R
Ridgerunner
Guest
qui est ce;8799922 said:I have not heard of it, but I’ll google it. Thanks for the reference.
Reminds me just a bit of an old country practice around here. Genuine country hillbillies insist on taking their children and grandchildren out to work with them, regardless of age. Early on, they also put the kid to work. Maybe just pulling a few weeds. Maybe just having them “help” by handing the parent or grandparent a tool. Maybe just chasing some heifers out of a lot they would have run out of anyway as soon as the gate was opened. Something. Anything to get the kid involved in work, to show the kid that work is what they ought to do and that it’s something they CAN do.
Some of these who say poor children have no work exposure can be said equally well of middle class people. Part of it can’t be helped very easily. Long ago, a garage operator could (and did) take his kids to work. A farmer could, and did, and most still do. When I was a kid, it was common for people who had their own businesses, stores or offices to bring their kids into the place. Maybe all they did was lick envelopes or stamps or sweep, but it was something. And meanwhile, the kid saw customers come and go, heard what they said, knew that people wanted things and that the object of work is to give them what they want and to be repaid for doing that. People with restaurants’ kids worked in them before child labor laws were strictly enforced against that. I picked strawberries for money when I was no more than five years old, and bucked bales starting at 11 or 12 for money. Can’t do that now, of course, and it’s too bad, in my opinion.
Nowadays, it’s tough for people of any class to expose kids to actual adult work, and it’s impossible for kids under age 16 to earn anything by working. I don’t think Gingrich expressed the core of this problem very well, and certainly not as broadly as I would, but I don’t see why the concept is so terrible.