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8/7/2025, 3:55:52 PM
>>512453567
I have two things to say to you
First, the idea that American data must only be handled on American soil is practically very complicated. Global companies operate within complex international networks, and for efficiency and innovation, talent and resources inevitably cross borders.
2nd, competition should be based on respect and fair opportunity. Targeting specific groups only weakens America's own growth potential.
I have two things to say to you
First, the idea that American data must only be handled on American soil is practically very complicated. Global companies operate within complex international networks, and for efficiency and innovation, talent and resources inevitably cross borders.
2nd, competition should be based on respect and fair opportunity. Targeting specific groups only weakens America's own growth potential.
8/6/2025, 9:46:58 AM
>>213525443
wrong photo
wrong photo
8/6/2025, 2:29:25 AM
>>213519205
You're right that fulfillment and social respect matter but you're still dodging the main issue.
No one dreams of picking apples, hauling cement, or collecting trash just like nursing used to be seen as low-status women's work
But when pay, benefits, and social respect improve, even the most overlooked jobs attract workers. It's not about the job itself, but a function of how society chooses to value and treat those roles.
So no, the problem isn't that "menial jobs" are beneath people. It's that we've spent decades making sure they stay beneath people underpaid, invisible, and disrespected.
If you want locals to do those jobs, treat them like jobs that matter. Because they do.
You're right that fulfillment and social respect matter but you're still dodging the main issue.
No one dreams of picking apples, hauling cement, or collecting trash just like nursing used to be seen as low-status women's work
But when pay, benefits, and social respect improve, even the most overlooked jobs attract workers. It's not about the job itself, but a function of how society chooses to value and treat those roles.
So no, the problem isn't that "menial jobs" are beneath people. It's that we've spent decades making sure they stay beneath people underpaid, invisible, and disrespected.
If you want locals to do those jobs, treat them like jobs that matter. Because they do.
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