tshwashere

tshwashere t1_ja97oj6 wrote

This looks to be Taiwanese from the traditional Chinese. Taiwanese loves to barbecue, and a high percentage of the populace are vegetarians.

Barbecuing vegetables are a thing. Grilled shitake mushrooms are freaking delicious (they taste similar to grilled portabella, but I think more flavorful). Grilled yams, eggplants, vegetarians imitation pork and fish are also a thing.

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tshwashere t1_ja8pnev wrote

Nope, nothing wrong with it and won't be misused. (Remembers the early Sony cameras with infrared that could see through clothes) Nope, nothing wrong here, move along.

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tshwashere t1_ja8o5kk wrote

It's a manji, a symbol of Buddhism. The manji denotes that this product is suitable for religious (Buddhist) vegetarians.

As others have pointed out, the swastika has a very noble meaning before Nazi's appropriation. Many Asian and Eurasian countries continue to use the symbol for its original meaning.

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tshwashere t1_j73a0s3 wrote

This will probably be an unpopular opinion, but I failed to see what is wrong with this.

There will always be shitty jobs needing to be done. And the way these shitty jobs get the workers are through proper compensation, and these workers get paid much more than other jobs available.

Before being called that I don't understand what they go through, I've been to Foxconn factories. Workers work in clean, A/C facilities with high-tech environment doing monotonous, boring as fuck jobs. But these people work jobs that are the envy of others, and there are always lines of workers dying to get into Foxconn because it pays that much better than anything else.

And as another redditor commented, factory jobs are the same everywhere, whether it is China or North America.

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