Workers
in the fabled efficient and regimented factories in China,
where all of the electronic toys that the western world
uses every minute of every day, are becoming restless
in the slave-like condition in which they toil.
They
are sick and tired of the long days, the long weeks, the
often-dangerous conditions, the barbed-wire dormitories,
and the low pay of their jobs.� They came from around
their country to work, but they did not think that they
would be kept like so much livestock.
What
is the solution to their complaints?� They have, together,
demonstrated to the companies that make some of the most
popular electronic devices used by millions of Americans,
that they are sick and tired of the exploitation and they
want changes and they want them now.
The
way they�re talking, you�d think that there were union
organizers scattered broadly throughout their midst.�
But, you�d be wrong.� In China, it doesn�t work that way.�
Rather, the tens of thousands of �job actions� and strikes
that are occurring each year in China are merely the response
of human beings that want to be treated as human beings.�
Without actually being on the shop floors, it appears
that these actions are spontaneous and are just human
reactions to unbearable stresses and strains of their
living and working conditions.
Chinese
workers do, indeed, need unions.� They need to be able
to work in conditions that are humane and bearable, because
they have had a direct hand in creating them.� This is
the ideal of a broadly supported union movement within
a democratic society:� people take charge of their lives
and, in the process, they make it better for their families,
their own communities, and, eventually, for the nation.�
That was the idea, even in the U.S.
Somewhere
along the way in the U.S., however, the use of the First
Amendment by very powerful elements in society in the
U.S. resulted in a propaganda barrage that has turned
the very workers who would benefit from a union against
the very idea of a union.� This assault has resulted in
the Citizens United U.S. Supreme Court decision,
wherein five justices of the court decreed that money
is speech and corporations are human beings.� As such,
Corporate America could spend as much money as it wants
to further its own agenda and there shall be no curb on
their acting as though they were people.
As
a result, there is no stopping them in the political arena.�
And, there is no convincing a sizable percentage of American
workers that there are profound benefits in joining a
union, which would provide higher wages, good benefits
(including health care), and a secure retirement.� The
corporate propaganda has worked�for nearly a century.�
It has had four or five generations to fully implant itself
in the body politic.
Chinese
workers are at a similar place in their progress as American
workers were early in the 20th Century, in
that there is little in the way of a formal or legal way
to defend themselves and to improve their lives.� Under
those conditions, workers spontaneously react to abuse
and exploitation.� That�s what American workers did and
that�s what Chinese workers have been, and are, doing.
Each
year there are scores of thousands of job actions and
strikes in China, some have involved burning cars and
destruction of other property.� Most of the actions, however,
have been non-violent and there have been some concessions
by authorities, some higher pay and improved working conditions.�
To accomplish small progress, it has taken unrest that
would be unheard of in the U.S., at least in 2012.� China
has about one billion more in population than the U.S.,
so it takes much tighter control measures to handle the
millions of workers in their cities and factories.
One
of the ways that they have attempted to make a distinction
between urban and rural workers is a system of identification
papers, started in Mao�s time, which determines where
one can seek services, and there is no way without great
difficulty that they can change rural papers to urban
ones.� Rural workers who work in urban factories are called
migrant workers in China and those workers can be forced
to send their children back to their rural villages for
schooling, housing, welfare, or other services.� A December
2011 BBC report noted that officials have admitted that
granting equal rights to migrant workers is a �major challenge.�
And,
the rural workers are not going to return to their villages,
even though conditions are not good in the urban factories,
like those in Guangzhou, described by BBC as �China's
manufacturing megacity.�� There are 14 million workers
in that city alone and seven million of them are migrants.�
Workers in other areas of life in the hub city, such as
bus drivers and laborers, have taken job actions or strikes
and the inclination to do so is growing.
Workers
may not know what it is that they are manufacturing, but
they know they want to live more like the people who buy
those products at the retail end.� They want the same
things.� They want to be consumers, for better or worse,
not just cogs in a manufacturing machine.� A growing number
of North Americans, Europeans, and Japanese are beginning
to realize the limits to a consumer society and the potential
harm to the ever more fragile environment that is so negatively
affected by such a system.� They are trying to change
that system to a more sustainable one, but it�s a tough
sell.�
The
average Chinese worker, farmer, or laborer doesn�t want
to hear about the necessary austerity of a more sustainable
society.� People earning a few dollars a day for a 16-hour
day and a six-day week want higher pay, benefits, security
in old age, good food and education for their children.�
They want what other people in other countries want.�
This
presents a problem for workers and consumers in other
countries, who want cheap electronics and computers, yet
they probably (most of them, anyway, in the abstract)
would say that all workers should be treated fairly and
compensated properly.� But, are they willing to pay twice
as much for their cell phones, computers, and other devices,
so that Chinese workers can be paid a decent wage and
live at a decent standard of living?� It�s not likely.�
They might be willing to pay a little more, but not so
much as to achieve what we might call a living wage.
In
a country where legal remedies time-consuming and rare,
the people, whether they are professors, laborers, doctors,
farmers, or factory workers, are finding that direct action
is the quickest to gain the attention of the government.�
A riot may even be better.� The government and the richest
entrepreneurs in China just want the problem to go away
and are becoming more willing to negotiate an end to the
strife, so that they can get back to making money.�
It
appears that Chinese workers, unlike most U.S. workers
today, are beginning to understand that concerted action
is vital to advancement of the working class.� This is
something that most U.S. workers once understood.� Out
of that understanding came the union movement, which improved
working class life and set the standard for all workers
in the nation.� Somewhere along the way, they fell prey
to a philosophy that eventually led them to believe the
propaganda that �hard work would be rewarded and the boss�
door is always open�just as long as you do not have anything
to do with a union.�� What they were not noticing was
that, as long as there was a strong union movement, the
living standard of all workers was improved and enhanced,
and they had some democracy in the workplace.� Along the
way, that knowledge was lost, the union movement was diminished,
and the living standard of U.S. workers has dropped like
a stone.
Workers
in this country have to summon the grit that it will take
to equal the Chinese workers� courage, even in the face
of a repressive regime.� In solidarity, U.S. workers need
to say that they will be willing to pay more for products
that come out of wage slavery, or worse.� Unless and until
workers in other countries have a decent standard of living,
few manufacturing jobs will return and there will be a
wrenching period of adjustment for the U.S. working class,
until there is a different way of providing energy and
a different way of producing the things that we need.
In
the meantime, workers in China will have to fight the
same fights that were fought in 1930s America, leading
to that short period of our history when workers joined
together, in unions, and showed what can be accomplished
when democratic principles are put into effect.� Chinese
workers don�t have the same amount of time to accomplish
their goals, but then, considering the state of working
America, neither do we.
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
New York State. In addition to labor work, he is organizing
family farmers as they struggle to stay on the land under
enormous pressure from factory food producers and land
developers. Click here
to contact Mr. Funiciello.