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ekk

ekk

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Rage jello

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  • V [email protected]

    Men mostly had office jobs. Office workers do not "do" much. Sitting at a table with a plastic box and a phone is not particularly strenuous. Their diets paired with excessive smoking, drinking and inactivity for most of their days caused the high death rate. Office workers, even now, do not "do" very much in comparison to other professions.

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    wrote last edited by
    #77

    When and where?

    S 1 Reply Last reply
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    • G [email protected]

      We're not talking about an average man. We're talking about a man whose wife puts unholy things in jelly. There is something wrong with that man.

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      wrote last edited by
      #78

      Or it could just have been the benzos

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      • rbos@lemmy.caR [email protected]

        I was reading the other day that Gen X technically got the highest lifetime lead exposure. Boomers didn't grow up with it.

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        wrote last edited by
        #79

        Boomers for sure did, leaded gasoline began being used before Boomers were even born.

        What likely leads to greater exposure is how many cars there were by the 70s and 80s. But lead exposure is cumulative over a lifetime. So I would be curious to see that research, as Boomers had roughly 40 years of exposure from 1950s to 1994. Gen X wouldn't have that much by decades.

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        • Y [email protected]

          The reason the workplace death rate for men is 100x that of women is because they are most certainly not doing "fuck all".

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          wrote last edited by
          #80

          More like "fuck safety" amiright?

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          • H [email protected]

            When and where?

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            wrote last edited by
            #81

            Mad Men, all seasons. Obviously.

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            • V [email protected]

              Men mostly had office jobs. Office workers do not "do" much. Sitting at a table with a plastic box and a phone is not particularly strenuous. Their diets paired with excessive smoking, drinking and inactivity for most of their days caused the high death rate. Office workers, even now, do not "do" very much in comparison to other professions.

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              S This user is from outside of this forum
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              wrote last edited by
              #82

              Even today, the workplace death rate for men is something like 20x that of women.

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              • kolanaki@pawb.socialK [email protected]

                Extra Sour Flamin' Hot Jell-O. 🤤

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                wrote last edited by
                #83

                This will give me nightmares I fear.

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                • N [email protected]

                  How old are you? 😆

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                  wrote last edited by
                  #84

                  Mid 40's. Not an office worker

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                  • V [email protected]

                    Men mostly had office jobs. Office workers do not "do" much. Sitting at a table with a plastic box and a phone is not particularly strenuous. Their diets paired with excessive smoking, drinking and inactivity for most of their days caused the high death rate. Office workers, even now, do not "do" very much in comparison to other professions.

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                    wrote last edited by
                    #85

                    Men did not mostly have office jobs in the 1950s and 60s.

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                    • N [email protected]

                      Well, yeah. Most people would much rather spend their time and energy taking care of their children than laboring away for someone else's profit. They may not phrase it like that, but raising children is far more self-fulfilling than working a job could ever be for most people. I imagine in most cases, people prefer tons of hard work raising a child when compared to working the easy cozy job, because at the end of the day the job is just a means to an end.

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                      wrote last edited by
                      #86

                      Speaking as a working parent (married to another working parent), it's worth pointing out that this dichotomy isn't mutually exclusive:

                      raising children is far more self-fulfilling than working a job could ever be for most people.

                      I agree with this! But I also would note that of the 168 hours in a week, being away from them for 50 of them (especially if they're at school anyway for 30 of them) doesn't really detract from my ability to do both big picture parenting (teaching life skills, moral values, building memories, being a role model) or even the small stuff that adds up (cooking meals, helping with homework, listening to them, talking to them, taking them to and from extracurricular activities, pursuing hobbies together, etc.).

                      So it's not an all or nothing thing. Most working parents can still raise children in an immensely fulfilling way, so the fulfilling part of a stay at home parent isn't actually exclusive to the stay at home parents.

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