Here’s why banning children from working is pure evil:

I grew up in a poor neighborhood where many families were even worse off than mine. Sometimes, when I looked for my neighbor friends to go play, they weren’t home because they were working at the supermarket three blocks away, bagging groceries at the cashier line. I joined them a few times because there wasn’t much else to do, but for them, it was something a bit more serious—it was a small but important source of income that they gave to their mothers. It was easy work, and customers appreciated it and tip them for their help.

Then, one day, someone decided to prohibit all forms of child labor. A few years later, the streets were full of kids cleaning car windows, others tried playing violin, singing on the sidewalks or simply asking for money, activities that noone find valuable.

The sense of pride my friend once had from earning a few pesos by providing a useful service had now been replaced by a naturalized shame of relying on pity from strangers.

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Labor is an essential right of passage to adulthood.

Denying kids to be productive is just evil.

When you put it this way it makes perfect sense! Selling lemonade or cutting the neighbors lawn is still alive and it creates a more entrepreneurial mind set.

Game is important part of learning process, but to really understand how market and entrepreneurship works, you must see how you bring real value to your counterparty.

It must be real laber and real market wage.

Still, selling lemonade to your neighbors is great game and it's at least something where to start.

To work for one’s family is a blessing. To toil for company profits is sacrilegious.

You know what they say about the most feared phrase in the English language...

"Hello, I'm from the Government and I'm here to help!'

I love Nostr because who knew I’d wake up this morning and zap a message of support in favor of child labor.

Get kids learning the value of work as early as possible. Too many have no concept and walk out of uni thinking the world owes them something. Hard lessons