That worked really well.the Beer Act of 1830 designed to break the monopolising power of big brewers while tackling an upsurge in spirits consumption
What does "sweater" mean here? Bosses of the workers mentioned in the previous sentence?As long as beer remains one of the main planks on the platform of the masses, wrote one pamphleteer in 1903, so long will they be governed by the monopolist and the sweater.
originally posted by Thor:
I like this part:
That worked really well.the Beer Act of 1830 designed to break the monopolising power of big brewers while tackling an upsurge in spirits consumption
I need a translation from English to American on this line, however:
What does "sweater" mean here? Bosses of the workers mentioned in the previous sentence?As long as beer remains one of the main planks on the platform of the masses, wrote one pamphleteer in 1903, so long will they be governed by the monopolist and the sweater.
But what a great sociology thesis paper if he meant the garment.originally posted by nigel groundwater:
originally posted by Thor:
I like this part:
I need a translation from English to American on this line, however:
What does "sweater" mean here? Bosses of the workers mentioned in the previous sentence?As long as beer remains one of the main planks on the platform of the masses, wrote one pamphleteer in 1903, so long will they be governed by the monopolist and the sweater.
I assume it means the owner of a sweatshop i.e. a place of work for low-paid and generally exploited labour.
That was my guess, but I was hoping (per CMM) for something a little more culturally definitive. Oh, well.I assume it means the owner of a sweatshop i.e. a place of work for low-paid and generally exploited labour.