Cruelty IS the point.
Edit: A few fun thoughts on this:
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I love the hypocracy of the Florida GOP here in that they’re part of all the state’s rights horse shit they circlejerk themselves over when they don’t want to do what the majority of the country’s decided to make law quoting tyranny of big government. Local municipalities take that to heart and instead they get the tyranny of big state gov’t and told they’re not allowed.
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All of the workers being put in danger should walk off the jobsite during the proposed break times.
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The workers should file a lawsuit challenging this like the chucklefucks in the GOP do to everything they don’t agree with.
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Guillotine.
Make sure to properly wax and oil your device, don’t want to get rusty from the liquids or start warping from overuse.
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The headline is misleading. The bill bans requiring heat protection. We don’t appreciate clickbait here, even if DeSantis is a canker.
It’s not misleading when Miami Dade was looking at the most stringent heat protection laws in the country.
There was going to be heat protection. Instead the state government override the will of local government to ban it.
Yes… that’s exactly my point? The state is banning municipalities from requiring heat protection. It’s not outlawing air-conditioning. It’s outlawing mandatory air-conditioning.
You should realize how terrible it is that DeSantis is doing this. Countless workers will not have aircon during the blistering Florida summer as a result.
You’re being facetious about the AC, I get it. You also clearly have never done real work in the heat before. People will die because some chucklefuck corpo thinks 10 minutes and a glass of water is enough on a construction site in a Florida summer.
I legitimately thought the headline was saying AC would be banned. I am stupid.
Nothing misleading about it. It bans protections, not protection.
Gotcha. I did not know this meaning.
I’ll tell the admin
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Ron DeSantis ® has signed legislation barring local and municipal governments from requiring their own heat protections for workers.
The bill’s passage comes after the state’s most populous county, Miami-Dade, considered local heat protection rules that would have been among the most stringent in the country.
That proposal would have required employers to provide shade, water and 10-minute breaks to workers every two hours on days over a certain heat threshold.
“Instead of addressing the skyrocketing insurance crisis or protecting our workforce, the Governor chose to abandon millions of hard-working Floridians and leave our state even more vulnerable to the impacts of climate change,” Sierra Club Florida Political Director Luigi Guadarrama said in a statement.
“Instead of offering real solutions for working families, HB433 will endanger the health and lives of thousands of outdoor workers in our state.”
Another confounding variable is the challenge of incorporating noncitizens, including immigrants lacking permanent legal status and guest workers, into the data.
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