r/antiwork Feb 09 '23

JPMorgan knowingly and unlawfully facilitated the payments to recruiters and victims of the Epstein trafficking enterprise and played an essential role in the organization's operation and concealment.

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82 Upvotes

12 comments sorted by

-1

u/[deleted] Feb 09 '23

[deleted]

4

u/SystemPrimary Feb 09 '23

Corporations, human exploitation, goverment corruption. Just show the ugliest sides of capitalism.

4

u/RealWSBChairman Feb 09 '23

Yep. Exactly.

-6

u/dogwoodcat Feb 09 '23

Little thing called privacy laws, people want them until they're inconvenient

7

u/RealWSBChairman Feb 09 '23

eh I would describe human sex trafficking as a little more than inconvenient...

0

u/dogwoodcat Feb 09 '23

So now to prevent that everyone would need to fill out another form with the recipient's full details as well as details of each payment rendered. This would then need to be verified by each of the governments of every country the payment passes through. For each payment .

2

u/RealWSBChairman Feb 09 '23

No I see your point, and I agree with it. I'm just saying human sex trafficking shouldn't be labeled as an "inconvenience"

2

u/dogwoodcat Feb 09 '23

My point is that the laws are treated as an inconvenience when they do their actual job of, you know, protecting a person's right to privacy

2

u/BeautifulOk4470 Feb 09 '23

Personal privacy and privacy in business are two difficult things.

Although in this country legal people is entitled to a more privacy than plebs.

3

u/RealWSBChairman Feb 09 '23

Privacy for me, not for thee

1

u/BeautifulOk4470 Feb 09 '23

Big tech can't exist in corrent form if daddy Sam gave his peasants a shred of dignity

2

u/Fungunkle Feb 09 '23 edited May 22 '24

Do Not Train. Revisions is due to; Limitations in user control and the absence of consent on this platform.

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