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exothermic , in Texas worker accused of being on drugs was actually dying of heatstroke

A million dollars is hardly enough. The lawsuit should be for the dollar amount of his lifetime worth of gainful employment. Anything less is despicable and wrong.

Master ,
@Master@sh.itjust.works avatar

and then times it by 10. If it bankrupts the company so be it.

I work in construction. We have a re-roof job running right now. They go through almost a pallet of water every day and are required to have x amount of rest in shade. When it got to hot the hours were moved to night till mid day to protect them from the heat.

If they suspected him of being on drugs they should have pulled him from the job site immediately once symptoms were showing. Anything less is a danger to the employee as well as everyone else on the site.

What this company did was illegal, morally wrong and down right evil.

JackbyDev ,

Yeah, as if being on drugs means they don’t need help and should return to work. Insane.

MajorHavoc ,

When a corporation kills a human, we should dissolve it, sell it’s assets, and turn the money raised over to the victim’s next of kin.

We can see how long it takes for stockholders to vote in favor of safety regulations after we do that a few times.

LEDZeppelin , in Alabama GOP refuses to draw second Black district, despite Supreme Court order

How’s that gutting of Voting Rights Act going, eh SCOTUS?

admiralteal ,

Surely the answer is "exactly as intended"?

Blamemeta , in Texas worker accused of being on drugs was actually dying of heatstroke

Problem is, heatstroke looks like drugs to idiots, and Ive never met one who wasn’t an idiot.

stown ,
@stown@sedd.it avatar

Never met what that wasn’t an idiot? People?

Blamemeta ,

Bosses, managers, especially in the construction industry.

peopleproblems , in Alabama GOP refuses to draw second Black district, despite Supreme Court order

I imagine the house GOP is thinking “What are you going to do about it.”

guess we’re at the fuck around and find out stage

gravitas_deficiency ,

The thing is, there’s nothing to find out. The SC (compromised as it is) says “no, you can’t do that”. The state government is saying “cool bro imma do it anyways”. If the feds impose a new map, what happens if the state just ignores it outright? Or any other measures intended to enforce this decision?

joyjoy ,

What are they gonna go, send in the military?

GeekFTW ,
@GeekFTW@kbin.social avatar

Me, a Canadian enjoying the current season of 'America™': Please???

smokinjoe ,
@smokinjoe@kbin.social avatar

Shit dude, I'm a US citizen and want to see that as well.

gravitas_deficiency ,

The funniest part of it is that this 100% has the potential to set up some sort of precedent for when the shoe is on the other foot. Like, if the Supreme Court orders CA to do something extremely shitty or anti-democratic, what happens if Newsom (or whoever is governor at that point) and the CA legislature just says “make me”?

Hogger85b ,

Does it ever though it always seems rep do what they want, Dems don't do shit

gravitas_deficiency ,

Dems don’t ever do shit when there’s no precedent.

But when the door’s already open, it’s easier to walk through it.

peopleproblems ,

California has a history of “make me.”

Economically, California is (at least was, I don’t know if it still is) capable of sustaining itself separated from federal money. It even has the power to set national standards, like the “known to cause cancer” warning. Which may seem like it’s slapped on everything, but from what I remember, its slapped on everything containing any carcinogens, covering products even after their lifespan into disposal (if you burn a product but it doesn’t destroy the carcinogen it’s still a risk since it’s airborne or in waste.)

Alabama is just completely fucked if they get cutoff from federal money.

gravitas_deficiency ,

I did a road trip from Los Angeles to Florida about a decade ago to help my college roommate move for med school. I recall seeing multiple billboards driving through gulf coast states saying things like

  • State funding: 10M
  • Federal funding: 65M

And some of the states didn’t even have the “state funding” part.

I really would enjoy seeing these states find out what happens when you fuck around with the people who are buttering your bread.

Neato ,
@Neato@kbin.social avatar

It's Alabama. They're already there.

effingjoe ,
@effingjoe@kbin.social avatar

You're right, there's not much the federal government can do to force this directly, but indirectly, they can decide where federal funding goes. and Alabama gets 41.2% of it's state revenue from federal funding.

gravitas_deficiency ,

Which is why I actually find this low-key hilarious, because if this is somehow left to stand, it implies that states who are net providers (I.e. most blue states) can simply ignore the SC.

Strategic thinking is not the GOP’s strong suit.

Neato ,
@Neato@kbin.social avatar

The executive branch is the only branch with significant enforcement capabilities. If the branches revolt it will be a quick coup.

BaroqueInMind ,
@BaroqueInMind@kbin.social avatar

It's almost like there's something something checks and balances

dhork ,

Well, there are options aside from sending in troops. The article notes that there can still be challenges to these maps, and one outcome is that the court throws out the legislatures maps entirely and hires a special master.

Maybe they should hire the one they used in NY. He was so effective at making competitive districts and avoiding gerrymandering that the Democrats lost 4 House seats there, making up most of the Republican Majority this Congress. If your goal is to level the playing field, he’s your man.

HeyThisIsntTheYMCA ,
@HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world avatar

Well, there are options aside from sending in troops

Yeah, but we could have so much

fleabomber ,

I don’t think folks are recognizing the amount of FAFO going on.

MONKEYHOG , in Miami woman, 18, arrested after allegedly trying to hire hitman to kill her 3-year-old son, police say

And why do you need a hit man to kill a 3 year old anyway? They’re easy to kill. This is just laziness.

GillyGumbo ,

Fuckin zoomer work ethic.

Widowmaker_Best_Girl ,

Fucking lazy zoomers. Why, back when I was their age I had already killed at least 7 or 8 three year olds!

keeb420 ,

Free Hat!

Jikiya ,

It was self defense.

JoumanaKayrouz ,
@JoumanaKayrouz@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve killed SO MANY 3 year olds and the fact that kids these days are hiring it out is so pathetic.

rustyfish ,
@rustyfish@lemmy.world avatar
cuddlesaftersex ,
null ,

Is there a c/jesuschristlemmy yet?

Izzent , in Jaguars associate strength coach Kevin Maxen comes out as gay in a first for US-based pro leagues
@Izzent@lemmy.world avatar

Both sad that it’s a first, and good for others who might be in a similar situation.

Chariotwheel , in Miami woman, 18, arrested after allegedly trying to hire hitman to kill her 3-year-old son, police say

At this point, just me the child up for adoption. Why the fuck pay for a fucking Hitman?

rusticus1773 , in Grassley releases full FBI memo with unverified claims about Hunter Biden's work in Ukraine

Refer this to that DOJ and get back to doing your jobs. So sick of this theatrical “they’re all the same” BS.

People, pay no attention to “allegations” of wrongdoing. If you just keep score based upon convictions and plea bargains, it is clear which team is committing 90% of the crimes.

elbowdrop , in Texas worker accused of being on drugs was actually dying of heatstroke

Fuck them. Require a licensed doctor on site observing the workers. Fuck this I think your on drugs bullshit. Why the actual fuck would Texas take away water breaks? How much more value is that aqueezing out of your workers. I think this lady deserves WAY more than a million. You kill an employee due to neglect, pay a billion. But that’s too high. It’s supposed to be a punishment. Fuck it. A billion a year forever.

gAlienLifeform ,
@gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world avatar

They’re taking away the workers’rights to get water breaks, not the supervisors’ rights to give them. So, if you’re a happy and compliant little drone who kisses enough ass maybe you’ll get one, and making workers’ feel the need to do things like that is where the real value in this lies for the bosses I think.

SmarfDurden ,
@SmarfDurden@lemmy.world avatar

You know, before this I really thought access to water was one of the few things conservatives wouldn’t have a problem with. They’re sadists

PhoenixRising ,
SmarfDurden ,
@SmarfDurden@lemmy.world avatar

That one at least makes sense (for them) since they wanna kill or deter dem voters. But yeah, nothing is off the table for them. Fuck them

Mirshe ,

Those 5 minutes you’re drinking water COULD be spent making money for the company! Think of the bottom line! /s

That’s literally what this is. I’m sure whoever proposed the bill had a friend who runs a construction or landscaping company complaining that their workers are taking too much time on break because they’re hot.

marron12 ,

The power dynamic is already heavily skewed in favor of the employer. Especially with construction and landscaping work, the way it tends to go is: workers need the job. The company rules with a pretty strict hand. You don’t like something, there’s the door. So you put up with stuff until you find another job or can’t take it anymore.

Take away a legal right, and that’s that. The workers and the company both know who has the upper hand. Sure, one person could try to stick up for themselves here and there, but plenty of people don’t because they’re afraid to lose their job. And it usually doesn’t change anything anyway. Even when there are laws to protect employees, companies don’t always follow them.

I’m talking mostly about non-union jobs there. Union jobs are better, but they’re not free of problems either.

ScoobyDoo27 ,

And don’t forget in those industries you see a lot of workers who may not be legal so they have to put up with the companies bullshit. It’s not like they can get the law involved even if they wanted to. Companies know this and abuse their workforce heavily because of it.

JackbyDev ,

It’s so insane. Let’s say they are on drugs. Does that make it okay to let them die? You should still try to get them help.

Motavader , in Alabama GOP refuses to draw second Black district, despite Supreme Court order

A lot of people were wondering this during the later Trump years: what’s to stop government officials from simply ignoring the Supreme Court (or another branch, for that matter). It’s surely a “Constitutional Crisis”, but many conservatives seem more interested in preaching about the Constitution than actually following it.

gAlienLifeform ,
@gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world avatar

what’s to stop government officials from simply ignoring the Supreme Court

A federal government being willing to enforce the law Reconstruction style and send in federal troops to effect the arrest of these traitors and the unconditional surrender of their government. Anything less is just giving the anti-democratic forces time to get stronger and chip away at more of our society.

effingjoe , (edited )
@effingjoe@kbin.social avatar

A federal government being willing to enforce the law Reconstruction style and send in federal troops to effect the arrest of these traitors and the unconditional surrender of their government. Anything less is just giving the anti-democratic forces time to get stronger and chip away at more of our society.

At first I was writing a comment to say the Posse Comitatus Act wouldn't allow this, but it seems like the Insurrection Act of 1807 is an exception, and would apply in this instance.

Specifically:

10 U.S. Code § 253 - Interference with State and Federal law

The President, by using the militia or the armed forces, or both, or by any other means, shall take such measures as he considers necessary to suppress, in a State, any insurrection, domestic violence, unlawful combination, or conspiracy, if it—

(1)so hinders the execution of the laws of that State, and of the United States within the State, that any part or class of its people is deprived of a right, privilege, immunity, or protection named in the Constitution and secured by law, and the constituted authorities of that State are unable, fail, or refuse to protect that right, privilege, or immunity, or to give that protection; or
(2)opposes or obstructs the execution of the laws of the United States or impedes the course of justice under those laws.

In any situation covered by clause (1), the State shall be considered to have denied the equal protection of the laws secured by the Constitution.

Edit: I feel compelled to point out that we're not here yet, because the SCOTUS order has a review process for the new voting maps, and if a judge rejects them, the judge can authorize a third party to draw the maps for Alabama. If the Alabama government rejects those third-party maps, then shit gets real.

Mirshe ,

It won’t get that real. Ohio’s GOP has been ordered by our state Supreme Court since before 2016 to redraw fair voting maps and not only did they not, but they submitted blatantly unfair maps that didn’t even come close to their guidelines. The Court has done nothing and will continue to do nothing.

hglman ,

We are most certainly within a constitutional crisis. You can probably start the timeline at the 2000 Supreme Court ruling where the court said it had no authority to rule, but it did. The republicans blocking the supreme court nomination was also a clear breakdown of the system.

Enigma ,

Republicans have been forcing a crisis so everyone gets on board with a convention so they can change the constitution.

Jaysyn ,
@Jaysyn@kbin.social avatar

They are getting farther & farther away from that goal with every election since 2016.

Neato ,
@Neato@kbin.social avatar

It's actually not a Constitutional crisis. Specifically because there's practically zero enumerated duties of SCOTUS in the Constitution.

Thank Marshall for conniving his way into actual power for the court. But it can vanish just as easily.

SheeEttin ,

Legally? Nothing. See Worcester v. Georgia, where the apocryphal quote “John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it” comes from.

Ultimately, though, if a state decides it doesn’t want to follow federal law any more, that’s secession, and we’ve fought a civil war over it before.

Xariphon ,

Just like every other part of their religion.

dis_honestfamiliar ,

Just like they do with preaching a book they don’t even read themselves. And only preach parts of it. And only when it’s convenient for them.

MoonshineDegreaser , in Texas worker accused of being on drugs was actually dying of heatstroke
@MoonshineDegreaser@lemmy.world avatar

Good way to m lose your business license if you aren’t a general contractor. But since they are, supervisor is getting fired and nothing else is going to change.

grte ,

Working someone until they die of heatstroke should be a murder charge, not risk losing a damned business license. What a sick society.

MoonshineDegreaser ,
@MoonshineDegreaser@lemmy.world avatar

You’re absolutely right. However there were rules and amenities put in place way before we were born

I’ll give you an example. When I worked as a utility locator, I caught a GC’s team doing HARD drugs on a construction site. I reported it to the county. Nothing happened. Same team, same habits. I would speak to the GC directly about their teams, and they didn’t care.

A week passes and the entire site is roped off with police tape. A heavy machinery operator from that team ended up running a cleaner over in one of those JLG cherry pickers with the monster truck tires. Turns out he had meth and thc in his system. He was fired. No charges towards the individual or the GC because it was chalked up to a workplace accident.

Now why were they able to get away with that you ask? GC’s have to maintain state and county contracts and they even do work for the counties and states. They literally have all the power when it comes to construction. The only real way to get a GC shut down is if there are multiple accidents resulting in an unusual number of injuries or death. But even then, that’s usually when the feds and OSHA get involved

meat_popsicle ,

Doesn’t hurt that the GCs will often just lose envelopes full of cash around where certain regulators, investigators, and politicians live.

It’s just by accident - those envelopes are just too damn easy to lose.

MoonshineDegreaser ,
@MoonshineDegreaser@lemmy.world avatar

AND when they do get caught in something of that nature, they don’t really shut down. They change the company name under a new license and then magically get all the contracts that the previous company had

prole ,

Not in Texas. Not anymore. They are actively making it so much worse with the recent bill removing a requirement that employers allow construction workers to drink fucking water.

marx2k ,

Also… is Texas.

I’m surprised they need licensing at all

thepianistfroggollum ,

You don’t actually have to be licensed to be a contractor in Texas.

marx2k ,

Damn, and I thought I was being funny

thepianistfroggollum ,

Texas does a good enough job of it on its own.

SmokeyMcPot , in Children’s cups sold on Amazon recalled for unsafe lead levels. What you should know

As an owner of these and other double wall stainless cups made in China, I wanted more information than this paywalled article. Somebody should start a lemmy instance that bans all paywall links.

Anyway the company was very diligent at preventing this but it still happened. See here:

www.cupkin.com/pages/recall

For anyone interested in facts and not headlines, the lead is on the exterior of the cup, in the bottom under the powder coated paint. It’s a seal disc in the bottom. Lead poses a threat to health only if ingested. For this lead to be ingested you’d basically have to destroy the cup.

This part was interesting:

tested the top selling household kids cup brands and found lead under the stainless steel discs for every single kids cup brand.

I think it would be safe to assume you’ll find lead in the seal disc on the bottom of any double wall stainless made in China.

breadsmasher ,
@breadsmasher@lemmy.world avatar

“It was tested thoroughly”

clearly not.

x4740N , (edited ) in Miami woman, 18, arrested after allegedly trying to hire hitman to kill her 3-year-old son, police say
@x4740N@lemmy.world avatar

What the fuck you ficking fucking maniac

Crackerjack ,

Define a ficking ficker!

Empricorn ,

A vicar?

MortyMcFry , in Miami woman, 18, arrested after allegedly trying to hire hitman to kill her 3-year-old son, police say
@MortyMcFry@aussie.zone avatar

Bell’s palsy is a bastard

ClockworkOtter , in Texas worker accused of being on drugs was actually dying of heatstroke

Infante later died in a hospital from severe heatstroke and had a recorded internal temperature of 109.8F (43.2C). The Center for Disease Control states a body temperature of 103F (39.4C) or higher is a main symptom of heatstroke.

The poor man was fucking cooked alive and the foreman wanted to do a piss test! I wish Abbott and his funders could experience that.

PoliticalAgitator ,

They’ll never be without air conditioning.

ClockworkOtter ,

Oh, I wasn’t suggesting to give them the option. Literally just leave them out in the desert.

kite ,

109.8

And that’s in the hospital, after he’d had a chance to cool down some in the ambulance, and I’m sure EMS started IV fluids as well, which would have also cooled him. I bet his temp was a good bit higher than 109.8 at its highest.

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