Stuff You Should Know - Child Labor: Not Funny
Episode Date: August 10, 2021Child labor is no laughing matter. Even though we've taken care of it in the USA (mostly), it's still an issue around the globe. Listen and learn! Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.ihea...rtpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey everybody, when you're staying at an Airbnb, you might be like me wondering, could
my place be an Airbnb?
And if it could, what could it earn?
So I was pretty surprised to hear about Lauren in Nova Scotia who realized she could Airbnb
her cozy backyard treehouse and the extra income helps cover her bills and pays for
her travel.
So yeah, you might not realize it, but you might have an Airbnb too.
Find out what your place could be earning at Airbnb.ca slash host.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever
have to say bye, bye, bye.
Find the Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever
you listen to podcasts.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant and Jerry's out there hovering around
in the digital weird audio ether.
And this is Stuff You Should Know, this is going to be a good, uplifting, fun one, a
bouncy, light one.
I think so.
And it's, you know, hot off the presses from our, my daughter just wrote this episode
for us.
Yeah.
Yeah.
In record time too, I was impressed.
You didn't pay her, did you?
No.
But it's funny, I went to look up, you know, I've talked before about, you know, the fact
that I started working when I was 13 at a barbecue restaurant and minimum wage when
I started working was $3.35 an hour.
Wow.
How far we've come?
Yeah.
Not far.
They've doubled it in the past, whatever, 40 years.
Isn't that nuts, dude?
Yeah.
And, you know, we'll get to that, but I have a list of kind of where we ended up with minimum
wage along the years.
But yeah, JJ's barbecue, $3.35 an hour, baby.
Wow.
That's pretty great.
My first job was even younger than that.
I was like nine or 10 when I was a paper boy.
Yeah.
I mean, I couldn't have made more than, because I was only, it's not like I was working every
night, I was working weekends.
I probably made like less than $50 a week.
But I mean, you're 13, what were you spending it on?
13 in like a good clean Christian kit.
You weren't spending that on anything.
Archie comics.
It buys a lot of Archie comics.
Yeah, it does.
Yes, it does.
And although they have a lot of variations, so you could easily spend $50 a week on Archie
comics.
Back then, though, those things were cheap.
I was living high on the hog at 13.
So it sounds like it, man.
So our buddy Dave helped us out with this one, Dave Roos.
And he makes a really good point that you and I sitting around talking about, you know,
you made $50 a week.
I was a paper boy, like whatever stresses and troubles that we ran into post, you know,
1770 something.
As far as our first jobs go when we were younger, that does not qualify as child labor.
That's not really what we're talking about here today.
It's called the kid having a job.
Exactly.
It's called the, you just stop your griping right now because there are actual kids out
there who are like real deal child laborers who work in like dangerous conditions for
little to no pay, who don't get to play, who may not socialize with other kids their age.
They may live and work in a mining camp with nothing but adults and grownups.
Like they would kill for, you know, a JJ's barbecue job basically.
Yeah.
And this is a good time to be talking about that in particular, because this is 2021 is
the international year for the elimination of child labor.
And as you'll see throughout this episode, we've made a lot of strides here in the U.S.
But like you said, it's not that way everywhere and it should be.
And I should say it's probably a little off the mark to say that a child laborer would
kill for a better job.
They would probably kill to just not have to work at all in general and just to get to
be a kid.
And I think ultimately for people who are activists against child labor, that's the
goal is to not like get better working conditions for six year olds.
It's to like just make six year olds not have to work any longer.
And we'll talk about how to solve that, how that international year for the elimination
of child labor aims to do that.
They have some pretty pragmatic ideas.
And so hopefully this episode will have a nice bow on the end.
But we're going to have to slog through some misery to get there, Chuck.
Take it away.
There's no better place to slog through misery than the founding of this country.
Way back in the old days when the new world was new and settlers came over and they very
much believed in, why did I think this was Ed?
You said this is Dave?
Yeah, I'm almost positive it was Dave.
That was Ed.
It reads like a Dave to me, but oh man, if it's Ed, I'm sorry.
Sorry to both of you.
Well, sure.
We need to get those guys together one day.
I think the universe should kill us.
Or maybe we should keep them far apart.
Yeah, exactly.
They might turn against us.
Yeah, so they believe very much that the idols' hands were the devil's workshop, that old
saying.
And this is one of those that was kind of hard for me to let's just lop off developing
nations today, which is clearly awful.
I found myself as an adult more and more with the cultural relativism thinking, obviously
five-year-olds shouldn't be working in factories.
But when I read about like 12 and 13-year-olds working hard back then, I was kind of like,
it's not great, but that's just kind of how it was at the time.
If you had parents that were farmers, you're not going to be just hanging out until your
sweet 16th birthday, having a good time.
You're going to be working from a pretty young age.
And I found myself more and more thinking like, in certain situations, that wasn't the
worst thing, but then you get to the industrial revolutions and that's what things really
got bad.
But kind of early on, that's really what we were talking about was a lot of kids working
on the farms, a lot of boys working on the farm, girls working in the house alongside
their sisters and mom.
And this kind of started when they were about 13 years old.
They were sort of expected to either go work and get a job and work full-time or to become
an apprentice, an unpaid apprentice, to work for food and board and training.
And I think also, in addition to that Protestant work ethic of just completely in the fabric
of America that was just coming out in you, it's also this idea of like, what else are
you going to do?
It's not like you can sit around and play video games or watch TV or do almost anything
else except just play outside.
But Chuck, I went back and looked to see if it was always this way and apparently in
medieval England, you played basically until you hit puberty and then you started to get
put to work.
When you hit puberty at four.
Right.
More like 14, but like there was like a childhood and it seems to have been somewhat wiped out
by that Protestant work ethic that the Puritans brought over or at the very least it was set
back a little more age-wise where you started working maybe a little sooner than you would
have had you been in medieval England at the time.
Right.
I think I guess I'm just trying to draw a line between life in the 1640s and then life
in 1938 when we eventually did something about it in the U.S.
Yeah.
No, totally.
And there is an enormous distinction between that because it was widespread, but it seemed
like they were mostly working with their families and it was just kind of the way that
things were.
That was how life was.
Yeah, to try and keep your family alive.
It's not like they were trying to just all survive basically.
Right.
And that's actually the reason why it's still around in other parts of the world today.
It's not even necessarily like a work ethic where children should work because idle hands
or the devils play things like the Puritans thought.
Instead it's like this is an extra worker we can have go out and make money to keep the
rest of the family alive.
We just don't have a choice in not doing that and that's what drives it still today.
Right.
When the Industrial Revolution came around and we're talking about basically cotton factories
in a big, big way, there were a lot of little kids working there and people like George Washington
and Alexander Hamilton thought that was awesome.
They did and like we're going to be skewered for even suggesting that Hamilton said this,
but he did.
He said that women and children in America would be, quote, rendered more useful by manufacturing
establishments than they otherwise would be.
And I think what he was saying is like, I'm not even going to paraphrase what he was saying.
I think you can understand it on its face.
Yeah.
He's saying, you know, they're not doing much use for us these kids and he's mainly talking
about kids here who would otherwise, quote, who would otherwise be idle.
This isn't Lin-Manuel Miranda saying this.
We all love him.
No, he didn't say this in a charming rap.
No, this is the real Alexander Hamilton.
Right.
And again, it was just a different time.
But even way back then in the early 1800s, not everyone thought this was a great thing.
There was a future mayor of Boston named Josiah Quincy.
Diamond Joe Quimby, who toured a cotton factory, a cotton spinning factory, and they had, you
know, four year olds working there all the way to 10, maybe 10, 12 hours a day for anywhere
from 12 to 25 cents a day, not an hour.
And he said, compassion calls us to pity these little creatures, playing in a contracted
room among fliers and cogs at an age when nature requires for them air, space, and sports.
There was a dull dejection and the countenance of all of them.
And you know, we'll get to some of these photos of some of these kids later on.
When you look at them, they look like beaten down miniature adults.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They really do.
They look like us.
Exactly.
They look ready to retire.
They look unhappy.
They look, yeah, just beaten down, but they're miniature and they're kids, they're children.
And it's really upsetting to see that, a photograph of that.
I'm sure it's even more upsetting to see it in real life.
And that's actually how a lot of this, a lot of changes came through was just people being
exposed to seeing that and kind of being shocked having their conscience shocked.
But as potentially like bad as it was for the children of colonial America who were
forced to work, it got way, way worse when the second industrial revolution kicked off,
the one powered by steam and steel and railroads and little hands and unbridled capitalism.
When you inject unbridled capitalism into an economy that allows for child labor, you
can imagine that things are going to get much, much worse for the children before it finally
gets better.
That's right.
And things did get worse.
When you're, when all of a sudden you have a robust steel industry and coal mining industry,
you have railroads that need this stuff in a big, big way.
And they partially kind of ran out of workers and partially just saw what was right underneath
their noses, which is these kids who they, at this point, they had long known that they
could work and farm and work hard.
So they said, you know what, a lot of these families in rural America, farming dried up
a bit so they moved to the city, a lot of it was immigrant labor as millions of people
came into the country from Europe, fleeting their poverty, famine-stricken countries.
And no matter where they came from, it was all under the thumb of the robber barons,
which was, I can't remember when we did it, it feels like a few, two or three years ago,
but pretty good podcast on the robber barons.
Yeah.
And we also talked about them in our book, we talked about keeping up with the Joneses.
They played a big role in that, too.
But yeah, so like these, the robber barons got rich through innovation, through consolidation,
through some pretty clever stuff, a lot of them invented new techniques or processes
or procedures.
So like they definitely were doing something, they were being productive.
But they also got to be filthy rich off of the backs of immigrant labor, child labor
that they directly exploited.
And it was basically like there was just nobody looking out for anybody else at this time.
It was just such a period of such enormous economic insurgents that there weren't anybody
or there wasn't anybody who was sitting there saying like, whoa, whoa, whoa, everybody,
we need to stop and really think about this and do this in a much more directed, smarter,
healthier way for our society.
It was like, it was like, just go, go, let's see where this takes us.
And a lot of people got trampled underfoot and that definitely included children, laborers
or child laborers.
That's right.
And I think that's a good time for a break.
Yay.
Yay.
That's two yeas, any nays.
So we'll be back and we'll talk a little bit about what some of these jobs might have been
in the late 19th century for these kids right after this.
Hey everybody, when you're staying at an Airbnb, you might be like me wondering, could my place
be an Airbnb?
And if it could, what could it earn?
So I was pretty surprised to hear about Lauren and Nova Scotia who realized she could Airbnb
her cozy backyard treehouse and the extra income helps cover her bills and pays for her travel.
So yeah, you might not realize it, but you might have an Airbnb too.
Find out what your place could be earning at airbnb.ca slash host.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay.
I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
This I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yeah, we know that Michael and a different hot, sexy teen crush boy band are each week
to guide you through life step by step, not another one, kids, relationships, life in
general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
And so tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so
we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever
you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology, but from the moment
I was born, it's been a part of my life in India.
It's like smoking.
You might not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology.
And lately I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running
and pay attention because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for
it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast.
Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop.
But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing down.
Situation doesn't look good.
There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too.
There's a skyline drive in the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
I wonder how many gallons of coffee everyone who has listened to this show since the beginning
has heard me drink.
I didn't even hear you drinking.
Oh, you didn't?
When I said, uh-uh, I had a mouthful of cafe.
Oh, interesting.
I have no shirt on.
Nice.
That's awesome, man.
No, that's not true.
You just top mine.
You said, no, that's not true.
I think you should have left it mysterious, Chuck, because there were a few people out
there who were about to email and say, I was offended that Chuck said he wasn't wearing
a shirt.
Yeah.
No, I put it on right before he recorded.
I had it off.
It's a little hot.
I felt like I needed to dress up, put the t-shirt back on.
Right.
Are you wearing one of those tuxedo t-shirt?
Do you ever had one of those?
Did you ever have one?
No, I didn't.
No, I didn't either.
You didn't?
You didn't wear them with your rainbow suspenders?
No, that stuff was a little too cutesy even for me.
Gotcha.
Okay.
What about the one that looks like I would wear it?
Okay.
What about one that looks like a ripped chest and abdomen?
Have you ever worn a t-shirt like that?
No, those are fun though.
For certain people.
They're fun.
They're also really good at boosting your ego quietly.
Sure.
There's nothing like me looking in a mirror at my beer belly covered in spray-painted
abs.
It really works.
The brain is so dumb that it falls for it every time I can attest.
All right, so we were going to talk about what some of these jobs might be, and it
kind of really depended on where you were living.
If you lived in the city or if you lived in a company town where they had these factories,
you were going to be working in factories out in the rural areas, you're going to be
working on farms.
Most Americans still lived on farms at the time, so most child labor took place on farms.
But if you were on that farm, you're going to be picking cotton and tobacco.
You're going to be picking a lot of stuff and doing all the sort of stuff that goes
on after the picking, which is stemming, de-seeding, all that stuff, shucking.
Stuff I did when I was a kid, we had a big, big garden, and my mom took us to the cannery,
and it was awful.
I hated it.
She took you to the cannery for sightseeing trip or for work?
To can.
Like there was a cannery that your mom went to.
You guys had so much stuff, you had to go to a second location to can it?
There was a cannery in DeKalb County, a sort of industrial cannery for the people.
And we would take green beans and corn, and we made preserves and all kinds of stuff.
They had like, you know, you could can your own junk there.
Sounds like a socialist utopia.
And yeah, and we would, you know, put sharpie like beans on the can and sharpie and put
it in the pantry.
Huh.
That's really interesting.
It was really interesting.
I had no idea that there was a cannery in DeKalb County.
Yeah.
Not too far from where I live now, actually.
It's like 15 minutes away, probably.
Do you shudder every time you pass it?
I do a little, actually.
I don't pass it much, but it's over near the dog pound where you can go adopt a dog.
And so I think we adopted Nico there, and I drove by the cannery and just like, ooh.
Yeah, I'll bet.
It was hot.
Well, you were lucky you weren't five or six and left there to work all day every day,
aren't you?
Yes.
You know?
For almost no money.
Yeah.
Pennies for a bucket of whatever you shucked or shelled or did whatever, peeled.
Yeah.
Working at a cannery would probably not have been very fun.
There were also furnace stoking jobs available, whether you wanted them or not.
What else, Chuck?
Well, kids did work in canneries.
They also worked in textile mills.
They had bobbin boys and bobbin girls.
This one doesn't sound so bad to me, but I'm sure I'm missing something that makes it atrocious.
Well, I mean, they would climb up on the machine and remove the bobbins, the full bobbins, and
replace them with empty ones.
So I don't think that was like the worst job in the world.
But when you're doing that for 10 or 12 hours a day and you're six, it's probably a bit
of a buzzkill.
Yeah.
I have a problem inherently with child labor in general.
Yeah.
Yeah, I know what you mean.
Not like having a job like you or I had first off, they got no problem with that, but any
kind of child labor, even if it is kind of kush comparatively.
No, I agree.
That one wasn't terrible.
It may have been dangerous.
I don't know.
I'll hide those bobbins where.
Yeah.
There's no way it wasn't dangerous.
It had to have been dangerous.
We're talking about the 19th century in industry.
It was dangerous in some way.
There was no OSHA.
No one knew who that was.
If you did live in the city and did work around factories, you would do that, but there were
also plenty of other jobs.
You could deliver, like be essentially, they call them telegraph boys, sort of delivering
emails basically by hand to people all over town.
You could shine shoes.
You could sell newspapers like you did.
I didn't stand on the street corner.
I was on a newsie, which we'll talk a little more about newsies in a second.
I was a delivery boy and not a really great one either.
I frequently overslapped and it was not good at delivering papers.
My mom and my oldest sister would have to do my route once in a while.
Is this a bike deal?
Yes.
Okay.
The thing is, they also make you shake down the people for their delinquent subscriptions.
So I was like a strong arm guy too for the Toledo Blade as well.
I want my $2.
Basically, that's exactly right.
That was right in my wheelhouse too.
I was like, this hits a little too close to home for me to laugh at this kid.
I know what he's going through.
I've had to put my foot in somebody's door before to get their $2.
Didn't ask for a dime.
I haven't seen that in a while.
That was a good movie.
Yeah.
Classic.
If you lived in the mountains of Appalachia, you might have been a breaker boy or a mule
handler and breaker boys will get, I guess we can go ahead and tell everyone what that
is.
You could sit around and break apart lumps of coal into uniform pieces all day long.
Yep.
And break dance on your breaks.
Yeah, breaker boys.
But that was it and they wouldn't let you wear gloves while you were a breaker boy too
because they're like, no, no.
You can't break these things as uniformly.
If you wear gloves, you stupid kid.
So you have to basically absorb all of this coal dust into your skin, get all sorts of
little cuts and calluses and all that by the time you're six, seven, eight and just do
this.
This is your life now.
Welcome to Pennsylvania.
Right.
Then let's say you managed to escape all forms of formal jobs.
Your parents, they didn't make you go to the factory.
You did live in the city so you didn't have to work on a farm and you might think you
just had it made in the shade, not so because there was plenty of jobs that you could do
right there from your credit little tenement apartment, like weaving baskets or making
paper flowers or hand rolling cigars and cigarettes all day long and selling them.
Yeah.
It was like your whole family worked on a farm or if you lived in a tenement, your whole
family worked in what are called tenement industries.
So there was basically not a lot of escape.
I get the impression that you basically had to have wealthy parents to not be forced into
child labor at the time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I might have mentioned this once before.
My mom did a thing for a little while where we would make money doing like stuffing envelopes.
Mm-hmm.
Did you remember that stuff?
I do.
And I don't even remember what it was for.
I guess it was for companies.
Okay.
I want to say Easter Seals had people do that too, but I'm sure they didn't pay.
They're notoriously cheap.
No, we got paid.
So this would be like a company that would have like a packet.
They would send out that had like five things in it.
I got you.
And we would be responsible for getting all that stuff in huge boxes, assembling it all
into the envelopes that they could mail, and we would get paid as a family to do that.
That's cute.
That's super late 70s, early 80s.
Like I can see your mom talking on the princess phone, making all the arrangements for them
to ship that to her and getting the instructions, you know, and then hanging up in that 50-foot
long cord just kind of coils up on its own quietly on the floor.
Yeah.
And I didn't mind that so much because I made a little money and that's something I could
do while I watch television.
Yeah, totally.
Totally.
Which is the perfect job as we all know.
Yeah, not exactly a high pressure job, it sounds like.
I wouldn't even know if that qualifies as a tenement industry to tell you the truth.
No, not in the 1970s.
No.
You had a lot of jobs though as a kid.
Good for you.
I always wanted my own money.
Protestant work ethic, shining through like a city upon a hill.
Should we talk newsies?
Yeah, we should.
And I think also the newsie strike that we're going to mention deserves its own episode,
at least short stuff.
I totally agree.
If not its own episode.
Okay, so yeah, let's just not talk about newsies.
No.
No, I thought the same thing and the more I got into the strike, I was like, this is
just too much, we got to do something.
But the idea was that little boys would buy a stack of newspapers wholesale for about
50 cents per 100.
Girls too.
I saw girls that did it too.
Oh, girls did it too?
All right.
And they sold them for a penny a piece.
So they would make half a penny per paper selling in the big cities, especially New
York City, of course, and then eventually in 1899 they did go on strike and it was a
big deal.
It kind of ground, I mean, it didn't grind them to a complete halt, but it really disrupted
their flow in getting newspapers into the hands of people.
And their sales over this two week strike went down two thirds.
Like they brought Pulitzer, Pulitzer, and Hearst to their knees basically, these newsies
did.
And they got some concessions too.
Yeah.
And I think the deal was is that morning subscribers were generally subscribers.
The morning paper was generally for subscribers, but it was that afternoon paper, that second
edition that the newsies really raked it in on because most people didn't subscribe to
that.
Right.
And so they really weren't selling any second editions hardly.
And the one big concession they got, which was huge, was they got them to agree to full
buybacks on unsold papers, which was a really, really big deal.
But it also really kind of goes to show you how much the newspaper barons believed newsies
were scrappy enough that they wouldn't just sit around and be like, I don't have to sell
these.
You know, I don't have to worry about this.
You know, they'll be bought back anyway.
I don't have to work to sell them.
Well, but buyback just means they give them back the money they paid for them.
It's not like they would make any money.
They would just, in fact, incentivize them, I think, to take out more papers and sell
more papers because they knew they wouldn't be stuck with them.
Yeah.
Totally.
We'll probably edit that part out.
So one of the things you mentioned was making cigars, like in your family's one room apartment
in, say, New York or something like that, right?
Yeah.
That was apparently really bad in that not only did you work long hours for very little
paying, cramped working conditions with your family on top of everything else, you would
frequently come down with nicotine poisoning as a little kid because you're rolling cured.
Because you're handling uncured tobacco and you're ingesting lots of nicotine through
your skin in a single day.
And so you might be nauseated.
You might be dizzy.
You might turn green.
It can get worse than that too.
You actually can suffer respiratory distress as well.
And apparently this is a big problem still with child laborers in Zimbabwe because I
think about 20 years ago, that country doubled down on their tobacco production and now it's
like one of the biggest exports of Zimbabwe.
But it's also a very poor country, so they use child labor a lot.
And so children are still to this day being exposed to tobacco and they're handling tobacco,
they're rolling stuff, they're rolling cigars, they're sorting it.
Kids in tobacco should not be in the same room together, basically.
Yeah, you know, it never occurred to me that I guess it would be a transdermal ingestion,
right?
Yeah, totally.
But sure, I mean you put tobacco on bee stings and all kinds of things, so of course it's
going to get into their skin.
Yeah, and having gotten myself sick on tobacco a time or two in my life, I can tell you it
is not pleasant.
And to do it against your will just because you're handling it for your job that you don't
even want is that sounds torturous actually.
Yeah.
I love that story.
Should you retell it for people who haven't heard it?
Are you talking about 8th grade in the tree fort?
Is that when you'd like smoked a whole pack of cigarettes and got sick?
It was more like a pack and a half.
It was right after I first started smoking and I was like, I really like how this makes
me feel.
Let's see how like 30 of these things make me feel and I was saying that reading comic
books up in the tree fort in the woods that my friends and I had built and I just went
too far.
Man, I felt so bad.
Oh man.
Like green.
That is rough.
Like I felt like I looked green.
It was bad news.
That's one of those moments where you really wish you could have like video footage.
Kind of.
Kind of.
That's what that looked like.
I kind of hope when I die it's a little bit like defending your life so they can show
it.
I'll be like, show me that one.
I'll go over the other stuff.
I really want to see that clip.
Yeah.
RipTorn will be there.
Yeah.
The upside of this though is do not ever start smoking.
I deeply regret ever having started smoking as a kid, as an adult.
It doesn't matter.
Like just don't ever start smoking and do yourself a real favor.
You did a great job quitting though and you've never looked back.
Nope.
I didn't.
Good job.
It was surprisingly easy because I was worried.
Hold on.
One more thing.
If there are people out there who are considering smoking right now and are worried about the
time they're going to have, one of my big worries was that I was going to spend every
day of the rest of my life wishing for a cigarette.
That's just not how it goes.
You spend a week, two weeks, if it's really bad, maybe three weeks, really longing for
a cigarette and then it starts to get easier and easier and then eventually you're grossed
out by the thought of cigarettes and people smoking cigarettes around you and you don't
ever want to see one again.
Like that's what's keeping you from quitting, don't let it because that's not how it is.
I like that.
Good PSA.
Thanks, man.
Thanks.
I think before we break maybe we'll just go over some of these final stats here at basically
the peak in about 1900.
By 1891 out of every five kids under 16 was working, 1.7 million kids under 16 was 6% of
the total workforce in the 1900 census.
That's just kids who were registered to work in these factories.
That does not include these kids rolling cigars in their house or the kids on the family farm.
It was much, much higher than that.
Yeah.
Because I think two thirds of kids in general in the country worked in agriculture.
If they were not counting agriculture, they missed out on a lot of kids in that number.
It's still a staggering number in and of itself, 1.7 million.
Yeah.
If you're wondering back then what effect this had on education, just a snapshot from
Philadelphia in 1900, 15% of 13-year-old boys had left school to work and I think half
of 15-year-old boys were not in school anymore because they were working.
Or like a significant portion because they were naughty.
Right.
Yeah.
They just didn't want to do anything.
This is the staggering one to me, 17-year-old boys, only 10% of them were still in school
in 1900 in Philadelphia.
That does not bode well for the future of an economy.
I think that actually is one reason why public education became so much more compulsory and
one reason why people came around to anti-child labor laws is the idea that, no, there's a
lot more that they could be doing than just working in a factory almost literally their
entire lives.
Right.
We can do better and we can build a better society and a better economy if we invest
in their education instead of robbing them of it.
All right.
I guess we'll take a break and talk about when that started in earnest and it wasn't
just then when you mentioned it.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay.
I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
This I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear, and you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you.
Oh man.
And so my husband, Michael, um, hey, that's me.
Yep.
We know that Michael and a different hot, sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide
you through life step by step, not another one, kids, relationships, life in general
can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen.
Radio will never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever
you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesh Atikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology, but from the moment
I was born, it's been a part of my life in India.
It's like smoking.
You might not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology.
And lately I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running
and pay attention, because maybe there is magic in the stars, if you're willing to look
for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast.
Tantric curses, Major League Baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop.
But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world came crashing down.
The situation doesn't look good, there is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology?
It changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
So Chuck, it turns out that there were...
So the progressive era is one of my favorite eras, or I should say the people from the
progressive era are some of my favorite people, like Frances Perkin, although she was a second
or third wave progressive reformer, but she was inspired by some of these earlier ones
who were working on things like fair wages, like a minimum wage, maximum work days or
working hours.
And then they also train their sights on things like ending child labor, or at the very least,
really restricting the amount of work a kid could do, especially in regards to them being
in school too.
The idea was to put school first, and then if the kid had the wherewithal or their parents
really needed the money or something like that, they could let them work in addition
to school, but the school needed to come first.
And this is really radical.
I mean, it seems radical.
We had kids rolling cigars in their one room apartment in New York their whole lives.
And now all of a sudden, some people are coming up to me like, no, no, no, kids should be
in school and then maybe working, preferably not working.
So how do we make that happen?
Yeah, it was a very big deal.
And most of these, or a lot of them were women, people like Jane Adams and Julia Lathrop and
Lillian Ward, anti-poverty measures.
And this is stuff that, you know, they would also go on to champion women's rights and
women's rights in the workforce and women's rights to vote.
So the whole progressive movement was kind of tied up in all these, you know, radical
ideas about, you know, being fair and good decent human beings.
Right, yeah, radical stuff.
So here's the problem is you've got these robber barons and these factory owners and
then these industrialists who are like, wait a minute, we got a good deal going because
we don't have to pay these kids much.
They're probably not going to unionize.
Like the Newsy's thing was definitely an anomaly that didn't happen much.
And he said they were like, we got a, we got a good thing going.
And so we're going to lobby against this as hard as we can.
But surely they were unsuccessful, right?
No, they were successful.
They did.
They blocked a lot of legislation early on for this kind of regulation, federally states,
you know, it kind of depends on where it was, but states did establish child labor commissions.
And some states had some minimum ages, minimum or maximum hours and minimum wages.
It was, they were sparse.
I couldn't find what states passed it, but for the most part there were, there was a,
there were probably, for the most part, though, there was a, a lot of pushback and enough
pushback among the states, the residents of the states that, that not a lot got passed.
So there was a progressive movement that started, say in like the 1890s.
And it had to, it basically, like any progressive movement, it ran full steam ahead, hit a huge
wall of industry, and then had to slowly just keep pushing and pushing and chugging and
chugging and keeping at it for a few decades before it was successful.
And one of the ways that it became successful, the way that it kept pushing at it after it
hit that wall of industry is a group called the National Child Labor Committee formed.
And I think they formed in back in 1904.
And they were basically, they became a lobbying group to lobby against the lobbying against
child labor laws that ended child labor.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They had a pretty smart way to get attention and that was in hiring a photographer named
Louis Hine to go around and sneakily document what was going on with his camera.
Yeah.
He was, he worked as a sociologist and a teacher, and then later became a photographer or was
also a photographer.
And I think he himself was a kid who was working 12, 13 hour days.
So he was like, let me start taking pictures of these kids and maybe that, because, you
know, that's worth a thousand words, they say.
At least.
And he took 5,000.
Yeah.
So that means that he took 50,000 words.
No.
5,000?
I'm just kidding.
5,500?
No, I know.
I'm just trying to undermine your confidence in your math.
No, it was totally wrong.
It was purposefully wrong though.
Let me just do that real quick.
Doot, doot, doot, carry the one.
He took 5 million words.
That's a lot of words.
And if you go back, you've probably seen a bunch of these pictures.
If you've seen pictures of very unhappy kids outside of a coal mine or standing on the
mountains of shucked oysters or standing around factory machines like little miniature adults,
they were probably Lewis Heinz photos.
Yeah.
I mean, 5,000 photos all archived in the Library of Congress from what I understand.
And he had like a really great eye to begin with.
Oh man.
They're really great photographs in and of themselves.
But you don't have to sit there and try to really contemplate it.
It just hits you immediately what you're looking at and how sad what you're looking at is.
And so he and the National Child Labor Committee got these into newspapers.
And like you said, he was very sneaky.
He would pose as different things.
One of them made sense to me, the industrial machinery photographer, got that.
But what excuse would a Bible salesman have for taking photographs of the kids at the
factory?
I could not find that to save my life.
I mean, the only thing I could think is that got him in the door.
And then maybe he was like, and I just love kids and can I take some pictures?
But I don't know.
And this is a time before stranger danger, I guess.
So they were like, sure.
Right.
I mean, they're child laborers.
I don't care about them.
Yeah, he also he wore a special jacket where he had the buttons on the jacket aligned in
known measurements.
So if he went over and stood like he would take a kid's picture and he would ask, you
know, they're documented like their names and their ages and stuff as best he could.
But he would go stand next to them if he felt like he couldn't outright ask what their age
was to kind of tip off that maybe he was not a Bible salesman.
Right.
And you know, if the kid went up to the second or third button, he would know roughly how
tall they were.
Or no, he would know how tall they were than roughly how old they were.
Right.
Unless they were giants.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
I'm sure, you know, he didn't get them all right, but, you know, you can't win them all.
But the other thing that made it that jacket special Chuck was that the lining was made
of a t-shirt of a ripped chest and abdomen and it would make him feel really good about
himself when he put that jacket on.
That's good.
Nice call back.
When did things finally change though?
Well, they started to kind of change like these pictures shock the conscience of the
nation when they saw them, when they made them into newspapers and they were accompanied
by muckraking articles about how bad these conditions were and, you know, shame on you
America for turning a blind eye to this kind of thing.
But it wasn't like an instantaneous switch was thrown.
It still took decades.
I think the first proposal for anti-child labor legislation came in 1906.
Senator Albert Beverage of Indiana was the first to propose it, got taken up in 1916
by the Keating Act that was actually passed, but the Supreme Court shut it down.
And then there was some more legislation that there was a constitutional amendment actually
that got passed but wasn't ratified by the states.
And then it wasn't until the Great Depression and the New Deal that it finally got passed.
And I think if it were just the New Deal, it wouldn't have gotten passed, but the Great
Depression changed things socially enough that it opened the door for an end to child
labor in America.
Yeah.
Like ironically, I think massive unemployment with so many adults out of work, they couldn't
turn around and just hire kids to do these jobs for lower wages.
It was, I mean, even at a time when a bad look didn't really matter as much as it does
today, they even knew that that was a really bad look and that they probably couldn't do
something like that.
So eventually the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, thank you Francis Perkins, our old
buddy.
That's right.
Among others.
This finally set a national minimum wage for the very first time, a maximum number of
hours for workers and then child labor limitations, notably that if you are under 16, you cannot
work in manufacturing and you cannot work in coal mining at all because they're just
too dangerous.
Another couple of things it did, it established overtime, time and a half.
Oh yeah.
So if you went over 40 hours a week, you could only work up to 44, but you could work four
hours at time and a half and that very first minimum wage was 25 cents an hour.
Man.
1939, it went up to 30, 45, it went up to 40.
In 1956, it finally reached a dollar.
Ka-ching.
And it didn't crack six dollars until 2008.
I know dude, it's just shameful.
Isn't that nuts?
We definitely need to do a minimum wage episode too because it's just not as cut and dried
as, yeah, just raise the minimum wage.
There's a lot to it and I really want to do one on that.
Yeah.
I hadn't really kept up with it because before I got salary jobs, I worked as a waiter for
15 or 20 years or something or as a PA on movie sets and TV sets and that's not an hourly
thing either.
So I hadn't had an hourly rate job since college, so I didn't really know how it changed
over the years.
I did not know it was 2008 when they cracked six dollars.
That's really low.
It really is.
It's very, it's just not okay and it's still at seven something right now.
I think it's 775.
No, it's 725 actually.
I think it, yeah, that's the national minimum wage, right?
Yeah.
Again, some of the states are raising stuff slowly but surely, but that's the federal
one still.
Boy, this says Alabama doesn't have a minimum wage.
Is that right?
Is that possible?
Yeah, that's possible, man.
You don't have to look into that.
That's on the fly.
So yeah, we'll do a whole one on minimum wage for sure coming up.
But you said that the Fair Labor Standards Act was passed in 1938 and it still basically
governs child labor and one of the things that it does, Chuck, is it divides child labor
into agricultural and non-agricultural jobs.
And with agricultural or non-agricultural jobs, there's like a pretty decent amount
of protections like kids can't work in hazardous stuff until they're 18.
Things like blasting, mining, forest firefighting, that kind of stuff that if you're under 16,
you can only work a maximum of three hours a day during the school year.
There's some exemptions.
Did you see the thing about home-based wreath making?
Yeah, so you cannot, non-agriculturally, you cannot work if you're under 14 at all.
Like I could not have worked as a busboy at 13 supposedly, but I still did unless that
was passed since then because this thing's been ratified a million times or not ratified
but amended.
But yeah, if you're a child actor, you can work if you're under 14, obviously.
If you're a newsy, you can still deliver newspapers if you're under 14, and home-based wreath
makers.
It's a weird.
It is weird.
And not only is it home-based wreath making is exempted from child labor laws in the United
States, it has to be a specific kind of wreath that has to be mostly evergreen wreaths.
So if you're making wreaths and it has to be at home, if you're having your kid make wreaths
at home and they're not mostly evergreen, that's illegal.
And if they're making things out of evergreen that are not wreaths, like say garland, that's
illegal, specifically homemade wreaths that are mostly evergreen.
It's really, really interesting.
It's one of the most bizarre facts we've ever talked about on this episode on this show.
Yeah, I'm going to keep that one in my pocket.
Totally.
But agricultural though, they have very little protection, like almost shamefully little
protections.
Yeah.
If you're 16 years old and you live on your family farm, they can work you.
There's no limit on how many hours they can work you.
You can work jobs that the Department of Labor considers hazardous.
I think 14-year-olds also can work unlimited hours if it's outside the school day.
And then kids as young as 12, I think actually 12 and younger can work with parental consent.
Yeah.
Still.
Yeah, basically unlimited hours, or at least up to 72 hours, and that's during the school
year as well.
And as a result of this, 55% of child farm workers graduate from high school here in
the 20-20-ish.
Yeah.
In the United States, we're talking about, and 100,000 of them are injured on the job
every year, child farm laborers.
Yeah.
So they're trying to get all this changed.
Yeah.
They're saying, look, just take these things that we apply to non-agricultural jobs and
apply it to agricultural problems solved.
And that would solve a lot of problems.
I'm sure it would create a lot of problems that you and I are unaware of not being farm
folk, but it would solve a lot of the child labor problems that child labor activists
have issues with.
It would do nothing for the much more rampant problems that are endemic around the world
with child labor, where a lot of it resembles basically how America was with child labor
during the Gilded Age.
Yeah.
158 million kids are estimated to be the victims of child labor around the world.
The good news is that's down 30% from 20 years ago, but the bad news is that's a lot of kids.
And I think 71% of those are in agriculture, harvesting, fishing, herding, stuff like that.
But there are a lot of kids around the world that still work in coal mines.
Yeah.
That's too narrow for an adult.
It's too dangerous.
You go in there and do it instead.
And they'll work at wildcat gold mines, so they're having to separate gold with mercury.
So they're getting mercury poisoning at a young age, which really messes with you developmentally.
On tobacco farms in places like Zimbabwe, not only are they having to get nicotine poisoning,
they're also being poisoned by toxic pesticides that are used on the crops and stuff too.
So these kids are working in deplorable working conditions.
And there's just some really basic stuff that needs to change that would just free the children
of the world, the world around from what is essentially like indentured servitude right
now.
Yeah.
And there's four kinds of basic things that the ILO says we can do around the country.
And like you said at the very beginning, they're very pragmatic, they all make sense,
and they would really make a difference.
And the first is expand access to education, get kids in school, and get rid of fees to
be in school, and put them, if they're in a school situation, they're way less likely
to join the workforce.
That's what our friends at Coed do, they're like helping get kids off of family farms
and into schools by removing any barriers between them and in school.
Yep.
It's all through education.
It's a great, great organization.
Yeah.
What else?
And that's, by the way, the cooperative, I always say that word wrong, cooperative for
education.
Yeah.
So we've championed them for years.
And we got a little fun thing coming up that we're doing with them that you guys might
be interested in.
So stay tuned for that.
Yeah.
Let me see.
What's the next one?
Help families meet basic needs.
This could be a universal basic income, it could be monthly stipend, but basically so
families don't have to send their kids out to work to provide at the most basic level.
Yeah.
And a way that you can help that is through Kiva by lending, making micro loans to people
so that they can, they have the capital to grow from initially.
Yeah.
There's also like, if you make sure that adults are getting better wages and pay and their
rights are protected, it makes their children less likely to be forced into the workplace
to begin with.
Because it's not, again, there's not like adults, the world around saying, you know,
our kids need to be working because they're lazy.
Like their kids need to be working because the adults aren't getting paid enough.
And if you make sure that you're, you know, if you're a Western company and you make sure
that you're paying everybody a fair wage, there's a good chance that you can eradicate
child labor from your supply chain.
Yeah.
And then the last thing is just enforcement.
They can put all the laws that they want on the books, but unless someone's going to actually
work on enforcement, then it really doesn't matter much.
So that's really sort of the last step is funding for enforcement.
Yeah.
And Germany actually just passed a law recently that demands that its companies do due diligence
and examine their supply chains to see if there's child labor involved and to do something
about it.
That doesn't have like as much teeth as Human Rights Watch was saying that they wish it had,
but it's a good first step and hopefully the way that, you know, progressive nations
will start moving.
That's right.
Two things.
Big shout out.
I can't remember his name, but the young listener who was mowing the lawn for his dad and wrote
in to request this episode, I think, I think he prompted this episode.
So hats off to you, young sir.
I hope you can kick up your heels for a little while.
And then also this was indeed a Dave Rue's joint.
So thanks again to Dave for this one.
Right?
That's right.
Since Chuck said that's right, everybody means it's time for a listener mail.
I'm going to call this, I think it's just thanks.
Hey guys, riding in from Louisville, Kentucky to say how much I love the show, even though
Josh said the KFCM center was in Lexington.
I'll never live that down.
Your correction put a smile on my face, knowing that there are other stuff you should know
fans near me.
I work in long term care and use your podcast many different ways.
I help people with cognitive impairments set up their tablets and such for enrichment,
socialization and stimulation.
And one of the first activities I show them is how to access entertainment with educational
podcast.
Everyone can find something they want to learn about on stuff you should know.
Also help people find ways of remembering new information and use your short stuff episodes
for those with shorter attention spans.
And finally, my own enjoyment is a factor.
I listened to many different podcasts during my drive to and from work, but only stuff
you should know has the ability to get me into a different headspace.
I attribute that to Josh and Chuck.
None of these topics would be nearly as interesting without you guys.
I've cried and laughed sometimes both all in all of your episodes, even the really
mathy ones.
I feel you on that one, Chuck and Josh.
Yeah.
Oh, that was a dig.
Wouldn't a dig?
Are you a math guy?
No, no, but I like to think I am.
Okay, sorry about that.
The episode on snake handling is a personal favorite.
I appreciate an episode.
I love the show and everyone that works on it.
Thanks for keeping it going.
I hope to see y'all in Kentucky.
And that is from Ellie.
Well, thanks again, Ellie.
And if you want to get in touch with us like Ellie did, you can write us an email.
Send it off to stuffpodcast.ihartradio.com.
Stuff you should know is a production of I Heart Radio.
For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you listen to your favorite shows.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart Podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
Get a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever
have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever
you listen to podcasts.
I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want
to believe.
We find in Major League Baseball, international banks, K-pop groups, even the White House.
But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject, something completely unbelievable
happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas
are about to change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
Hey guys, I'm Kaylee Shore.
In my podcast Too Much To Say, I share my thoughts on everything from music to martinis, social
media, social anxiety, regrets, to risky texts, and so much more.
I have been known to read my literal diary entries on my show and sometimes I do interviews
with my crazy group of friends.
So if you guys want to tune in, you can hear new episodes of Too Much To Say every Wednesday
on the National Podcast Network, available on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you listen to them.