The suffering of the working class, within and
outside the United States, is ignored by our
corporatized media, and yet, it is one of the
most important human rights issues of our era.
By Chris Hedges:
May 02, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - - "
ScheerPost"-
Global capitalists have turned back the clock
to the early days of the Industrial Revolution. The
working class is increasingly bereft of rights,
blocked from forming unions, paid starvation wages,
subject to wage theft, under constant surveillance,
fired for minor infractions, exposed to dangerous
carcinogens, forced to work overtime, given
punishing quotas and abandoned when they are sick
and old. Workers have become, here and abroad,
disposable cogs to corporate oligarchs, who wallow
in obscene personal wealth that dwarfs the worst
excesses of the Robber Barons.
In fashionable liberal circles there are, as Noam
Chomsky notes, worthy and unworthy victims. Nancy
Pelosi has called on global leaders not to attend
the Winter Olympics, scheduled to be held in Beijing
in February, because of what she called a “genocide”
being carried out by the Chinese government against
the Uyghur minority. New York Times columnist Nick
Kristof in a column rattled off a list of human
rights violations overseen by China’s leader Xi
Jinping, writing “[Xi] eviscerates Hong Kong
freedoms, jails lawyers and journalists, seizes
Canadian hostages, threatens Taiwan and, most
horrifying, presides over crimes against humanity in
the far western region of Xinjiang that is home to
several Muslim minorities.”
Not a word about the millions of workers in China
who are treated little better than serfs. They live
separated from their families, including their
children, and housed in overcrowded company
dormitories, which sees rent deducted from their
paychecks, next to factories that have
round-the-clock production, often making products
for U.S. corporations. Workers are abused, underpaid
and sickened from exposure to chemicals and toxins
such as aluminum dust.
The suffering of the working class, within and
outside the United States, is as ignored by our
corporatized media as the suffering of the
Palestinians. And yet, I would argue, it is one of
the most important human rights issues of our era,
since once workers are empowered, they can fend off
other human rights violations. Unless workers can
organize, here and in countries such as China, and
achieve basic rights and living wages, it will
cement into place a global serfdom that will leave
workers trapped in the appalling conditions
described by Friedrich Engels in his 1845 book “The
Conditions of the Working Class in England” or
Émile Zola‘s 1885 masterpiece “Germinal.”
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As long as China can pay slave wages it will be
impossible to raise wages anywhere else. Any trade
agreement has to include the right of workers to
organize, otherwise all the promises by Joe Biden to
rebuild the American middle class is a lie. Between
2001-2011, 2.7 million jobs were lost to China with
2.1 million in manufacturing. None are coming back
if workers in China and other countries that allow
corporations to exploit labor and skirt basic
environmental and labor regulations are locked in
corporate servitude. And while we can chastise China
for its labor policies, the United States has
crushed its own union movement, allowed its
corporations to move manufacturing overseas to
profit from the Chinese manufacturing models,
suppressed wages, passed anti-labor right-to-work
laws, and demolished regulations that once protected
workers. The war on workers is not a Chinese
phenomenon. It is a global one. And U.S.
corporations are complicit. Apple has 46 percent of
its suppliers in China. Walmart has 80 percent of
its suppliers in China. Amazon has 63 percent of its
suppliers in China.
The largest U.S. corporations are full partners
in the exploitation of Chinese labor, and the
abandonment and impoverishment of the American
working class. U.S. corporations and Chinese
manufacturers kept millions of Chinese workers
crammed into factories at the height of a global
pandemic. Their health was of no concern. Apple’s
profits more than doubled to $23.6 billion in the
most recent quarter. Its revenues rose by 54 percent
to $89.6 billion, which meant Apple sold more than
$1 billion on average each day. Until these
corporations are held accountable, which the Biden
administration will not do, nothing will change for
workers here or in China. Economic justice is global
or it does not exist.
Workers in Chinese industrial
centers—self-contained company cities with up to a
half million people—drive the huge profits of two of
the world’s most powerful companies, Foxconn,
the world’s largest provider of electronics
manufacturing services, and Apple, with $ 2 trillion
dollars in market value. Foxconn’s largest customer
is Apple, but it also produces products for Alphabet
(formerly Google), Amazon, which owns more than 400
private-label brands, BlackBerry, Cisco, Dell,
Fujitsu, GE, HP, IBM, Intel, LG, Microsoft,
Nintendo, Panasonic, Philips, Samsung, Sony, and
Toshiba, as well as leading Chinese firms including
Lenovo, Huawei, ZTE, and Xiaomi. Foxconn assembles
iPhones, iPads, iPods, Macs, TVs, Xboxes,
PlayStations, Wii U’s, Kindles, printers, as well as
numerous digital devices.
Jenny Chan, Mark Selden, and Pun Ngai spent a
decade conducting undercover research at Foxconn’s
major manufacturing sites in the Chinese cities of
Shenzhen, Shanghai, Kunshan, Hangzhou, Nanjing,
Tianjin, Langfang, Taiyuan, and Wuhan for their book
“Dying
for an iPhone: Apple, Foxconn, and The Lives of
China’s Workers”. What they describe is an
Orwellian dystopia, one where global corporations
have perfected the techniques for a disempowered
work force. These vast worker cities are little
more than labor penal colonies. Yes, it is possible
to leave, but to incur the ire of the bosses,
especially by speaking out or attempting to
organize, is to be blacklisted for life throughout
China’s archipelago of industrial centers and cast
to the margins of society or often prison.
Workers live under constant surveillance. They
are policed by company security units. They sleep in
segregated male and female dormitories with eight or
more people to a room. The multi-story dormitories
have bars on the windows and nets below, put up to
halt the spate of worker suicides that afflicted
these factory cities a few years ago.
“The workplace and living space are compressed to
facilitate high-speed, round-the-clock production,”
the authors write. “The dormitory warehouses a
massive migrant labor force without the care and
love of family. Whether single or married, the
worker is assigned a bunk space for one person. The
‘private space’ consists simply of one’s own bed
behind a self-made curtain with little common living
space.”
Workers, who earn about $2 an hour and an average
of $390 a month, are paid in wage debit cards, an
updated version of company scrip. The bank card
allows a worker to deposit, withdraw, and transfer
money from 24-hour ATM machines that are accessible
at Foxconn facilities.
Managers, foremen, and line leaders prohibit
conversation on the assembly floor that operates on
a 24-hour cycle of 10- or 12-hour shifts. Workers
are reprimanded if they work “too slowly” on the
line. They are punished for turning out defective
products. Workers are often forced to remain behind
after a shift if a worker committed an infraction.
The worker who violated the rules is required to
stand before his or her co-workers and read a
statement of self-criticism. Any worker issued a “D”
grade in their review for “unsatisfactory
performance” is fired. The workers receive one day
off every second week, or two rest days a month.
They can be summarily shifted between the night and
day shifts.
The authors describe the daily routine of a
worker entering a Foxconn factory at 7 a.m. with
hundreds of thousands of other Foxconn employees.
Each person, prohibited from entering the factory
complex with electronic devices, is checked by
facial recognition systems to confirm his or her
identity.
The human flow continues for more than an
hour. Night-shift workers cross the footbridge
and pour into the shopping malls and street
markets that have sprung up around the factory.
Day-shift workers cross the same footbridge, in
the opposite direction, heading to work. From
the moment they enter the factory gate, workers
are monitored by a security system more
intrusive than any that we found in the
neighboring smaller electronics-processing
factories. “Foxconn has its own security force,
just as a country has an army,” a stern faced,
broad-shouldered security officer stated as a
matter of fact. Workers pass through successive
electronic gates and Special Security Zones
before arriving at their workshops to start
work.
Once inside, the authors write, workers endure a
familiar ritual:
As workers prepare to begin a shift, managers
call out: “How are you?” Workers must respond by
shouting in unison, “Good! Very good! Very, very
good!” This drill is said to foster disciplined
workers. A laser-soldering worker reported,
“Before shift-time, a whistle sounds three
times. At the first whistle we must rise and put
our stools in order. At the second whistle we
prepare to work and put on special gloves or
equipment. At the third whistle we sit and work.
“No talking, no laughing, no eating, no
sleeping” during work hours is the number one
factory rule. Any behavior that violates
discipline is penalized. “Going to the toilet
for more than ten minutes incurs an oral
warning, and chatting during work time incurs a
written warning,” a line leader explained.
The work is exhausting, stressful and repetitive.
An iPhone has more than one hundred parts. “Every
worker,” the authors write, “specializes in one task
and performs repetitive motions at high speed,
hourly, daily, ten hours or more on many working
days, for months on end.”
A woman interviewed in the book described her
life on the assembly line:
I am a cog in the visual inspection
workstation, which is part of the static
electricity assembly line. As the adjacent
soldering oven delivers smartphone motherboards,
both my hands extend to take the motherboard,
then my head starts shifting from left to right,
my eyes move from the left side of the
motherboard to the right side, then stare from
the top to the bottom, without interruption, and
when something is off, I call out, and another
human part similar to myself will run over, ask
about the cause of the error, and fix it. I
repeat the same task thousands of times a day.
My brain rusts.
The work can also be hazardous. The polishing
machine emits aluminum dust as it grinds the
casings. This dust gets into the eyes and causes
irritation and tiny tears. Workers suffer from
respiratory problems, sore throats and chronic
coughs. “Microscopic aluminum dust coats workers’
faces and clothes,” the authors write. “A worker
described the situation this way: ‘I’m breathing
aluminum dust at Foxconn like a vacuum cleaner. With
the workshop windows tightly shut, workers felt that
they were suffocating.’”
The aluminum dust can also cause fires, such as
one on May 20, 2011 when an accumulation of aluminum
dust in the air duct on the third floor at Foxconn
Chengdu Building A5 was ignited by a spark from an
electric switch. Four workers died. Dozens were
injured. It was not the only explosion, which
Foxconn managed to largely hide by imposing a near
total media blackout. “Seven months after the
Foxconn tragedy, on December 17, 2011, combustible
aluminum dust fueled another blast, this time at
iPhone maker Pegatron in Shanghai, injuring
sixty-one workers. In the blast, young men and women
suffered severe burns and shattered bones, leaving
many permanently disabled,” the authors write.
Workers are required to clean one thousand iPhone
touchscreens per shift. They were cleaned for years
with the chemical n-hexane, which evaporates faster
than industrial alcohol. Prolonged exposure to
n-hexane damages peripheral nerves, leading to
painful muscle cramps, headaches, uncontrollable
shaking, blurred vision and difficulties walking. It
should only be applied in well ventilated areas by
workers wearing respirators. Thousands of Foxconn
workers applied n-hexane in sealed rooms without
ventilators and were sickened, finally leading to
its ban.
These vast industrial complexes also discharge
huge amounts of heavy metals and wastewater into the
rivers and ground water. Rivers near plants run
black with sewage and are filled with plastic waste.
Workers complain that the drinking water is
discolored and smells.
The United States cast its workers aside in the
1990s with de-industrialization. China did the same
by dismantling socialism in favor of
state-controlled capitalism. State and collective
sector jobs in China fell from 76 percent in 1995 to
27 percent in 2005. Tens of millions of laid off
workers were left to compete for jobs run by
corporations such as Foxconn. But even these jobs
are now under threat, partly from automation, with
workers on assembly lines replaced by robotic
automatons that can spray, weld, press, polish, do
quality testing and assemble printed circuit boards.
Foxconn has installed over 40,000 industrial robots
in its factories, along with hundreds of thousands
of other automated machines.
But over the past decade, the authors note, “the
major changes inside Foxconn
were not the replacement of workers with robots
but the replacement of full-time employees with
growing numbers of student interns and contingent
subcontracted laborers.”
These workers, part of the gig economy familiar
in the United States, have even less job stability
and security than full time employees. As many as
150,000 high-school age vocational students are
employed in Foxconn plants. They are paid the
minimum wage, but are not entitled to the
400-yuan-per-month skills subsidy, even if they pass
the probationary period. Foxconn is also not
required to enroll them in social security.
Those who lead these corporate behemoths often
replicate the behavior of despots, not only exerting
total control over every aspect of their workers
lives but dispensing folksy wisdom to the masses.
They are often treated by a fawning media as gurus,
asked to opine–as Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, Elon
Musk and Jeff Bezos do–on a range of social,
economic, political and cultural issues. Their
immense fortunes confer to them in our
Mammon-worshipping society a sage-like status.
Terry Gou, the founder and CEO of Foxconn, has
published a list of slogans and aphorisms that adorn
the walls of his factories, along with his
portraits. Workers are required to write out
passages from “Gou’s Quotations.” While Mao Zedong
called for class struggle and rebellion, Gou calls
for conformity and blind obedience. “Growth thy name
is suffering,” reads one of his quotes. The Wall
Street Journal reporter Jason Dean, in a 2007
interview with Gou, characterized Gao as a
“warlord,” and noted that “he wears a beaded
bracelet he got from a temple dedicated to Genghis
Khan, the thirteenth-century Mongolian conqueror
whom he calls a personal hero.”
“A harsh environment is a good thing,” one of
Gou’s quotes reads. “Achieve goals or the sun will
no longer rise. Value efficiency every minute, every
second. Execution is the integration of speed,
accuracy, and precision.”
His more than one million employees, as is true
at Amazon and other large corporations, are
subjected to mandatory company meetings where they
are taught to obey company rules, pay fealty to the
interests of the corporation and, as the authors
note, strive for “the individualistic model of
success.” Those who heed the rules, workers are
told, are rewarded. Those who do not, are punished
or banished.
Workers in these global sweatshops are organizing
underground and protesting. There were 8,700
incidents of labor unrest in China in 1993, the
first year for which official data is available, to
32,000 in 1999, the authors write. “The number
‘continued to increase at more than 20 percent a
year’ between 2000 and 2003. In 2005, the official
record noted 87,000 cases, rising to 127,000 in 2008
during the world recession–the last time the Chinese
Ministry of Public Security released figures.”
In Hubei’s East Lake High-Tech Development Zone,
the authors note, known as Optics Valley, on January
3, 2012, 150 Foxconn workers threatened to jump from
the roof of the factory and commit mass suicide if
the managers refused to address their demands, which
included protests over forced transfers to other
factories’ cities and a wage dispute.
Strikes, protests and work stoppages that take
place now are state secrets, but the past statistics
seem to indicate that they are growing. Strikes are
usually swiftly and brutally broken by company
security and police, with strike leaders being fired
and often imprisoned.
We will not save ourselves through the perverted
individualism, sold to us by our corporate masters
and a compliant mass media, which encourages our
advancement at the expense of others. We will save
ourselves by working in solidarity with workers
inside and outside the United States. This
collective power is our only hope. Amazon workers
from the Hulu Garment factory in Phnom Penh,
Cambodia, and Global Garments factory in Chittagong,
Bangladesh, recently led a global day of action to
make Amazon pay all its workers, no matter where
they live, fair wages. This has to be our model.
Otherwise, workers in one country will be pitted
against workers in another country. Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels got it right. Workers of the world
unite. You have nothing to lose but your chains.
Chris Hedges, spent nearly two decades as a
foreign correspondent in Central America, the Middle
East, Africa and the Balkans. He has reported from
more than 50 countries and has worked for The
Christian Science Monitor, National Public Radio,
The Dallas Morning News and The New York Times, for
which he was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.
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