By the time I was leaving school, there were no factories. There was no industry.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Factories not what they used to be - they're all extremely high-tech.
Factories are the workplaces of our National Socialist racial comrades.
My parents had a factory, so I was linked to the textile and fashion industry.
I thus decided to leave the university forever and tried to find an industrial job in the United States.
I left school when I was 16; then I worked for my father, who was a welder. And I was a welder for three years, you know, welder of fabrication, metal 'cause it was a big industrial town, Sheffield. It was much steel and coal and stuff like that.
In the summer or fall of 1974, I read some books about factory farming, and decided that I wanted no part of it.
I came into the industry at a time when there weren't a lot of choices to what you could do.
As soon as I left school at 16, I worked in a factory making aircraft components.
For the longest time I was afraid I'd have to keep on working at the factories. There was a steel mill and a pottery; if you didn't go to college, you went to work in those places.
In the Soviet Union, no industry went under until they all did.