Yeah, well, again, New Zealand, being an English-speaking country that’s still loyal to the crown actually has a government much more limited than our own, if you think about it.
I don’t know how much longer I can give some of these comics. They are supposed to be gag-a-day cartoons and they feel a need to shove politics down my throat. And I LOVE editorial cartoons… on the editorial page. Here I just want a chuckle.
I have seen both. Field hands are sprayed with poisons, and construction is in the top five in death or permanent injury on the job. Plus the danger that when payday comes around, instead of money, INS carts them off to a prison without a trial and boss man pockets the wages.
I see Donnie settled on the Chump U. lawsuit for 25 million. Two questions. First, will he pay up? And second, if he does pay, who will he scam to get the money? Hail to the thief.
Sure it’s against the law, and the law prescribes a fine for killing workers, the corporate tax law considers it a deductible tax write-off. Just the cost of doing business.
,
Night-Gaunt49
The German and Italians locked up were citizens of those countries. I don’t recall any US citizens of the one-million member German-Amercan Bund being locked up unless it were for some other reason, like sabotage. Yet native-born US citizens were imprisoned for the crime of having a Japanese grandparent. There was one exception, those in Hawaii retained their freedom because if they were locked up, the islands’ economy would have collapsed from lack of workers. The heavily Japanese-ancestry Territorial Guard, plus some released from the concentration camps on the mainland, formed the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, the most decorated unit in the US military in WW-II. The whole concentration camp scheme has been formally declared unconstitutional, not that The Leader cares about constitutional law.
railwayman001 almost 8 years ago
Yeah, well, again, New Zealand, being an English-speaking country that’s still loyal to the crown actually has a government much more limited than our own, if you think about it.
gammaguy almost 8 years ago
Right now, I think they’re more worried about the indignant species.
bama1fan92 almost 8 years ago
How much longer is it gonna take for this strip to catch up?
TossedSaladCartoon almost 8 years ago
I don’t know how much longer I can give some of these comics. They are supposed to be gag-a-day cartoons and they feel a need to shove politics down my throat. And I LOVE editorial cartoons… on the editorial page. Here I just want a chuckle.
hippogriff almost 8 years ago
fbjsr
I have seen both. Field hands are sprayed with poisons, and construction is in the top five in death or permanent injury on the job. Plus the danger that when payday comes around, instead of money, INS carts them off to a prison without a trial and boss man pockets the wages.
peabodyboy almost 8 years ago
I see Donnie settled on the Chump U. lawsuit for 25 million. Two questions. First, will he pay up? And second, if he does pay, who will he scam to get the money? Hail to the thief.
hippogriff almost 8 years ago
fbjsr
Sure it’s against the law, and the law prescribes a fine for killing workers, the corporate tax law considers it a deductible tax write-off. Just the cost of doing business.
,
Night-Gaunt49
The German and Italians locked up were citizens of those countries. I don’t recall any US citizens of the one-million member German-Amercan Bund being locked up unless it were for some other reason, like sabotage. Yet native-born US citizens were imprisoned for the crime of having a Japanese grandparent. There was one exception, those in Hawaii retained their freedom because if they were locked up, the islands’ economy would have collapsed from lack of workers. The heavily Japanese-ancestry Territorial Guard, plus some released from the concentration camps on the mainland, formed the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, the most decorated unit in the US military in WW-II. The whole concentration camp scheme has been formally declared unconstitutional, not that The Leader cares about constitutional law.