About 1970, age 16, I had a Summer job in a British steelworks dragging sheet steel through a big shearing machine. Gloves were considered too expensive to destroy, we cut out squares of sackcloth to cover the palms of our hands. If you missed the sheet first time, you did not try a second time as the blade was coming down again. I'm not joking. Did it for 6 weeks and never went back.
@@marinaldamendesmarinalda3651The government needs to stop their space programme and spend other countries monetary aid on the poor of India. The Indian people need to make their leaders accountable like other countries have done in the past.
I ran a Wysong 240 inch shear like that. Every day for about two hours, shearing giant 1 piece salt box spreader sides. Then Id form them on the pressbrake, then cut drill tap, mill drill and Cnc bore everything else. for 9 years ... And every painful step I take nowadays reminds me. To all of you, DONT DO MY ABOVE JOB i listed. Itll make you so much money in OT but youll never see family and be a wreck at 55. Worse then pro ball without the compensation.
Once I saw a homeless guy going house to house pulling cans out of the recycle bins and as I was watching him I thought of that phrase "A man's got to do what man's got to do" and as I was thinking that he actually said it out loud.
Yes, very hard, unpleasant and dangerous work, but these guys do what they have to do to feed their family. Very hard workers and very skilled, so good luck.
They probably rotate from boring parts to more technical parts as they gain experience. If only Americans were this industrious about recycling their trash.
@@xyz574 we have laws about workers being in dangerous situations . like breathing toxic gasses from aluminum we dont have to recycle trash when we can send it to third world countries .
@@dahabs123 I don't generate any garbage at all. Except for the rare toxic material such as broken Pyrex, dried paint. >> we have laws about workers being in dangerous situations . Not if Trump is reinstalled.
I agree. First thing that came to mind is how many jobs there are and how many of these jobs could easily be eliminated by robotics. Much safer, better tolerances, perhaps lower prices, but all at the cost of loss of jobs - so who really wins? Perhaps many would argue it better to breath dust and provide for their family than be homeless and/or destitute. Looking at some of the city blight (rust belt) in America gives you an idea of the cost of so called progress.
La vida no es dura...los macabros la convirtieron en esclavitud ....tanta tecnología y la miseria redunda.....el rey de las bestias solo produce miseria
Yes, it's nice to see them allowing children to work, it's never too late to start working in a factory without any form of protection as that will just make the end product more expensive.
@@nothing9220 My father always said - there but by the grace of (insert whichever god you want) goes I. I live by that. My God, your God, we agree on almost nothing - we as humans are so dysfunctional we have no right to even be in the universe.
I am a retired Engineer from Argentina and am *IMPRESSED* by the high quality product these skilled workers are turning out. Congratulations and much respect.
I am a retired Pulmonologist from the US and am DISMAYED by the high quantity of cancerous lung tumors these (soon to be dead) workers have. Sympathy to their families.
@@theivan8851 Mostly People Can't go to school Bcz they don't have Someone for support Like No family Father died And other family Issues these people work daily Only for 2$
That's because they don't allow us to use children to clean those machines. If only those stupid countries would allow us to use small children to clean machines for us. Just recently an American company got in trouble for having children clean those dirty food machines.
God bless these hard workers. They are helping to provide for their families, cleaning up the environment through recycling, and also helping their county as a whole. Good sustainable living.
@@Zulu369 yes, and the fact that if you're breathing in those fumes you'll die young from cancer. But oh yes, let's compliment those poor bastards on "how hard they're working for their family." This is called desperation my friend and it should not be this way. Wake up!
This is just the background of the spectacle that is the modern world. Large companies creating top quality material for underdeveloped countries to survive with their remains
It's really nice to see countries like Pakistan use up all of their resources like children, it's not like they will ever run out of those. This is why Capitalism is so great, it helps countries with a lot of money stretch that dollar just a little more.
@@theivan8851 Humanity is very expensive when you work in a country that capitalizes on exploitation. Humanity is usually reserved for countries with a healthy welfare system that incentivizes fat people to sit at home and live off of the government.
The sandals always get me. They've definitely seen shoes. They just have to have free toes. No matter the industry, no matter the hazards. It's flip-flops or nothing. And then I notice that the vat isn't full of detergent. It's nitric acid. Which just destroys athlete's foot. Smart.
I love the sterile operating room conditions the men are working in,state of the art protection equipment and respirators.. truly a template for fledgling business.
@@andyvitale6071 yes its safe and no i dont profit from them. your talking as if its any different in the west, ive done warehouse work in the west for amazon where you march for 12 hours like a slave, where your back discs degenerate from lifting boxes, where electric lights above your head give you cancer, where cardboard dusts in closed warehouse units give you lung cancer, where you have to wear a portable scanner on your wrist which gives you radiation and cancer but you dont mention that, you mention "flip flops"
I really feel bad if I think that goods mad under this poor conditions are sold in the western world for cheap. Those people are really hard working under very dangerous conditions. I think many of them will get thick or suffer from accidents they will have some day while working in those facilities. Just to fulfill our appetite for cheap goods. Hope some day the world will be a better place for all! God may bless this people.
They are probably not sold in the west. No one buys a pressure cooker made out of aluminum in the west. Stainless steel is the way to go (have one myself) since aluminum is weaker and degrades when getting on contact with salt. Honestly I have never seen a pressure cooker made out of aluminum in the stores over here. 😂
@@michaelevervall9889 maybe not the pressure cooker, but there are plenty of other things from clothing, electronics, leather goods and so on that are also manufactured under similar conditions. And those goods are definitely sold to the western market as well. For example there is a video called "L-Handle Socket wrench production". Those wrenches you can find in every large supermarket. Don't know if it comes from the same production line, but most likely they look all more or less the same.
What is most impressive is the total disregard for human life. Unhealthy environment, no safety equipment, only highly dangerous tools operated without the slightest precaution. Including children working in the process. Unfortunate.
Desde un país del primer mundo, se puede juzgar fácilmente la falta de medidas de seguridad, la falta de respeto al medio ambiente, incluso se puede criticar el trabajo infantil y las largas jornadas laborales. Pero desde la realidad de un país del tercer mundo como el del video, o de la mayoría de los países en Latinoamérica, las condiciones laborales son duras! Las prestaciones son escasas y el sueldo es apenas lo mínimo para poder subsistir. Pero son esas condiciones las que se viven en la mayoría del mundo y que a final de cuentas permite a esas economías poder subsistir.
As a retired Engineer I take my hat off these men and boys, they work very hard for not a lot in return. Amazing to watch what was a common sight in Britain not so long ago. No health and safety and a long queue of people ready to take your job if you fail or fall. China now leads the world in the production of almost everything from Tech to raw steel. India works very hard too and deserves the credit too, for a population that strives for a better life, and an ability to repair almost anything.
man these people are so hardworking, here I am worried that I have to type an assignment on my laptop in a airconditioned room.. these people makes me appreciate my own job more..
Oh stop. Pressure cookers get to 15 psi tops. Several other things have to fail before it will get to enough pressure to make that metal pot or top explode
так ещё и алюминий со всяким говном переплавленный, всё скидали в дыру. даже мешки в которых банки были, но на выходе вроде вполне симпотичные получились, хотя при ближнем расмотрении думаю что там везде огрехи имеются.
Impresionante el trabajo que realizan con maquinaria muy rudimentaria y lo más cruel es que no se les proporcionan equipos de seguridad y laborando en sótanos y supongo que el pago es mínimo. Mi admiración y respeto para estos y más trabajadores pakistaníes😢
Not that it can compare to the danger factor, but I started working a summer job at a fish plant when I was 15, putting fish into cans on a conveyor belt. On my first day I wore strap sandals. Decades later I'm still an amazing legend, never to be forgotten.
I look at products like this and wonder how it can be so cheap, but this video is a great example of how quickly you can whip through the steps of taking waste material to a flashy new product, boxed.
I was relieved to see that they were all wearing standard-issue safety sandals. I did hear, however, that they would soon be issued new safety loafers if they started working full 16-hour shifts.
I was a little bit taken back that they had to give the guy handling the boiling acid gloves. They could have saved so much time and money without this step..
في كل مره سأنظر لقدر الطبخ سأتذكر هذا الفديو وهؤلاء الناس في كيفية وهذا الابداع والأتقان الفريد احترم هذا النوع من البشر مكافح ومُجد في عمله الله يبارك في مالهم
Always my favorite part: throw thing on ground. Pick up from ground. Do another task, throw it back in the ground. Pick back up off ground. So much wasted time in that.
Time is cheap in this territory. Of more concern is the lack of protection from fumes, swarf, dust, noise, chemicals. These hard workers are not looked after.
Allahu Akbar - I respect and appreciate these people may Allāh ﷻ give them a high place in jannah and ease their life and give them happiness in both the worlds
Yes, you can make pressure cookers out of aluminum, you just have to make sure it's the correct thickness. Americans have even used aluminum for engines.
Helping the enviroment? WOW - look how they destroy the planet, with all that wastegas, its not filtered, with NO safety, nothing - they should stop destroying the planet ^^
You gotta be joking right? Helping the environment? are you serious? Companies who ACUTALLY help the environment have fume extractors on top of the furnace so that all these toxic fumes get filtered. Secondly they use aluminum because its easy to work with but in cookware its very controversial because in high doses its toxic. "The surface of aluminium pressure cookers tends to react with acidic foods during and after preparation. Hence, the use of aluminium pressure cookers can cause adverse effects on your health. Stainless steel is non-reactive to acidic and salty food items, making cookers made of stainless steel a healthier choice" Anybody claiming anything else is misinformed or is trying to sell you something, i am just saying how it is. Ever used aluminum cookware? After long use it starts pitting and it deteriorates, it looks like it gets holes in it. Where do you think that material goes? (Easy to work with regarding machining, melting down etc melting point= 660,3 °C (1220 F), in comparison stainless steel the melting point is 1510C (2750) over double.
This is the absolute opposite of helping the environment. Those cans would be 100x less environmentally damaging just piled in a bush or buried in a hole. Instead they are burning huge quantities of dirty coal with no fine collection, releasing aluminum vapours as well as any other chemicals from the can labelling, and risking their lives and health while doing it. They are working their asses off to survive, but this is the absolute opposite of helping the environment.
@@FireGodSpeed First thing i thought, that smokes coming from the plastic liners Burning off "real clean" and then the leaching from them. Im curious if the dip was to coat them but yeah no thanks!
@@shmodzilla I wouldn't buy aluminum cookware to begin with even if it was from a billion dollar company, and certainly not from a shady workplace like in the video, i mean JESUS christ, they throw everything on the ground like who gives a damn. And yea definitely was a coating at the end with the dip but who on earth knows what they are using. I mean look at the "assemble stations" they have, didn't even bother to clean the floor, straight handling it on the dirty floor, with dirty hands.. Maybe they didn't invent brooms yet, that would explain why every floor is completely covered in dirt. I get that machines get dirty over the time but when was the last time anybody wiped down a machine, they are CAKED with oil, dust and chips. That's years and years of neglect.
You will not use aluminium for ANY hwatinf process! Reasons: Aluminium is constantly loosing particles over time. Alum. is verry soft, way to soft for heatings. Alum. is danger for health.
Great. 1. First thing how metal is used in beverages. 2. Collection of this empty can gives many poor peoples their daily bread. They take effort roaming around and kindling the garbage and collect this. 3. These metals instead of lying as garbage and takes years to get into earth gives an industry employ many peoples work in their factory. 4. The life if this waste metal turn into a useful product for home. 5. It still has a recycle value as a whole to make any other product. God Bless. Industrial revolution is not just very rich peoples but even small but helps the country.