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  • Originally posted by Albany Rifles View Post

    Upton Sinclair is spinning in his grave!
    This in Reuters today after a half year long investigation

    https://www.reuters.com/business/aut...ns-2023-02-24/


    The audits began last August, after Reuters first reported on the issue, and were conducted by an outside law firm that reviewed documents and did on-site inspections.

    Hyundai also told investors it was implementing extensive new corporate measures, including a training program for its parts suppliers to begin next month in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), to prevent future child labor violations. DOL did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Hyundai's pledge to its shareholders comes after a 2022 Reuters investigation showed several suppliers to the automaker's massive Montgomery, Alabama vehicle plant used underage migrant workers to make parts for its popular U.S.-made cars and SUVs.

    One of the plants where children worked, SMART Alabama LLC in rural Luverne, Alabama, is a direct Hyundai subsidiary. According to Hyundai's financial statements from last year, the automaker controls a 72% stake in SMART.

    Chang wrote that Hyundai was "in the process of divesting its ownership interest in SMART" but it would ensure "that the economically important jobs in the Luverne, Alabama community are preserved."

    Hyundai's letter did not say when the transaction would be completed or identify a buyer or the form a divestiture would take. Since the early 2000s, the metal stamping plant has made chassis parts for hundreds of thousands of Hyundai vehicles per year.

    STATE AND FEDERAL INVESTIGATIONS

    Following Reuters' first story on child labor at SMART last July, as many as 10 Hyundai suppliers in Alabama have been under investigation by state or federal authorities for child labor violations, Reuters reported in December.

    One of the plants was inspected last August and authorities found and removed several children from the factory floor, later issuing penalties to the plant operator and a third-party staffing firm who recruited them.

    "The use of underage labor at a supplier or any operation is unacceptable, and we are committed to making sure non-compliance never happens again," Chang wrote in the letter. "This is a zero tolerance issue."

    As Reuters reported earlier, many of the underage workers who found their way into the Alabama auto parts plants were recruited by third-party staffing agencies, a process that can allow big corporations to turn a blind eye to the illegal employment of minors.

    In the shareholder letter, Chang reiterated that Hyundai was "discouraging" suppliers from relying on such staffing agencies in the future.

    He wrote that staffing firms who hired children to work at Hyundai supplier plants had provided false employee documentation. In the future, however, Hyundai and its supply chain partners must do more to ensure children are never put to work in their factories, the letter said.

    "Ultimately, the responsibility is with Hyundai to make sure all our suppliers understand and meet our high global workforce standards," Chang wrote.

    U.S. and Alabama law prohibit people under age 16 from working in industrial factory settings, and anyone under 18 is prohibited from working in particularly dangerous roles in automotive plants, such as driving forklifts or operating metal-cutting and stamping machines.

    Earlier this month, thirty-three members of Congress urged DOL to seek strong and swift penalties against those responsible for child labor in the Hyundai supply chain.

    Comment


    • I found this interesting because of the bolded part below. I wondered if that were all that much different than the Gestapo going from apartment building to apartment building asking residents if they knew of any Jews in the building? It simply amazes me that there are people who just have to butt into another person's most personal issues regarding that person's life which doesn't affect the person butting in. I just don't get it...

      Bills would let transgender people seal name-change requests

      SEATTLE (AP) — You can change your name, but in many states you can’t completely shed your old one — something that’s of particular concern to transgender people and that legislators in at least two states are trying to change.

      A bill in Washington would allow gender expression and identity as reasons to seal, or keep out of the public record, a future petition for a name change. And a California bill would require the sealing of petitions by minors to change their name and gender on identity documents.

      In states where such petitions aren’t sealed, transgender people can be susceptible to cyberbullying or even physical violence because their previous names, and by extension their lives, are an open book in the public record, advocates warn. Students, for instance, can and do easily find and share such records when they are looking for background on a new kid in town, one advocate noted.

      Maia Xiao, a University of Washington graduate student, has changed her name in that state and said the publication of a transgender friend’s name-change records in an online forum led to relentless harassment, including hate mail. She wrote last summer to Democratic state Sen. Jamie Pedersen to urge reform.

      “It feels very close to me,” said Xiao, who would not disclose the name of her friend, citing privacy. “I don’t live a very online life, but it’s really scary to know that something so personal can be so easily accessed by transphobic trolls who want to cause harm.”

      Pedersen is sponsoring the Washington legislation, which passed the Senate this month with bipartisan support and is expected to also pass the House. The bill is modeled on laws in New York and Oregon and would also extend records privacy to refugees, emancipated minors and people who have been granted asylum.

      Currently, only people subjected to domestic violence can have their name changes easily sealed in Washington. Some other states, including California, also make exceptions for victims of crimes like human trafficking, stalking and sexual assault.

      “This seemed to me like a simple action that could go a long way in making transgender people a lot safer in our state,” Pedersen said.

      Some officials and law enforcement officers worry that criminals who request a name change could escape accountability under the proposals. The Washington bill would allow courts to unseal a name change file if law enforcement had reasonable suspicions, and sex offenders and incarcerated people would still be ineligible for a sealed name change.

      “This is not the intent of the bill, and such cases would be rare, but there needs to be procedures in place to prevent it,” Jennifer Wallace, executive director of the Washington Association of County Officials, said in an email.

      The approaches in Washington and California contrast starkly with recent and mysterious moves in Florida and Texas to compile lists of trans residents using public records, and as lawmakers in at least 39 states consider a torrent of anti-trans bills.

      Republicans’ “disturbing” requests for data on transgender residents in some of those states add urgency to his proposal, Pedersen said.

      The office of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton last year requested data on how many people had changed the gender information on their driver’s licenses. The Texas Department of Public Safety found over 16,000 gender changes during the prior two years but didn’t turn over data because it could not determine the reason for each change.

      In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis asked state universities last month for data on students who had sought or received treatments for gender dysphoria. Neither Paxton nor DeSantis explained why they requested the data.

      Harassment from such disclosures can especially target young trans people who struggle with mental health issues or gender dysphoria, advocates say. The same internet forum that Xiao said had targeted her friend came under fire last year for instances of doxxing trans people, or maliciously publishing their personal information online, and has been linked to suicides.

      Peers may search students’ names as they move to a new middle or high school and can easily find and share court records related to their petitions for a name and gender change, said Kathie Moehlig, executive director of the San Diego nonprofit TransFamily Support Services. She approached California Assembly Speaker Pro Tem Chris Ward with the idea for the bill after students she advises brought the trend to her attention.

      Many families with trans children aren’t even aware such records are public, Moehlig said.

      “Somebody’s gender identity is an innate piece about them — it’s intimate,” she said. “They deserve the right to the privacy around their identity.”

      The California bill, which was introduced last month and has not yet been scheduled for a hearing, would require the state to seal any petition filed by a person under 18 for a change to gender and sex or to gender, sex and name in identity documents. Also sealed would be documents from a petitioner’s court proceedings.

      San Diego lawyer Clarice Barrelet, whose 11-year-old son is transgender, said simply plugging his name into a search engine shows his legal gender change.

      He had insisted by age 6 that he should not be called a girl and would grow up to be a man, Barrelet said. He came out as transgender at age 8 and changed the name and pronouns he used in school, even before his mom petitioned the court for a legal change to his identity documents.

      Barrelet said she thinks those records should be sealed for children and adults to better protect their privacy.

      Ward, a San Diego County Democrat and vice chair of the California Legislative LGBTQ Caucus, said he hopes his bill will reduce the risk of bullying for gender-nonconforming children. He noted that being outed can be especially traumatic for young people who are still processing their identities.

      “I want them to certainly be comfortable,” Ward said, “and free to be themselves.”

      https://apnews.com/article/district-...gn=position_07

      Comment


      • I can see some credit reference check issues with sealed records, assuming someone is unscrupulous enough to manipulate the system that way. The same potentially for child support and other debt related matters. I wonder how the authorities are proposing to deal with problems like that in the new bill. I know its directed primarily at children and teenagers but adults can surely take advantage of the bill as well?
        Last edited by Monash; 19 Mar 23,, 04:51.
        If you are emotionally invested in 'believing' something is true you have lost the ability to tell if it is true.

        Comment


        • These bitter white men recognize that the demographical changes are shifting against them and their fellow GQPers so they are doing all they can to dilute the truth to "deradicalize"...in their minds...young generations so their racist, tired and morally bankrupt beliefs will continue to thrive.

          So much of the these would have been found unconstitutional by the Supreme Court just 10 years ago,,,but not this court.
          “Loyalty to country ALWAYS. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it.”
          Mark Twain

          Comment


          • The best take on Scott Adams and Dilbert.
            https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/...m_medium=email
            Trust me?
            I'm an economist!

            Comment


            • Thank St Peters that I didn't accept any Irish invitations yesterday.
              Chimo

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Officer of Engineers View Post
                Thank St Peters that I didn't accept any Irish invitations yesterday.
                Amateur hour. Bet no one had a fish tank with piranha!
                “Loyalty to country ALWAYS. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it.”
                Mark Twain

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Albany Rifles View Post
                  Amateur hour. Bet no one had a fish tank with piranha!
                  Those days of powering through those hangovers are long done - especially those kinds of hangovers.
                  Chimo

                  Comment


                  • Is is time to lump all the threads about The Orange Don into one ?
                    I see at least 8 now, and frankly it isn't doing my mental health any good to think about him more than once a day.
                    Trust me?
                    I'm an economist!

                    Comment


                    • Random musing:

                      I bought a couple bottles of sunflower seed oil yesterday at less than half the usual price. According to the label the oil was produced in Ukraine.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by DOR View Post
                        Is is time to lump all the threads about The Orange Don into one ?
                        I see at least 8 now, and frankly it isn't doing my mental health any good to think about him more than once a day.
                        I've thought about that but I'm also trying to get away from mega-threads.

                        As I've often said, if Trump was still just a failed businessman and 4th rate con man from Queens, I wouldn't care in the slightest about the Orange one and he wouldn't even rate a single thread, AFAIC.

                        Unfortunately he was President of the United States, he did incite an insurrection against the same government that he was leader of, and now looks to be the first former president under criminal indictment....possibly even for inciting that insurrection and/or attempting mass voter fraud in Georgia....all while still currently being the undisputed leader of the Republican Party, declared candidate for the Republican Party presidential ticket in 2024 and, at the moment, the nominee-apparent.
                        “He was the most prodigious personification of all human inferiorities. He was an utterly incapable, unadapted, irresponsible, psychopathic personality, full of empty, infantile fantasies, but cursed with the keen intuition of a rat or a guttersnipe. He represented the shadow, the inferior part of everybody’s personality, in an overwhelming degree, and this was another reason why they fell for him.”

                        Comment


                        • Amazon is soon deleting DPReview.

                          .
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                          Comment


                          • Took some time off from work. Not so little Wire Dog is back in the States after 5 years. Made E-5 in 5 years. Headed to his first Stateside duty station in a few weeks

                            Comment


                            • Well done by him!

                              I forget...what does he do in the Air Force?
                              “Loyalty to country ALWAYS. Loyalty to government, when it deserves it.”
                              Mark Twain

                              Comment


                              • Hes a cable dog

                                Comment

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