Jun
3, 2010 - Issue 378 |
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Why Do Workers and Farmers |
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At
the end of last month, a story out of Competition in such factories is fierce, since the international corporations are constantly attempting to drive down prices, so that, at the retail end, they are “competitive” with other corporations on price and features. The result is a nightmare for workers who must adjust their bodies to forced overtime, night work, and the constant badgering by supervisors to produce, produce, produce. Everything else is secondary to the production quotas. Also, there’s quality control. While enduring all of the oppressive conditions of an electronic sweatshop, the workers must produce a high quality gadget. The pressure is immense. A Taiwan-owned
business, Foxconn Technology Group, located in Shenzhen in southern
According to Web-based LabourStart, a dozen workers from 18-24 years old have committed suicide while working at Foxconn. Eric Lee, of LabourStart, pointed out that the thin profit margins of companies like this are driving workers to suicide, because in the end, the full weight of the global economy falls on their shoulders. “Workers inevitably suffer as a result,” said Lee. “Analyzing this vicious cycle of exploitation, we must realize that, while Foxconn holds primary responsibility in exploiting the workers, global brands like Apple are just as much to blame for this race to the bottom game.” The owner of the
factory, a Taiwanese billionaire, doesn’t take any of the blame for conditions
in the factory or for the suicides. He blames If they have not returned to the villages, they have become wanderers in the streets of the big cities, without jobs and often without any place to live. It’s a story that is found around the world in the developing countries and no one seems to have an answer to the grave economic problems. For example, here
in the While it’s true
that there doesn’t seem to be the same problem of suicides of workers
in the While unions in
The problem is so big, however, that only a small dent is made in the oppressive conditions, if any. If Americans and others in the so-called developed world are to be aware of working conditions in other countries - conditions from which they benefit - they need to self-educate and need to constantly check where and how their goods are made. Foxconn may be just one factory in It has been reported
over the past few years that some 200,000 farmers in Over a number of years, the farmers there have been told by advertising and by their own agricultural consultants and the government that the “new” seeds are the answer to their prayers. The “new” seeds are genetically modified (GM) and they require fertilizers and chemicals that are purchased each year and, each year, the farmers go deeper into debt to try to grow a crop. Monsanto is one
of those corporations and it has been working in developing countries
like The result has
been massive numbers of farmer suicides, even in a country with a population
that rivals So it is with
the workers in Foxconn in Workers are able to withstand incredible hardship and suffering, if they can see a benefit to their families and their communities in the long run. But, when they look realistically at their condition and that of their community and nation and can see no hope, that’s when they take the route to the ultimate escape. BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
John Funiciello, is a
labor organizer and former union organizer. His union work started when
he became a local president of The Newspaper Guild in the early 1970s.
He was a reporter for 14 years for newspapers in
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