OMG we’re going to be like USSR.
Reality shows were next: “Lives of the Rich and Famous” promoted idolatry of the dollar, and the ‘you too can become a big star’ type shows especially reflect the lottery mentality.
One sees that every day today, reading posts by “JQPublic-conservative” on article comment threads: apologias/ justifications for the gross riches of some, compared to everyone else; no awareness of contribution of govt creating billionaires via Reagan ‘trickle-up’ policies. They just want to coddle themselves with the thought that “free market,” “American freedom” or whatever noodle-headed concept means any joe blow might stumble into fabulous riches cuz, “opportunity” and “hard work.” 🙄
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