The Riskiest Mining Jobs In The World | Risky Business Marathon | Insider News

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 523

  • @allisonmccune9556
    @allisonmccune9556 Год назад +140

    That was impressive watching the workers throw the limestone bricks up on the truck with such precision.

    • @georgea7336
      @georgea7336 Год назад +11

      Most definitely these guys have some serious skills at their trades.......one would think they make more than just $6 daily!

    • @bradslone2409
      @bradslone2409 Год назад +2

      I was thinking the same thing. Lol

    • @wang3952
      @wang3952 Год назад

      😂

    • @PraiseTheLordyourGodJesus
      @PraiseTheLordyourGodJesus Год назад

      ‭‭Isaiah‬ ‭35:10‬ ‭KJV‬‬
      [10] and the ransomed of the LORD shall return, and come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their heads: they shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away. Jesus is coming back repent now! God bless.

    • @ctdieselnut
      @ctdieselnut 6 месяцев назад

      I do the exact same thing with firewood. I don't think I'm as good as these guys doing it all day every day, though.
      Having to do it for $6/day is what really caught my attention. Hats off to these guys. Hard workers.

  • @laurazeller9134
    @laurazeller9134 Год назад +220

    I'm really glad to have seen this episode. It's important that we don't forget the reality of the world as it currently is.

    • @budgetking2591
      @budgetking2591 Год назад

      Yeah but meanwhile their goverments are putting out propoganda about how bad life in Europe is, lol..........

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Год назад +6

      Эта реальность называется чертовый капитализм!

    • @boringbastard4920
      @boringbastard4920 Год назад +2

      So those driving the cart with blades have cut of several workers hands and feet. Even killed them by driving into and crushing their heads. I who also are surrounded by heavy machinery that could kill me . have to write a little lol here

    • @Truth-And-Freedom
      @Truth-And-Freedom Год назад +3

      This was made for children wasn't it??
      Proper condescending

    • @Aaron-zu3xn
      @Aaron-zu3xn 10 месяцев назад

      the problem with any economy is the rich have to cause artificial need for this dollar to make it worth what it is so they buy up mines fund them for less than living wage and keep the people working for less so their more is worth more these guys make millions each year they can afford $5/hr

  • @georgea7336
    @georgea7336 Год назад +31

    Limestone, a $70 Billion+ a year industry ....................but these MEN are paid $6.00 a day with potential $3 and tea stipends for their efforts? WTF

    • @reappermen
      @reappermen Год назад +8

      Most of the limestone industry is not in egypt. A single guy with an excavator is mining more limestone per day in other parts of the work than an entire work crew as shown here.

    • @juangomezfuentes8825
      @juangomezfuentes8825 9 месяцев назад +1

      Because they do it with their barehands. Dificult to compete in prices with heavy machinery.

    • @Ruminatinghafez
      @Ruminatinghafez 2 месяца назад

      I just want to hear about the beef mines

    • @ErikArmstrong-l1l
      @ErikArmstrong-l1l Месяц назад

      I know

  • @noahcarver6072
    @noahcarver6072 Год назад +46

    The lime mines in Egypt pre-dawn made me think of an artic environment.

    • @bruce_daddy
      @bruce_daddy Год назад

      it reminded me of Apocalypto when they arrived at the city and the guy spit up blood.

  • @JT-pg1lw
    @JT-pg1lw Год назад +29

    21:00...He says government-subsidized solar panels power the pumps, but the pumps they are using are not electric.

    • @zexer_ity
      @zexer_ity Год назад +2

      Dude that's India for ya ..... Always exceptional in good and bad both I guess

    • @lennart266
      @lennart266 Год назад +1

      Some generators start with diesel then run on electricity.

    • @MrReachashish
      @MrReachashish Год назад +1

      They asre for running other appliances in their huts . Earlier they need to bring wood along . now they can charge their phones, etc with the solar panels

    • @aprilboneski4639
      @aprilboneski4639 8 месяцев назад

      The number of panels shown would never be able to much enough water.@@MrReachashish

    • @aprilboneski4639
      @aprilboneski4639 8 месяцев назад

      What generators run like that?@@lennart266

  • @koriw1701
    @koriw1701 Год назад +36

    The way the salt mines are run reminds me of the old 19th century railroad robber-barons who would house and feed their workers at an insanely inflated price to keep them under the yoke of debt. Six families would live in a house meant for one which had one cold water tap and a single toilet in the basement. It was degrading and humiliating to work for them, just like these poor salt miners. Unable to change their fate.
    I now have a new understanding of the phrase: "back to the salt mines!" as a quip when feeling tired and/or overworked. I don't think that I'll be using that phrase anymore...

  • @portablebacon1
    @portablebacon1 2 месяца назад +6

    48:20 "the workers have been working in shifts to socially distance because of covid"
    Actually crazy that COVID is their main concern. What a clown world.

  • @PibrochPonder
    @PibrochPonder 4 месяца назад +4

    Did you know that China started constructing a whopping 70 gigawatts (GW) of new coal power capacity in 2023 alone? That’s almost 20 times more than the rest of the world combined! To put this into perspective, it’s like adding the entire power capacity of the UK to their grid just from new coal plants. While the world is shifting towards renewable energy, China is still heavily investing in coal, raising serious environmental concerns.
    Comparison Analogy:
    To understand the scale of 70 GW, consider that the total installed electricity generation capacity of the UK is around 100 GW. This means China’s new coal projects in 2023 alone are nearly equivalent to the entire electricity generation capacity of the UK, highlighting the massive scale of China’s continued investment in coal power .

    • @ryanehlis426
      @ryanehlis426 Месяц назад

      CO2 is actually very good for the environment, look up global greening.

  • @drawengrave01
    @drawengrave01 Год назад +15

    As a supervisor the most challenging part of the job was to enforce use of safety equipment. Workers would take off equipment every time I turned my back.

    • @Tribuneoftheplebs
      @Tribuneoftheplebs Год назад +1

      I was that worker. Its so nasty being covered in safety equipment in a hot ass warehouse. Dripping sweat everywhere. Make sure to provide cleaning wipes...

    • @Tribuneoftheplebs
      @Tribuneoftheplebs 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@Nunya58294 Better to just quit and work a better job honestly. Not worth being so dirty unless they pay very well

    • @willthomsen7569
      @willthomsen7569 10 месяцев назад +1

      I am also that worker lol. Safety is a racket. As you can see in this documentary, nobody ACTUALLY cares about the safety of workers, except the workers themselves. People see ways to create more bureaucracy, enforce high fines, and make tons of money (so they don’t have to work so hard)

  • @danrowlands3705
    @danrowlands3705 Год назад +28

    My hat goes off to these men ..... Their work ethic is tough .... and those boys loading the truck ...... wow ....Legends
    Sending 🖤 from Wollongong Australia

    • @GRAITOM
      @GRAITOM Год назад +4

      Just so unbelievable the wages these workers get paid for all their work. Companies have more than enough abilities to pay them an actual livable wage.

    • @RS-ls7mm
      @RS-ls7mm Год назад

      Until you really think about it. Its all donkey labor, zero effort to improve themselves. I bet there is not even a school. And I bet there is a local holy building that keeps them ignorant so they can't change the power structure. Education is the only escape from poverty.

    • @RS-ls7mm
      @RS-ls7mm Год назад

      @@GRAITOM Dead wrong. If you divide all the money in the world by all the people in the world then everyone is way below the poverty line. Its unfair, its cruel, but if you are religious its how god likes it apparently. You only move ahead by stepping on others.

    • @jyedawg2059
      @jyedawg2059 Год назад

      Why can’t they farm or hunt if they’re so scared of starving, so stupid

    • @BigRW
      @BigRW 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@jyedawg2059Yes you are.

  • @Clintoniumer
    @Clintoniumer 7 месяцев назад +4

    And people in the US complain when their Starbucks is taking too long….. take nothing for granted

  • @Dreddip
    @Dreddip Год назад +6

    "The solar panels power the pumps" - shows guy starting diesel pump. 🤣

  • @thogusdonatus4607
    @thogusdonatus4607 Год назад +11

    The sulfur miners are a special kind of human kind more tougher than normal people i can barely walk along whit 20 kg vest and they are climing a mountain whit 70 kg D:

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Год назад +1

      Это не самое плохое для них. Газы SO2 уничтожают их легкие. Это смерть.

  • @andylin6560
    @andylin6560 Год назад +40

    The indian coal miner could use charcoal, sand, and some mud/dirt to create a filter for her water. All the material are readily at her access, she just needs the knowledge.

    • @dasgerbil5189
      @dasgerbil5189 8 месяцев назад +3

      You know there is different between charcoal and mined coal arent you? I do not want to spoil it, but you need to find the info yourselves. Get a proper education and stop giving dangerous advice

    • @andylin6560
      @andylin6560 8 месяцев назад

      @@dasgerbil5189 Tell me you're an idiot without actually telling me. Charcoal can be made from simply burning wood. You're the definition of the Dunning kruger effect

  • @karnydhillon5188
    @karnydhillon5188 Год назад +5

    Sad thing is, this is what truckings started to look like in Canada/USA. Drivers making pennys. wages are being cut for the same job , and days of sitting unpaid in other provinces countries, well everything needed to live rent to food to gas to medicine is all going thru the roof

  • @pan.gremlin
    @pan.gremlin Месяц назад +1

    At 43:13 the line “we dare to die because we’re afraid of hunger” hit me like a truck full of boulders. I’ll never not be grateful that I’m privileged enough to live outside of poverty. Right now I’m too young to work, but once I do, I hope that I can donate to causes to get people in these jobs better working conditions.

  • @Sovereign_Citizen_LEO
    @Sovereign_Citizen_LEO 9 месяцев назад +1

    What's really mind blowing to me, is the people (pipefitters/ ironworkers) who built the sulfur pipelines into the walls of the volcano. Those people probably didn't live long doing that job.

  • @Sunny-u9p1l
    @Sunny-u9p1l Год назад +2

    I did not expect Egypt to be a part of the video, that's crazy, I hope Egypt gets more recognition!

  • @UnknownUser69698
    @UnknownUser69698 4 месяца назад +1

    Imagine if evil colonists came with their machinery, safety equipment, and safety regulations to create industry here building markets, schools, and housing 😭😭😭 i love to see the beautiful diverse natives with their culturally traditional forms of hitting rocks with metal rods

  • @budgetking2591
    @budgetking2591 Год назад +6

    Modern world trying to save the world from global warming, meanwhile in India they DOUBLING kole usage, lmfao.

    • @henlewis7788
      @henlewis7788 Год назад +1

      Smartest comment I’ve read for this subject.

    • @PibrochPonder
      @PibrochPonder 4 месяца назад

      Did you know that China started constructing a whopping 70 gigawatts (GW) of new coal power capacity in 2023 alone? That’s almost 20 times more than the rest of the world combined! To put this into perspective, it’s like adding the entire power capacity of the UK to their grid just from new coal plants. While the world is shifting towards renewable energy, China is still heavily investing in coal, raising serious environmental concerns.
      Comparison Analogy:
      To understand the scale of 70 GW, consider that the total installed electricity generation capacity of the UK is around 100 GW. This means China’s new coal projects in 2023 alone are nearly equivalent to the entire electricity generation capacity of the UK, highlighting the massive scale of China’s continued investment in coal power .

    • @Ruminatinghafez
      @Ruminatinghafez 2 месяца назад +1

      Thankfully there is no actual danger from this on a global scale, the fear mongering over changing seasons has been endemic for millenia

  • @marrissadonet698
    @marrissadonet698 Год назад +12

    I think we all in the developed world would be happy to pay more for our products if we knew the money would go to these miners pockets.

    • @mosuke5123
      @mosuke5123 Год назад

      And that will never happen. Just look at fairtrade, which is surprise surpirse a scam.

    • @reappermen
      @reappermen Год назад +1

      Most of the stuff shown here is not for the developed world. A lot of it is not worth exportin halfway across the globe, or actually cheapdr to mine in place. For example the coal in india, while the workers only get a tiny amount of money compared to workers in the us, the productivity due to automation is so much higher that the coal is cheaper per ton than the indian coal.

  • @actionjackson9554
    @actionjackson9554 Год назад +23

    We need to have a greater respect for our fellow humans.

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Год назад +4

      Наоборот. Нужно больше ненавидеть богатых собратьев. Кто наживается на труде этих рабочих.

    • @jeffthomas5291
      @jeffthomas5291 Год назад +2

      BOT

    • @actionjackson9554
      @actionjackson9554 Год назад

      @@jeffthomas5291 lol not not dude..kind heart gifts for you.

    • @actionjackson9554
      @actionjackson9554 Год назад

      @@kotnapromke no comprende..thanks I guess or not lol

    • @BigRW
      @BigRW 10 месяцев назад

      I have the utmost respect for the working man.

  • @DrumToTheBassWoop
    @DrumToTheBassWoop Год назад +5

    Here's me complaining about my 9 -5 5/7 day job. 😑

  • @adamm1633
    @adamm1633 Год назад +28

    Made me tear a lot of parts, how could people treat others like this

    • @zitronentee
      @zitronentee Год назад +2

      I think the Indonesian sulphur mining is more complicated case. The place is considered sacred by locals, that modern mining companies are not allowed to mine there. Thus, only locals can manually mine.

    • @stanfordleonard338
      @stanfordleonard338 Год назад +1

      They do it illegally

    • @burnthem6430
      @burnthem6430 Год назад +2

      @@stanfordleonard338 nope, there's no regulations in the Banyuwangi regency to regulate the sulphur mining....
      It's an complicated condition for the local and government... So It just "let it go"

    • @georgea7336
      @georgea7336 Год назад +3

      These are the atrocities society commits upon itself. The efforts wasted on outcompeting one another rather than working together to share the workload are astronomically ridiculous and not to mention EXPENSIVE in every conceivable way..... smh

    • @glennosmond4306
      @glennosmond4306 Год назад

      @@georgea7336 I worked with dangerous materials and methods for years and passed the cost of safety on to my clients, then while working on a farm I found it impossible to recover that cost. The difference was that farms are primary producers and like the humans in this video I now worked for very little because there was very little to go around. Society can do something about this by collecting money to ensure their safety, provide protection directly. We now have the network, I'm thinking something like a Gofundme. I also found that information on safety was lacking everywhere I've worked.

  • @k.sophiacavallo8858
    @k.sophiacavallo8858 Год назад +2

    Exploiting poor people should be considered a crime & companies profits seized. The $$ should be distributed along those who actually produce it, not those who do nothing yet are morbidly wealthy.

  • @ipadize
    @ipadize 10 месяцев назад +1

    one salt miner to another salt miner who looks angry: hey, why so salty?

  • @ronhilton4294
    @ronhilton4294 Год назад +32

    Hard to get rich without exploitation.

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Год назад

      Именно. На этом стоит капитализм.

    • @enzomaidana1945
      @enzomaidana1945 Год назад +1

      Really? Then how come Europe can keep their work ethics and still pay their workers a fair salary?

  • @janinewetzler5037
    @janinewetzler5037 Год назад +1

    If I feel like complaining about working any day, I will just say, well, I am not mining salt in Pakistan, sulfur in Indonesia or tin.

  • @lisocampos8080
    @lisocampos8080 Год назад +1

    Life has its humor. You have to stroke a stick in and out of your mouth to refine gems.

  • @davidluciemable3778
    @davidluciemable3778 Год назад +5

    I’m going to sound so ignorant, but what language is being spoken by the locals in the Himalayan pink salt episode? I wasn’t reading the subtitles but I heard a bunch of English strung together with a bunch of words I didn’t know

    • @zexer_ity
      @zexer_ity Год назад +4

      It was HINDI URDU and ENGLISH Mixed up 😅.... that's what most of the North Indians and Pakistanis speak

  • @chesthoIe
    @chesthoIe Год назад +1

    Let's collectivize labor here in the US more, and then export that. Let's give Amazon and Uber and Doordash workers a union.

    • @RS-ls7mm
      @RS-ls7mm Год назад

      Not a student of history I see. The US tried that, wages increased for a while, but unions overreached. They made the US worker the most expensive workers in the world. So the businesses all left to other countries. Now unions are nearly extinct because no one can afford them and almost all manufacturing is gone.

    • @chesthoIe
      @chesthoIe Год назад

      @@RS-ls7mm So why didn't deregulation lead to a rush back to manufacturing in America?

    • @RS-ls7mm
      @RS-ls7mm Год назад

      @@chesthoIe Maybe you haven't noticed but even without unions the democrats are still in charge. The minimum wage is so ridiculously high the US isn't even close to being competitive. I guess they didn't teach economics in your school.

  • @brendtpederson2376
    @brendtpederson2376 7 месяцев назад

    Much respect to the lady carrying coal. Americans have no idea about surviving. Salt of the earth people

  • @Swingin_wit_Willy
    @Swingin_wit_Willy Год назад

    Nice work Glenno, thanks for sharing mate. It's great seeing you out there while I am out of action..
    Nice chunky gold mate, though that rise in water as well as the fact it was pulsing out of the bedrock was a good warning to get out. Would hate to be caught in a flash flood.
    Good Luck & Happy Prospectin' mate.

  • @ritzoriginal
    @ritzoriginal Год назад +4

    Did you know the word "salary" comes from Roman times when salt was so valuable that Roman soldiers used to be paid with salt instead of money?

  • @B00Fmaster5ooo
    @B00Fmaster5ooo Год назад +1

    They act like every country on Earth doesn't risk there lives mining.

  • @simonanderson3961
    @simonanderson3961 Год назад +2

    50:19.... Hmm kinda crazy. Seems you could redirect either the gas or the condensed sulfer through pipes to the top and skip a couple of steps... I guess huge upfront cost

    • @henlewis7788
      @henlewis7788 Год назад +1

      Sulfur can be synthesized anywhere and has a way higher purity than the illegal sulfur they are mining it’s obsolete unless sold for pennies. It is terrible that the only means of making money is by doing that.

  • @pestilenceart1386
    @pestilenceart1386 Год назад +1

    I wonder if someone has set up a charity where we can give some of these hard workers better equipments and fight for their rights to a safer environment.

  • @davidweather3267
    @davidweather3267 Год назад +1

    Pair of Wellington boots and a pair of sun glasses, job done

  • @ANTIAVISOSPORFIN-ii1cu
    @ANTIAVISOSPORFIN-ii1cu 8 месяцев назад +2

    This Situation Has Great Importance In Our Lives! Sadly The Narrator Voice Is Not Accorde To The Documentary... She Must Use Her Voice For Other Simplicities In The Life!

  • @abel5925
    @abel5925 Год назад +5

    God bless these workers

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 Год назад

      Honestly ? just where is your god you foul person

  • @AlpineTrails
    @AlpineTrails Год назад +1

    So sad to see how these people are forced to risk their lives and work to exhaustion for a few dollars a day and we pay that for a bread.

  • @looking4leasuretime
    @looking4leasuretime Год назад +2

    Thank-you for this reminder and eye-opener.

  • @johnmenzies6865
    @johnmenzies6865 Год назад +4

    They have to earn a living and they have been doing so for thousands of years. HOWEVER the real story of mining is very very different. Large industrial scale western mining is NOT dangerous. It far less dangerous than for example construction where death and injury is surprisingly common. A single injury gets reported and investigated no matter how minor. A death is a very grave issue and entire mining operations are closed by the companies during investigation. Only a small portion of teh world's minerals are derived from artisanal miners and jobs with western mining companies in developing countries are highly sought after as they pay more, the team members are all treated with respect and health and safety are paramount. In addition all western companies participate in community programs often in the same communities where the team members live, creating pride in their business.

  • @romsnsama23
    @romsnsama23 8 месяцев назад

    I'm from Gujarat,India...been looking at those salt pans since i was a kid ..we can find them on both the sides of Highway when we pass through those regions...

  • @thewerst8346
    @thewerst8346 11 месяцев назад +1

    The situation of these miners is grim and could easily be improved with different incentives in the markets. That being said, the reporter and the portrayal of these conditions is obviously oblivious to hard labor and see the world through rose lenses. It sounds privileged and unaware of the day to day for many in labor jobs. Work is hard and you better be hardcore to build a society.

  • @barba928
    @barba928 Год назад +8

    The production and details in this video are really top notch, well done!

    • @Truth-And-Freedom
      @Truth-And-Freedom Год назад +1

      And the way the narrator talks to you like you are 5 ....
      🤣👍🤡

    • @benlotus2703
      @benlotus2703 Год назад

      LoL@@Truth-And-Freedom

  • @brilliant-handle
    @brilliant-handle 8 месяцев назад

    Vast majority of mined minerals are done with heavy equipment. These are people just trying to survive but they cannot compete with actual commercial operations. That's why they are paid so little.

  • @WheeledHamster
    @WheeledHamster Год назад +1

    Can't complaint about my life anymore.

  • @kds365
    @kds365 Год назад +1

    Apparently the pay is worth the risk. Dont poor shame them.

  • @mousehorn461
    @mousehorn461 Год назад +5

    Sea water or salt can heal wounds faster and help cure skin disease when use properly. Ironically, too much exposure to salt has the opposite effect

    • @kotnapromke
      @kotnapromke Год назад

      Для легких это очень полезно. Для дыхания. У кого кашель или бронхит.

  • @AaronSchwarz42
    @AaronSchwarz42 9 месяцев назад

    Ironic given that huge amounts of commercial sulfur are produced by oil refineries that are forced to remove sulfur from diesel on-road fuel //

  • @AaronSchwarz42
    @AaronSchwarz42 9 месяцев назад

    They could install a shroud over the cutter wheel to keep the dust from being chucked up into the air like that & reduce the noise emissions

  • @_el_louie_213
    @_el_louie_213 Год назад +1

    i’ve subscribed early on with many cryptotubers.. along the i’ve unsubscribed from them all for one reason or another.
    you’re the only one that made the cut.. i trust your word.

  • @Lex5576
    @Lex5576 Месяц назад

    All of the people covered in this video are trapped in their own kind of hell. Stuck doing hazardous, back breaking work day after day after day, and making themselves sick in the process. The sickening part is that's it's all because of the greed of others who take advantage of them. The one that breaks my heart the most is the girl mining coal. She may not live to see 30 if she doesn't get away from that mine.

  • @dameronlyon6740
    @dameronlyon6740 Год назад +3

    I think every American should see this.While our less talented ball players make millions these people are literally killing themselves to feed their families

    • @mirrage42
      @mirrage42 Год назад +2

      People in the US are struggling to feed their families too. Luckily we do have a few laws that protect workers, even though many lawmakers are trying hard to eliminate those.

    • @dameronlyon6740
      @dameronlyon6740 Год назад

      @@mirrage42 too many lazy people in America that know they can sit and draw a check(walefare)for doing nothing while others slave to support them..Not all are lazy some are just misfortunate but decifering the two is a hard decision to make..

  • @paulaubin510
    @paulaubin510 Год назад

    That's why Canada should have a large coal industry

  • @tuna22lm
    @tuna22lm 2 месяца назад

    And a lot of us in the western developed world think we've got it ruff. This is truly heart breaking to see what some people in other countries have to go through just to be able to live from one day to the next their lives will never get any better only worse health wise and financial it is so sad to see that is going on in our modern world and that there is no help from the governments to save these people from certain death at a young age.

  • @teclabs57
    @teclabs57 Год назад +1

    Why are they wearing flip flops 😐

  • @darreno9874
    @darreno9874 Год назад

    People who claim to be poor in the West don't know the meaning of the word, and say the word work to them and they will have a panic attack. God bless these people who work so hard just to survive.

  • @Grateful.For.Everything
    @Grateful.For.Everything Год назад +1

    This was so well done 👏👏👏👏 what an exploration, and most importantly what a revealing journey!!

  • @jairososa3114
    @jairososa3114 Год назад +1

    Я родился в Финиксе, штат Аризона. Оба моих родителя из Мексики. Я хочу поехать в Россию, это первое, что есть в моем списке. Я люблю холод, хотя живу в пустыне. Я, вероятно, не свяжусь с тобой, Эли, и, вероятно, не увижу этого. Мечта сбудется, если я получу от вас ответ. Я большой поклонник и хотел бы поехать в Россию и встретиться с вами.

  • @alexzruss7257
    @alexzruss7257 2 месяца назад +1

    and what you want us to do? be police of the world and demand them to stop working? or what is this BS documentary suggesting?

  • @AaronSchwarz42
    @AaronSchwarz42 9 месяцев назад

    They could start at the limestone mine much early pre-dawn like they do in Japanese bakeries, before the Sun exposure a full, then take a break in the middle of the day in shaded areas to cool off, then start up again during the sunset into dusk & twilight, with a split shift // to reduce solar burden //

  • @Humuhumunukunukuapaa
    @Humuhumunukunukuapaa 6 месяцев назад

    "Pumps run off solar panels" but clearly shows they're running on diesel... 21:05

  • @Charly-ie8ei
    @Charly-ie8ei Год назад

    You should make an educating video for those exposures to local public

  • @TOPGNBR1
    @TOPGNBR1 7 месяцев назад

    I will never ever complain about my job ever again

  • @armouredthug5154
    @armouredthug5154 Год назад +1

    take from this what you will - i certainly feel alot better about my own situation after watching this,

  • @jonathanstrickengloss3287
    @jonathanstrickengloss3287 Год назад +2

    They could boycott there jobs causing the price to go up.

  • @DanielAusMV-op9mi
    @DanielAusMV-op9mi 6 месяцев назад

    Can we just send them protective equipment? We should have a crowd-sourced project which gives these people safety equipment

  • @MmmHuggles
    @MmmHuggles 9 месяцев назад

    The pink salt is just salt with some impurities. No point in paying more for it than regular rock salt.

  • @joeycormier7489
    @joeycormier7489 Год назад +1

    Surly masks would stop ALL the particles that you can see …. Right? So you think masks can stop particles you can’t see?

  • @InumanNa
    @InumanNa Год назад +6

    I like the fact they work hard and don't complain about minimum wage. 1,000 tons of salt a day. I'm watching this at the drive thru waiting on my cheeseburger.

  • @vickythefist7062
    @vickythefist7062 10 месяцев назад

    Those lamps are beautiful .

  • @platin2148
    @platin2148 Год назад +1

    The working conditions are very bad. But it also feels like they also can’t afford to improve the process which is really bad.
    But does this mean with the now reduction of oil and gas especially the sulfur will have to be mined again like this?

  • @jhonathanulysse4535
    @jhonathanulysse4535 5 месяцев назад

    The industry hit 70 billion but yet still people are being paid$ 6.00 a day!!!!

  • @DJDarkGift
    @DJDarkGift Год назад

    They should seriously wear facemasks doing that coal mining. My grandfather died from Black Lung as a retired coal miner and I must say it's not a nice death. Slava Ukraini 🇺🇸❤️🇺🇦

  • @TyeisLopez-b5r
    @TyeisLopez-b5r Месяц назад

    Waterworld was exordinate movie to make, to show its a reality is superb. I bet they've got it on lock now..... ❤️

  • @kcraig51
    @kcraig51 Год назад

    "...government subsidized solar panels to power the electric pumps..." Next picture shows them cranking up a diesel engine. Green energy subsides at work. LOL

  • @inabsentia439
    @inabsentia439 Год назад +2

    Look at the heavy duty machines needed to cut lime stone today, a fairly soft stone. And you want us to believe the ancients built the Pyramids with only cooper hand tools?

  • @Truthiscrystalclear
    @Truthiscrystalclear Год назад +1

    All mining is dangerous, even minerals used in batteries, like lithium or cobalt.

  • @TT-dp8qh
    @TT-dp8qh Год назад

    i don't really know how good of those minerals are but this salt has a lot of sand in it!

  • @mooglemy3813
    @mooglemy3813 Год назад +2

    Can't believe the conditions they work in just to feed their family.
    Can't say much else. What the hell am I going to say anyway. Glad I watched this nevertheless.

    • @henlewis7788
      @henlewis7788 Год назад

      Forget the pay scale which from their country to ours inflation and cost of living probably evens it out, but how do or did you feel about Americans that were doing the exact same thing. I understand the need to eliminate the use of fossil fuels as much as possible and the need to attempt to eliminate green house gases but in America people worked just as hard at the same jobs including myself and being a 23 year underground coal miner and then seeing my country treat us like bugs that needed to be exterminated. I do hate any way in which people are mistreated and underpaid but every reply about this is nothing but how terrible it is and how wrong I never heard anything that even sounded like remorse when Americans doing the same jobs were threw away like trash and then talked about as if we had committed crimes against people that turn around and feel so terrible for anything else that doesn’t even directly affect themselves

    • @FransceneJK98
      @FransceneJK98 10 месяцев назад

      Be mindful what you buy and how much

  • @Nicholas-g7m
    @Nicholas-g7m 7 месяцев назад

    We dare to die because we fear to starve. Sulfur miners are a rare breed!

  • @NODARKNESSNOLIGHT
    @NODARKNESSNOLIGHT Год назад +1

    Why don’t they use water on the saw blade for the limestone? I worked in the flagstone business and we cut cubes of stone and used saws with water too cool the blade and gets rid of most of not lol the dust? Does it ruin the limestone? Or are they just too poor?

    • @nikkilovesrocks
      @nikkilovesrocks Год назад +5

      Water is a resource... re-source!
      Get it. Get it to the mine. Store it. Use it. Re-place it. Pay for it.

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 Год назад

      BECAUSE IT COSTS MONEY

    • @NODARKNESSNOLIGHT
      @NODARKNESSNOLIGHT Год назад +1

      @@gowdsake7103 damn mr crabs chill, I’ll get back to them kraby patties.

    • @FransceneJK98
      @FransceneJK98 10 месяцев назад

      Water is a rare commodity in the Sahara desert so I’m guessing that’s why. They’d have to transport water which needs more workers and costs more money.

  • @mackenzieleopeng4272
    @mackenzieleopeng4272 7 месяцев назад

    Owners will spend as little as possible for safety. Thanks God we have greedy lawyers in America who would sue these owners into oblivion.

  • @ronaldlogue1516
    @ronaldlogue1516 Год назад +1

    Who ever owns this channel, please get ahold of me please. Thank you.

  • @richardngarirena245
    @richardngarirena245 Год назад

    feel so sorry for the people you would not work in the West and risk your life like that

  • @popthatbeep
    @popthatbeep Год назад +1

    This can only be improve if we abolish paper money financial system where one side can dictate and pay less with their difference in money exchange. If money were to backed by gold, these hardworking nations would be very rich and can upgrade their working conditions and safety.

  • @j-sin3344
    @j-sin3344 3 месяца назад

    $11 a week ?? I feel horrible its sad people work this hard for that. Id give her 11 dollars a week for nothing.

  • @lexandr911
    @lexandr911 9 месяцев назад +1

    дуже шкода цих трудолюбивих людей

  • @JohnSmith-fq7hj
    @JohnSmith-fq7hj 3 месяца назад

    Why do I feel like cobra commander is the owner there in the limestone mines lol

  • @dmgranger90
    @dmgranger90 7 месяцев назад

    ...If they're having to go back for a loan to the trader who's buying their salt, then he isn't paying them enough for it. He knows exactly what he is doing.
    It's amazing how the willingness and eagerness to exploit those less fortunate than yourself is the only way for some people to become successful in life.
    The traders can explain to the people what's happening, crunch some numbers, and pay them a little more per ton while still making plenty of money for himself. Greed is a disgusting thing.

  • @कॉम्पिटिशन_एग्जाम

    He said 84 minerals and yells only sodium potassium calcium lol hahhaha

    • @drmustjab
      @drmustjab 2 месяца назад

      Sodium Potassium Calcium is major portion. Other 81 are in minute quantities so these 81 high level can damage human body.

  • @InfernusdomniAZ
    @InfernusdomniAZ Год назад +1

    Why is the lady in the last segement narrating like she is doing asmr

  • @davewave1982
    @davewave1982 Год назад

    Subtitles are way too quick to read.

  • @Andy-lr1gx
    @Andy-lr1gx Год назад

    Thats a cool way to store salt. Out of salt? Just use my lamp 💀

  • @retsamyar
    @retsamyar Год назад

    the woman mining coal makes not much less then someone working for gov required hour level in the us... the cost of a pair of sneakers.

  • @ElectricInevitability
    @ElectricInevitability Год назад

    So whose fault is that? They need to strike like our workers did.. the bosses didn't decide to make things safer on their own ...they were FORCED.

  • @janeyluper
    @janeyluper Год назад +2

    Who are the mine owners? I just know the trail will lead up to US billionaires and corporations. Name names

    • @henlewis7788
      @henlewis7788 Год назад

      What mine owners their all doing what they do for themselves illegally so maybe changing hands to others could be looked at as leading somewhere but their actually self employed so if you actually pay attention there are so many legitimate things to be concerned with but nobody cares just want to blame.

  • @Chulitatr
    @Chulitatr Год назад

    The modern-day slavery is rampant and it's repugnant that it's allowed to happen.