?Forced labor is most prevalent in five sectors of the US economy: prostitution and sex
services (46%); domestic service (27%); agriculture (10%); sweatshop/factory work (5%);
and restaurant and hotel work (4%).? David Batstone, Not For Sale: The Return of the
Global Slave Trade, 2010, p. 214 ---- The USA is not the only country where modern slavery
exists, or even the one with the highest level of modern slavery, but it is the country
that does make the biggest noise about ?liberty?. It is also one of the few western
countries where slavery existed as a legal institution after 1850. The peculiar symbol of
the huge crack in the Liberty Bell perhaps best illustrates the broken nature of the
?liberty? won by the American War of Independence, a liberty that left 4 million living in
chattel slavery. So liberty in the United States was then, and is today, hypocrisy wrapped
in abstraction.
Slavery did not end in the USA in 1865, but the legal institution of slavery did. There is
an undeniable difference between being legally owned by capitalists as personal property,
and in being merely rented as another type of resource for use in extracting profit. The
first is infinitely worse, but both are without question fundamentally dehumanizing. In
the eyes of the capitalists, the only difference is one of profitability. Eventually it
was discovered by the capitalists that it was more cost-effective to rent workers rather
than own them outright. While wage-labor soon came to dominate as the preferred method of
exploitation, slavery continues to be a source of profit to the present day.
In the 2014 Trafficking in Persons Report released by the State Department some trends in
modern slavery in the United States were noted. The report includes several examples of
modern slavery including the ?abuse of third-country nationals trafficked to work on
military bases, migrant domestic workers subjected to forced labor by diplomats and
international organization personnel, and temporary guest workers in a variety of
industries forced to work under horrifying conditions with nowhere to turn. While it?s
important that the report stresses there?s more the U.S. government can do to stem
trafficking in America, it offers nothing new and recycles much of its findings and
recommendations from past years ? recommendations that still haven?t been fully implemented.?
In short: the US government is well aware that slavery exists and is growing. Further,
it has joined the ranks of those who exploit slave labor either through complacency or
concerted effort. For example we turn to the experience of Prakash Adhikari:
?He left his village in Nepal in 2004 after local labor recruiters falsely promised him
work in five-star hotels and restaurants in Jordan?Based on this promise, Adhikari
borrowed heavily to pay the recruitment fees he had been charged. After he arrived in
Jordan, his passport was seized, and he was transported against his will to Iraq to work
for a U.S. government subcontractor called Daoud & Partners. En route to the military
base, the convoy in which he was traveling, along with dozens of men in the same
predicament, was attacked by Iraqi insurgents. He and 11 other similarly trafficked men in
the convoy were later executed.?
The United States? involvement in the exploitation of slave labor is more than just an
isolated incident or an unfortunate mistake. Rather, it is a major contributor to the
growth of modern slavery.
?Since 2003, similar labor trafficking schemes, enabled by the government?s deficient
oversight and accountability mechanisms, have resulted in thousands of foreign workers
hired to work on U.S. government contracts in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere, as cooks,
janitors, cleaners, and mechanics on U.S. military bases and diplomatic missions. In 2011,
there were more than 60,000 such workers in Iraq and Afghanistan alone.? (ACLU Blog of
Rights, 06/24/2014).
How Many Slaves?
?Hundreds of thousands are being held against their will today (in the USA)?many are
forced to work on farms, in factories, or the commercial sex trade.? (CNN, ?Human
Trafficking: Modern Slavery in America?, 2012)
The figure quoted in every official report of modern slavery in the US is ?17,500
trafficked into the country every year?. This figure first appeared in a 2006 State
Department trafficking report, as an estimate. Even if this estimate is low (and it is),
the figure of 140,000 people trafficked into the country since 2006 does not include the
many thousands who are enslaved while already living here. The FBI reports that there
293,000 children ALONE who are likely suffering as sex slaves in the United States, with
the additional revelation that 83% of the victims in confirmed sex trafficking cases were
American citizens.
Victims of human trafficking are offered little or no help, and it?s not enough that the
victims are offered no assistance; very often the victims of sex slavery are themselves
treated as criminals in the American justice system. Children exploited within the sex
work industry are arrested, charged, and then bailed back out to their masters/pimps on a
regular business. The few such operations that have faced prosecution have been because of
the repetition of this insanity, and the gradual realization of justice officials that
something might be amiss.
According to the Global Slavery Index, as of 2014 there were at least 60,000 people who
live as modern slaves in the United States: ?The United States (US) is a destination of
exploitation for both US citizens and foreign nationals, predominately from Mexico, the
Philippines, Thailand, Honduras, Guatemala, India and El Salvador. Men, women and children
are exploited as forced laborers, and in the commercial sex industry. In 2013, potential
modern slavery cases were reported in fifty states of the US. Victims of forced labor
have been identified in domestic work and home healthcare, the food service industry,
construction and agriculture, nursing, factories and garment-manufacturing,9 beauty
salons, janitorial services, and travelling sales crews, among other sectors.?
So we see here the problem with estimating the number of slaves in the United States. Each
source uses different methodology. Each methodology considers different factors. By
correlating the various estimates, we might get a figure closer to a real estimate. This
would come in at over 250,000 people living in slavery conditions in the USA; and if we
include prison laborers, a growing industrial sector, we have a figure of over 300,000, at
LEAST. The magical thing about prison industry and prison labor: as crime goes down, the
prison population continues to increase. The criminal justice system appears to be
actively recruiting cheap labor for manufacturing work; workers that can never organize or
go on strike, because if they did they would be tear gassed, beaten, or executed on the
spot. Paid literally pennies for their work, subject to brutal punishment, and with every
aspect of their lives controlled by their employer, they definitely meet any reasonable
definition of slave.
It is not a clich? to say that many of America?s great fortunes are based on the
exploitation of slavery. It?s more of an embarrassing fact. For example:
Lehman Brothers- according to the Sun Times, the financial services firm acknowledged
recently that its founding partners owned not one, but several enslaved Africans during
the Civil War era and that, ?in all likelihood,? it ?profited significantly? from slavery.
?This is a sad part of our heritage ?We?re deeply apologetic ? It was a terrible thing ?
There?s no one sitting in the United States in the year 2005, hopefully, who would ever,
in a million years, defend the practice,? said Joe Polizzotto, general counsel of Lehman
Brothers.
Aetna, Inc. ? the United States? largest health insurer, apologized for selling policies
in the 1850s that reimbursed slave owners for financial losses when the enslaved Africans
they owned died.
?Aetna has long acknowledged that for several years shortly after its founding in 1853
that the company may have insured the lives of slaves,? said Aetna spokesman Fred Laberge
in 2002. ?We express our deep regret over any participation at all in this deplorable
practice.?
JP Morgan Chase- ?Today, we are reporting that this research found that, between 1831 and
1865, two of our predecessor banks?Citizens Bank and Canal Bank in Louisiana?accepted
approximately 13,000 enslaved individuals as collateral on loans and took ownership of
approximately 1,250 of them when the plantation owners defaulted on the loans,? the
company wrote in a statement.
CSX Railroad- used slave labor to construct portions of some U.S. rail lines under the
political and legal system that was in place more than a century ago.
Two enslaved Africans who the company rented were identified as John Henry and Reuben. The
record states, ?they were to be returned clothed when they arrived to work for the company.?
Individual enslaved Africans cost up to $200 ? the equivalent of $3,800 today ? to rent
for a season and CSX took full advantage.
Brown Brothers Harriman is the oldest and largest private investment bank and securities
firm in the United States, founded in 1818. USA Today found that the New York merchant
bank of James and William Brown, currently known as Brown Bros. Harriman owned hundreds of
enslaved Africans and financed the cotton economy by lending millions to southern
planters, merchants and cotton brokers.
The list seems endless. Slave wealth is without question one of the foundations of the
American master class, in the same way that the theft of First Nations tribal lands built
their fortunes. So we can say without hyperbole that American wealth has been built on
sadism, slavery and outright theft. Likewise it should come as no shock that America, the
?world policeman?, refuses to do anything about the rise of modern slavery. Why should it?
How could it, when it directly participates in, and profits from, such activities? If the
USA participated in police activities against modern slavery they would likely be of the
same sort as those against the illegal drug trade: aimed more at getting a piece of the
profits than eliminating the source of the profits, which would be ?un-American?.
The rise of modern slavery in America is a return to the roots of American capitalism, to
the ?good old days?, when capitalism ruled unopposed and the greatest virtue was the
highest possible profit.
SPREAD THE INFORMATION
Any information or special reports about various countries may be published with photos/videos on the world blog with bold legit source. All languages are welcome. Mail to lucschrijvers@hotmail.com.
Autobiography Luc Schrijvers Ebook €5 - Amazon
Search for an article in this Worldwide information blog
zondag 11 januari 2015
(en) US, WSA Ideas & Actions - Modern Slavery and the Triumph of Capitalism, (Part two): Modern Slavery in the USA By Mike Kolhoff
Abonneren op:
Reacties posten (Atom)
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten