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Happy Labor Day!
Pennsey 4-6-2 43 on northbound passenger train 857 at ERIE interlocking tower HO, Horseheads NY somewhere between 1946-1952. HD Runey image.
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untitled (labor)
2017_11
oil on linen
6" x 6" x 1 3/8" (15.24 x 15.24 x 3.49)cm
Matt Niebuhr
West Branch Studio
Una nocturna de las complicadas. Fusión manual de 5 fotos.
A complicated night shot. Manual blending of 5 shots.
I hope this man that as part of his everyday labors is to take down the flags
that fly at the San Jacinto Monument and Battlegrounds, where Texas won
their Independence from Mexico in 1836, was able to rest today on Labor
Day 2012 from his labors. Peter McGuire is considered by some to be the
Father of the Labor Day holiday. An Irish-American cabinet maker and
pioneer unionist proposed a day dedicated to all who labor at a meeting
of the Central Labor Union on May 18,1882 where he stated, “Let us have,
a festive day during which a parade through the streets of the city would
permit public tribute to American Industry.” He is described as a red-headed,
fiery, eloquent leader of the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners. This work-
free observance was intended to honor the workers of America by recognizing
their social & economic achievements, and rewarding them with a day of rest.
By making Labor Day a national holiday, Congress instituted an annual
celebration that pays tribute to those who play a part in the overall success,
prosperity and well-being of America.
(www.dol.gov/opa/aboutdol/laborday.htm)
May God bless each of you on this national day of rest here in the USA!!!
For Gaithersburg Labor Day videos and lots of photos see: www.areaguides.com/gaithersburg-labor-day-parade
photo by MontgomeryCountyMD.com
Child labor isn’t working.
Children are not a short-term resource for immediate economic relief and their education is an investment in their country’s (and family’s) future.
original file size: 16"x20", 300 dpi, quarter inch bleed.
Hope you enjoyed :)
It was a tradition for the Wasatch Mountain Railway to run steam doubleheaders on Memorial Day and Labor Day weekends. On Labor Day, 1976, Pacific Lumber Company 2-8-2 No. 35 and Union Pacific 2-8-0 No. 618 simmer at the Heber City, Utah servicing facility before commencing the afternoon journey down Provo Canyon.
A young Blair Kooistra can be seen with two cameras around his neck on the left side of the frame.
Finally, let's thank and honor all of us fans. It's hard work trying to get that perfect location for a photo or photos. You don't always have the cooperation of your fellow fans or the ddp's (damned daisy pickers). We travel great distances from home, subject ourselves to all kinds of inconveniences and crappy weather. Then there is the subject itself. It doesn't always come when the light is dead-nuts on or shows up when something gets in the way. Or, heaven help us, the camera equipment fails or gets blown off a tripod or falls in a... well suffice it to say, it didn't hold up to the elements. So fans, slap yourself on the back. Enjoy the fruits of your labor. You deserve an "atta-boy" for all that hard work!
Shooting the CNW leaving Council Bluffs (photo by Mike Raymond)
Original - Center Image Only
VIEW ALL SIZES TO CHOOSE THE ONE FOR YOU
This series is based on a World War II Poster, "Together We Can Do It!", created by the Office for Office for Emergency Management and the War Production Board.
The source for this series is an image in the public domain from The U.S. National Archives flickr photostream.
My first sunset photo in quite awhile -- about eight months, to be more exact. It was taken on State Highway 79, a few miles north of Florence, Arizona.
I am definitely going to enjoy this Labor Day holiday....it means I got to sleep in!! Our family is going to pack a picnic lunch and spend the day in the woods, which is very relaxing to me. I hope you all have a great holiday!
This is a kit conversion of Bandai's ARL-99B "Helldiver" kit. I found the idea of a military Labor in JGSDF use pretty conclusive, so I cooked up this close relative as a pure ground use Labor. So, the "Raijin" has become a light and highly mobile army support Labor for the Japanese Army during the Millennium era, its use would be observation/scouting, support for light/mobile ground troops and tasks which would call for high mobility and secrecy, e .g. as an enemy Labor/tank sniper...
The basic Helldiver frame was kept, but the conversion includes a different head and cockpit arrangement, as well as "normal" legs - the air brakes from the ARL-99B have been "closed", the holes PSRed away. I also added hand-held armament: a single-action anti-labor rifle for sniping purposes (a converted piece from a 1:144 Gundam RX-79) and a kind of machine pistol (from the same donor kit), kept in a hip holster, but detachable.
The 3-color camouflage scheme was inspired by JASDF fighter paint schemes - the SEA-style scheme used on RF-4E Phantom II's and F-1 fighters. I just got the colors VERY wrong - at the time I built this model, I just had a few print pictures of such aircraft, and I ended up with Humbrol 66, 98 and 121 as basic colors, the brown and green ended up much too dark. This looks a bit wacky, esp. for Japan, but when the model is placed into typical Japanese mountaineous landscape or into a forest setting, it fits surprisingly well!
The diorama was built on a 8x8" base and includes some rocks (made from plaster and water-based paint), a small pond in the front and a tree that is to remind of a mountain pine. I based the sloped ground on pictures from Japanese mountain sites.
Dans la rue Péllisson, en nous retournant vers la Place Jean Jaurès d'où nous venons, nous pouvons bien nous rendre compte de l'étroitesse de la rue et c'est là que nous découvrons cette inscription peinte sur le mur, Laboratoire ?
Hard labor in searing heat, yes even in December this high ceiling workshop was really hot, is what it is required to prepare the famous Calicut Halwa.
Labor Day or Labour Day is an annual holiday to celebrate the economic and social achievements of workers. Labour Day has its origins in the labour union movement, specifically the eight-hour day movement, which advocated eight hours for work, eight hours for recreation, and eight hours for rest.
A large American Flag flies from a crane at the construction site at I-435 and Renner Rd in Shawnee, KS over Labor day weekend.
"Rights of the children are not questionable.
Child labor is not negotiable.
Child labor is the worst form of modern slavery.
Whatever excuse people may have, employing kids full-time is child labor."
Recently I saw those words on a wall in Sarnath, at the entrance of of the place where His Holiness the Dalai Lama was giving his teachings.
This is the reason why it is also writen in Tibetan.
Yesterday was "World Day Against Child Labour".
Around 115 million boys and girls under the age of 18 are involved in hazardous child labour.
Making a change is possible.
In India both employers and trade unions are actively involved in the fight against child labour, especially when it comes to keeping children out of hazardous work.
There shouldn't be only one "World Day Against Child Labour", we should think about this everyday...
Anyone who sees or knows a case of childlabor and doesn't interfere becomes a sinner of complicity.
This year you are more than one million viewers to have visited my websites on Facebook, Flickr, Wordpress and Ipernity, I am humbly asking you to think about this madness.
There is a child in each of us, it is easy to remember that once we were children as well...
We need to work together.
A child must be in school only and we need to educate the mothers as well.
Child labor is really not negotiable.
(As I wrote many times this file with pictures standing against Human Rights Violations and Human trafficking gets many comments and mails from people who don't understand why I am raising my voice for this purpose.
The reason is that I should not have to justify those pictures nor my words as child labor is absolutly wrong and besides I truly think that there is no deal nor concession to make with providers or users of child labor.
Uploading those pictures is not a lack of respect to India nor to its traditions, the rest of my photostream shows my respect and true love for the country.
Of course I understand that this can be disturbing for those who are so used to have children working for them or to those for whom this is such a common thing that it became normal to see this without feeling anything wrong about it.)
Give a second thought about this...
www.ilo.org/global/meetings-and-events/events/world-day-a...
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What is child labor? Is it exploitative to employ children in factories in the third world?
I came across this boy in war-torn Blama, Sierra Leone. (According to this page, Blama was 90% destroyed in the Sierra Leone Civil War).
This boy was not in school, and he was probably one of his mother's several children, born to help share the burden of providing for their family unit. All he had at his disposal were these three chunks of coconut for sale. But I am sure the few cents he could earn by selling the coconut were of some value to his family.
I doubt the boy attended school, and I doubt that there were any laws preventing him from walking the village for endless hours, hoping to make a few cents. Would he be better off if he was employed at a factory creating sneakers at a more competitive wage? What if there were laws that enforced his working conditions and school attendance, would he be better off?
For Gaithersburg Labor Day videos and lots of photos see: www.areaguides.com/gaithersburg-labor-day-parade
photo by MontgomeryCountyMD.com