The cost of fertilizers according to Shalsi
Mar 11, 2024 23:01:14 GMT -5
Post by bisal37 on Mar 11, 2024 23:01:14 GMT -5
Anyone who works at Top Channel, in Kashar, and anyone who is invited to the shows of this television, I believe has felt the terrible smell of the garbage recycling factory, a few meters next to the new building of TCH. I once asked how we could work so close to garbage and was assured that it was not dangerous. If I was still working at Top Channel, this assurance they gave me would have been enough for me. Believing a word of mouth, without ever entering that building, next door, where smoke came out every night. I acted like the indifferent majority that doesn't feel until someone speaks. I contented myself with a vague clarification.
Read also: "No dignity"/ Xhaferaj accuses Lulzim Basha: Playing USA Phone Number games with the government Horoscope, Tuesday, March 12, 2024/ What the stars have predicted for your sign And maybe that's right, maybe that recycling plant really isn't dangerous. Maybe those who built the TCH there knew more than me about environmental pollution. I also wondered why I hadn't seen any recycling plants near the BBC or CNN buildings, but then I fell short. I was working at TCH and had no intention of knowing more. What I did is from a man who makes news and processes opinion, treating his work as the center of the world, while everything else is a minor matter of life.
But what is essential in life is not work, nor salary, it is life itself. And my question is, now that I see things not from the inside but from afar: Does a recycling plant with added raw materials improve my life? No. Of course not. What about the lives of its employees? How much are they, how much are they paid? How many get sick, what job opportunities are there for them, if the factories where they work are closed? How will they raise the children? How will they live? I cannot answer these questions. But someone should clarify, not only what a factory owner loses, but what a worker loses, how many they lose and especially.
Read also: "No dignity"/ Xhaferaj accuses Lulzim Basha: Playing USA Phone Number games with the government Horoscope, Tuesday, March 12, 2024/ What the stars have predicted for your sign And maybe that's right, maybe that recycling plant really isn't dangerous. Maybe those who built the TCH there knew more than me about environmental pollution. I also wondered why I hadn't seen any recycling plants near the BBC or CNN buildings, but then I fell short. I was working at TCH and had no intention of knowing more. What I did is from a man who makes news and processes opinion, treating his work as the center of the world, while everything else is a minor matter of life.
But what is essential in life is not work, nor salary, it is life itself. And my question is, now that I see things not from the inside but from afar: Does a recycling plant with added raw materials improve my life? No. Of course not. What about the lives of its employees? How much are they, how much are they paid? How many get sick, what job opportunities are there for them, if the factories where they work are closed? How will they raise the children? How will they live? I cannot answer these questions. But someone should clarify, not only what a factory owner loses, but what a worker loses, how many they lose and especially.