Ain't
Gonna Work on Maggie's Farm No More
ByNorma
Sherry
OpEdNews.Com
Are
American workers at risk of losing their jobs? Damn right they are.
Particularly if they pursued what they thought were safe jobs in today's
commerce. When American workers lost their blue-collar jobs they stepped
up to the plate and educated themselves in the technologies that they were
told would assure them security. Sadly, corporate America lied. Not only
are American workers losing their coveted jobs, but in unprecedented moves
they are being asked to train their replacements.
The
consequences are mortifying.
By
now, most of us have experienced calling an organization we have done
business with before only to find the overtly sweet voice on the other end
of the receiver has a thick, almost unintelligible foreign accent.
Well,
folks, get used to it.
By
the thousands jobs are being exported, or the new word, outsourced to
India, Hong Kong, Peoples Republic of China, Panama, Manila, The
Philippines; and many other countries where the local citizens speak
English. Jobs are moving offshore to any country where the populace is
accustomed to working for pennies a day. Any sum above a dollar in many
cases, is the beginning to middle-class wealth and vast change of
lifestyle.
Are
you wondering how to safeguard yourself? It's not very promising, but
here's the scoop. All manufacturing careers are going overseas. It's as
simple and as appalling as that.
Since
1986, 15 million high-paying manufacturing jobs have left the US and
American workers. Need a second to take absorb that? It's startling, I
know. But the horrifying truth is, sooner than you think, not a single
automobile, airplane, or ship will be assembled or manufactured in the
land of free, home of the brave. It won't be long thereafter, that all
manufacturers wanting to stay competitive will seek to bring their
businesses to the millions of workers overseas. After all, they are
willing to work for a pittance without the contrivance or interference of
nasty unions, health benefits, 401K's, and the multitude of perks the
American worker has worked hard to achieve.
Be
on notice, American workers. If your job can be performed as well
elsewhere, you are in grave danger of losing your jobs. If your job relies
on computer skills, telephone skills, manufacturing.your days are
numbered. Any job that can be performed in another location, preferably
outside of the realm of American wages and American work-related laws, are
going.
If
you're a nurse or a physician, a medical technician, a physical therapist,
even a nurse's aide, you're safe.at least for the time being. But if
you're an x-ray technician, watch out. According to Irwin Kellner, a
professor of economics at Hofstra University in New York, already many
films are transmitted via the Internet and read abroad. Kellner also says,
however, that ''We will manage not only to muddle through but to create
jobs to add to our overall well-being,'' He also says he has. ''.faith in
the system. Somehow or another, we'll create jobs that can't be exported
overseas.''
Other
experts in the field are not quite so idealistic. Diane Morello, research
director and VP at Gartner, Inc., estimates that "based on her
preliminary calculations, at least 500,000 jobs will be lost to offshore
outsourcing by the end of 2004." Her company report also dimly
states, "one out of 10 jobs in the US computer services and software
sector could move overseas by the end of next year". Furthermore, the
study indicates that "while professionals in the computer industry
will be especially hard-hit, IT jobs in other sectors such as banking,
health-care, and insurance will also feel the impact, with one in 20 being
exported to emerging markets such as Russia, India, or other countries in
Southeast Asia.
According
to the Washington Post, 2.5 million factory jobs have disappeared since
2001.
If
you're a draftsman, an architect, a computer programmer, a graphic
designer, your days are numbered. If you're a plumber, electrician,
construction worker, contractor, bricklayer, you're secure for now.
A
young software executive states, "He's allowed to hire whomever he
wants--as long as they live in India or Australia. Another American
executive says, "We've got one company that's closing a support
facility here to move it to Asia, and another that doesn't even try to
fill jobs at home. There's something vaguely unpatriotic about all this.
Especially when the jobs are answering the phone to talk to American
customers or developing programs to be sold primarily to American
companies."
Stuart
Yasgur and Ernie Nounou wrote in Business Week that, "Common
knowledge says that we are in the midst of a 'Jobless Recovery.' After
all, while the United States economy recovered statistically from the
'mild' recession in 2001, unemployment has risen from 4% to 6%-- a
whopping 50% increase. Urban centers like New York City, which had a
January unemployment rate of 8.6%, have been particularly hard hit. What
is not commonly known, however, is that jobs have been created during this
recovery, just not in places like New York City, San Francisco, or even
Flint, Michigan. Jobs have been created in places like India, Jamaica, the
Philippines, and even Sri Lanka. The National Association of Software and
Service Companies (Nasscom), an association of software and IT- enabled
services companies, estimates that India's IT-enabled services industry
grew by 70% during 2001-2002."
So,
dear reader, if you find yourself maddened by the inarticulate, difficult
to understand techie on the telephone, perhaps it's time we made our
voices heard. If you pick up your telephone and dial an out-of-state
number and the voice on the other end of the telephone is speaking in an
almost unintelligible accent from India or some other foreign country, you
can rest assured your phone call was re-directed outside of the United
States.
Corporate
America is sending our jobs and the jobs of our fellow Americans abroad to
foreign countries so that the company that is multi-billions of dollars
wealthy can save money by farming its work outside of America and far from
American workers. I don't know about you, but I'm mad as hell and I don't
want to take it anymore.
The
very companies we made rich by buying their products, their computers,
their software, their clothing, their kitchen gadgets, their televisions
-- are thanking us by taking the jobs of our citizens and moving them,
excuse me, outsourcing them, to countries and a workforce far from our
shores. They're doing this for one reason and one reason only: The
Almighty Dollar. It's despicable.
If
we don't do something and do something quick, it's going to be too late.
Our lifestyle and our wealth will cease to exist, as we know it. The
wealthy few will be the corporate entities that outsourced their
workforce.
After
Shirley Turner, a Democratic state senator from New Jersey discovered that
a program from her state, Families First, which provides welfare
recipients with grocery debit cards had been outsourced to Mumbai, India,
she proposed bill No. 1349. Her bill, which was approved unanimously by
the New Jersey Senate in December 2002, would require all state contracts
to be performed by either US citizens or foreign citizens who work legally
in the United States.
Following
her lead, Connecticut, Maryland, Missouri, and Wisconsin all have similar
bills under consideration. However, folks, this is a very small pebble
making tiny ripples. It is time we stepped up to the plate.
We
need to revolt. We need to get mad as hell and unwilling to take this
anymore. Not just because corporate America is a lethal indignity; not
just because truth in advertising is a lie; not just because American jobs
are being shipped out of the country. We need to realize we are the power,
we can make this a better world, a better place in which to raise the next
generation. We can start here and now and tell Bill Gates' Microsoft, the
McAfee's and Norton's, The Gateway's, the Dell's, our telephone companies,
and insurance companies, and our Internet providers that if they want our
business, they are going to have to earn it.and they're going to have to
keep on earning it. It's time folks to become mad as hell and not take it
anymore.
We
need to boycott products that are outsourced. We need to write letters to
our representatives and our local newspapers. We need to make our voices
heard. We need to parade in front of corporate offices and hold banners
high and shout out loud "We are mad as hell and we are not going to
take this anymore!" We need to write to the CEO's and write them
again and tell them how we feel. But first and foremost, we need to stop
buying their products and their services.
Finally,
we need to safeguard ourselves by becoming re-educated and prepared for
the possibility that we may need to fit into a new workforce.
***********
©
Norma Sherry 2003
Bio:
Norma Sherry is co-founder of TogetherForeverChanging.org, an organization
devoted to educating, stimulating, and igniting personal responsibility
particularly with regards to our diminishing civil liberties. She is also
an award-winning writer/producer. Her email: norma@togetherforeverchanging.org
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