Sept 15, 2011 - Issue 441 |
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The Hershey Factory
and State Department
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In “Letter to My Nephew on the One Hundredth Anniversary of the Emancipation,” the Uncle James warns the younger James, “you can only be destroyed” if you believe “that you really are” what others tell you are. “Trust your experience. Know whence you came.” I remember being terrified of bullies. My arm, squeezed too tightly by another elementary classmate, or the proverbial foot on the toe, obligated me to stand still, to feel the grip and to recognize the sudden palpitations in my chest and the diminishing availability of air. I had to listen and not act - in even self-defense. These fellow children frightened me. I felt small, and I was. I felt weak, vulnerable, unprotected, and I was. The overbearing and stifling seemed inhuman, dishonest and unnatural. I thought I was in danger those moments, but I was not. In The Hershey
factory at I agree with
the NYT writer Julia Preston. I think they did learn what life
is like in the Ordered to lift
heavy boxes and pack “Reese’s candies, Kit-Kats and Almond Joys on a
fast-moving production line,” the students discovered “deductions for
fees associated with the program” and rent, writes As part of the
preparation to teach in In a country
like In the The 400 foreign students dared to question the sincerity (bless them; they learned quickly!) of the U.S-based corporation Hershey’s Chocolates. The walkout at the Hershey plant is “the first time that foreign students have engaged in a strike to protest their employment,” but it is not the first time the State Department has received complaints from students participating in this program. According to the New York Times report, a spokesperson for the State Department, John Fleming, is aware of the problem and is “investigating” it. Rick Anaya, Chief Executive of the Council for Educational Travel, U.S.A (State Department), claims he is not receiving “any cooperation” from the protesters. “‘We are trying to work with these kids. All of this negativity is hurting an excellent program. We would go out of our way to help them, but it seems like someone is stirring them up out there.’” Hmm…a second-year
medical student from “‘The tipping
point was when we found out about the rent,’” says Godwin Efobi, a 26-year-old,
third-year medical student from But someone
is stirring them up! All this negativity is damaging to the image
of the program! (I think this line of thinking has been overheard
many times here in the Hershey, the
towering Hershey Company near Let us see…does
this response remind Americans of those once very bad bullies of the
defunct Cultural
exchange program! No! Get the job done, we’ll barely pay you, and “you’ll
take it and you’ll like it” because, Bogart-style, we have a foot on
the toe! This is Bullies grow
up addicted to the skillful generation of power by inducing fear among
the masses. THE Bully itself stirred up the students! The empowerment
of the increasingly unrestrained collective of the “corporate person”
is the But this is
the good news - the students said, enough and committed themselves to
action! Are the students in danger now? Yes! But they are free
- a state of being human many Americans believe they are experiencing
but may never really experience! This is the irony of living free in
the Hershey ducks and runs for cover while the State Department rises to defend the roughshod operation of one of the corporations it kowtows to in the first place. But note - it does so only if this corporate-roughshod operation is in danger of being exposed to the American public. These menacing “kids” are the problem. Uncooperative! A threat to business as usual! Negative P.R. is an issue everyone at the top recognizes, not the human beings whose labor rights’ and human rights have been violated! Nonetheless, the foreign students at the Hershey factory recognized they had rights, labor and human rights that no bully could take from them! Instead of beginning work at 3 p.m. on July 17, 2011, the students “walked into the plant and presented a petition with several hundred signatures to a management representative.” I am sure they could feel palpitations in their throats and even envisioned myriad unsettling responses from the Hershey Company or law enforcement as holders of J-1 visas. But they marched, as students and workers, as people, outside the plants, and any and everyone could hear their chants in English, Chinese, Nigerian, Romanian, and Ukrainian: “‘we are the mighty, mighty students!’” We are human beings! We know whence we came! In the land
of the bullies, among the bullies, it is only honest and natural to
feel frightened, as I discovered many years ago in my late teens. Pick
your battles, my grandmothers used to say, because here in the BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels, PhD, has a Doctorate in Modern American Literature/Cultural Theory. Click here to contact Dr. Daniels. |
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