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  • Well you might have heard of cars, highways and other such human created things that haven't existed during all that time.

    Here's one study where they examined the welfare concerns over unrestricted/unsupervised outdoor access (and other concerns). https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7070728/#sec5-animals-10-00258

    Also how are you mitigating the risk of “such dangers” for pets and children?

    I wouldn't allow a cat or a small child to roam around unrestricted. It just seems due to the inherent threats pretty irresponsible.

  • I pointed you directly to the 8-day workweek, which was the consequence of socialist reforms following the industrial revolution.

    And again it's not an achievement of socialist countries specifically. It happened (and originated) in the capitalist countries too.

  • And they've been dying in some horrific ways during that time. Now there's also a lot of extra, human caused dangers. A responsible pet owner wouldn't subject their pet to such dangers.

  • You're not really giving any actual examples of automation shortening the work week in socialist countries here, unless a socialist country for you is the UK in the 70's and unless automation for you is a maoists uprising against landlords.

  • Industrial Britian had an enormous activist labor movement. A slew of left wing thinkers and agitators emerged from the British academic scene, including Marx, Engels, Lenin, and Ghandi.

    Yeah because of how mega capitalist it was

    How are you defining "Capitalist Country" if you ignore all the socialist policies a country has implemented?

    Worker ownership of means of production, usually. Let's say Eastern Block, China, you get the picture.

  • That movement is not at all specific to socialist states. If you read a bit further it even says how it originated in industrial revolution Britain and happened all over the world.

    I'm not asking about socialist or social democratic or labour movement policies in capitalist countries, I'm asking about automation shortening the work day in socialist countries

  • Efficiency and low-cost comes with baggage too, so I guess both in a way. Efficiency and low cost good, but what is required to achieve those often sucks

    The second thing is undeniably bad