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Bye,
Bye Miss American Pie; Outsourcing is Tantamount to Slavery
by
Norma Sherry
OpEdNews.com
I’m
just going to blurt it out; tell it like it is. In the words of the
venerable, Walter Cronkite, “and that’s the way it is”; here it is
folks; outsourcing is tantamount to legalized slave labor.
Of
course, it’s much more than that to the American worker. Ask anyone who
is out of work, out of unemployment, on the verge of losing their home and
all that they worked for and thought was their American dream come true.
Their jobs by the multi-millions have left the shores of the
U.S.
for greener, cheaper labor. Slave labor.
A
dollar an hour versus twenty-five or fourteen, or even ten, you figure the
math, big business, not-so-big business, even the little businesses are
moving in droves to lands faraway. The problem with doing so, however, is
multi-dimensional.
For
the millions of American workers who have lost their jobs, the prospects
are very dim. Jody, who has worked as an IT professional for twenty years,
lost her job when her company outsourced its workforce to a foreign land
and foreign workers. In five months, she hasn’t been interviewed even
once despite her very marketable skills. When her unemployment runs out,
she fears she’ll have no recourse but to sell their home.
Beverly
says, “I completed my graduate degree in
engineering and truly thought that I was living the American
dream.” That is until three years ago when she and her co-workers
watched as the jobs dwindled down and were shipped first to
Mexico
and then elsewhere. All the years of
bettering herself, securing her future in the finality were measured in
her ability to instruct her replacement to do her job. Humiliation and
degradation were her reward.
Fern
was in healthcare for thirty years. She watched nursing jobs given to
immigrant nurses rather than American graduates. Sadly, she laments
observing sweet, dedicated and idealistic young women she trained become
hardened and embittered.
How
did this happen. Where were we? Did we have our heads buried in the sand?
Or were we preoccupied with the realities of everyday life? Perhaps
that’s what our policy makers counted on. But I can tell you one thing
for certain. It didn’t happen overnight.
In
fact, it began to surface in the late 70’s championed by the very
conservative Heritage Foundation. Under the auspices of President Ronald
Reagan, free trade “throughout the hemisphere” was borne. But truth be
known, the seeds were sown long before Ronald Reagan. Richard Milhous
Nixon was the first President given authority in the 1974 Fast Track Bill.
It was awarded every president thereafter through 1998. Fast
Track gives the President sole authority over trade negotiations.
Congress, after the fact, can accept or reject the negotiation, but it
cannot amend it in any way whatsoever. In effect, Fast Track
effectively removes Congress from the process of world trade negotiations.
Ronald
Reagan, however, was the first to propose a free trade agreement in his
1980 presidential campaign. Proudly, The Heritage Foundation boasts its
role in articulating President Reagan’s vision in no less than three
dozen reports.
The Heritage
Foundation predicted that free trade would, “over
a fifteen-year time span, create the world's largest market: some 360
million people, with an economic output of more than $6 trillion a
year.” Moreover, they asserted that NAFTA would guarantee that American
workers would remain the most competitive in the world. That American
consumers would continue to have access to the world's finest goods and
services.
They
also emphasized that NAFTA would assure Americans cheaper goods while
increasing
U.S.
exports to the rest of the
world. Moreover, the American workforce was told NAFTA would stimulate and
create an estimated 200,000 jobs annually. Later, The Heritage Foundation
wrote, “Economists are virtually unanimous in their conclusion that the
NAFTA will have a strongly positive impact on job growth throughout the
US
, with most estimates in the
hundreds of thousands.” That NAFTA would effectively reduce illegal
immigration from
Mexico
, would be instrumental in
tackling drug trafficking, would strengthen Mexican democracy and human
rights, and above all else, would serve as a model for the rest of the
world. It all sounded so cheeky.
Lofty
predictions. The only aspect that has proven true for Americans is
“cheaper goods.” Instead of the 200,000 promised new jobs yearly for
Americans, the American worker is losing their jobs – to date,
conservatively speaking by 2.7 million. The rate of which is growing
steadily. As a matter of fact, 200,000 additional jobs were lost to
American workers in September alone. However, The Heritage Foundation and
the Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) say the converse is true.
The USTR offers, “Too often, bad
news grips the imagination, while good news goes unheard. In a dynamic
economy such as ours, it is not surprising to hear of some firms closing
shop. However, in a typical month, our country gains a net of over 150,000
jobs.” My guess is these jobs are akin to a hologram. Sarcasm aside, the
numbers don’t jive.
As
to the remaining gobbledygook, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to
know the dire state of the American economic picture. According to the
Congressional Budget Office, the forecast looks very bleak with the
national deficit expected to reach $480 billion next year with
unemployment continuing to rise. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
reported, “Long-term unemployment is at its highest in over a decade”.
The BLS stated, “The last time the share of long-term unemployed
surpassed this level was 20 years ago, in September 1983. BLS also
reported the startling decline in education employment as the largest
one-month loss since July 1982. There are 1.4 million individuals stuck in
the quagmire of personal bankruptcy. According to foreclosures.com,
foreclosures are at record highs, especially homes in the upper six
figures. Bank One in
Chicago
anticipates a tidal wave of
foreclosures in 2004. Bleak, how about downright abject gloom?
Perhaps
we overlooked the loss of jobs because, well, they were just factory
workers, after all—and besides, clothing was never cheaper. Cheaper is
the key word, not merely less expensive, but threadbare cheap, made to
literally fall apart after a few month’s of laundering. Then word
started seeping into the American psyche, “child labor”, “slave
labor” and “abusive, horrendous working conditions”. Clothing
designers went on the defensive, but they needn’t have concerned
themselves, the uproar was short-lived. The consumer greed won out. After
all, cheap is cheap—and nothing wins like saving money!
Then
the consumer began to notice that there were fewer and fewer American-made
automobiles. Advertising agencies expounded on the consumer concern and
began a national advertising campaign to buy, “Made in
America
” automobiles, etcetera,
etcetera. However, despicable as Corporate America is, the truth that
nearly no part of an American car or truck, van, or SUV is made in
America
mattered not.
NAFTA
has made us partners with the countries of the world with whom we do
business. It has made us culpable to the abuses and horrifying conditions
workers of the world work under. And we know it. Our legislators know it.
Our Corporate America knows it—and yet, we allow it to continue.
A
famous film company reportedly pays
Bangladesh
workers between eight and
nineteen cents an hour toiling in deplorable, sub-human conditions for 14
to 15 hours a day. Corporate
America
knows it, so do our
legislators, and yet we still buy their products. Corporate
America
rushes to their shore
anxiously bringing their contracts and opening their factories.
The
World Trade Organization (WTO) protects corporations but abashedly,
blatantly ignores the torturous existence of laborers.
Burma
, ruled by a military
dictatorship since 1962 is a very poor, yet resource rich country. It is
also a haven for sweatshops and many American corporations. Until 2000 and
adverse publicity, Anheuser-Busch, Apple, Estee Lauder, Hewlett-Packard,
Macy’s, Ralph Lauren, Oshkosh B’Gosh, Levi-Strauss, Liz Claiborne, and
many more did business with Burma. Colgate, General Electric, Ford,
Halliburton, Gillette, Jordache, Lockheed, Nautica, Adidas, Chase
Manhattan Corp, Proctor and Gamble, and Perry Ellis are among the
businesses that continued to do business with
Burma
after 2000.
In
Burma
, Unocal was named in a human
rights lawsuit in the course of building its pipeline. The suit charged
Unocal knowingly used forced labor. Hundreds of eyewitnesses testified
that the government’s military provided Unocal with unpaid labor by
forcing thousands of villagers to work at gunpoint. Reportedly, women who
refused to work were raped or murdered.
In
2000, a California Federal Court found Unocal blameless because they did
not have direct participation in the wrongful acts. The case and the
appeals are stalemated. In 2003, the Bush Administration filed a brief on
behalf of Unocal arguing that allowing the case to go to trial could
interfere with
US
foreign policy and even
disrupt the war on terrorism.
When
I called my Dell Computer Support Department eight months ago to register
my new laptop, my phone call was routed to
India
. The helpful young man on the
phone and I became chatty. He was very excited about his new job, although
he still had to live at home with his parents and couldn’t afford to
marry. He was 34 years old. He was on his twelfth hour of a fourteen-hour
day. He earned $9 a day! A day—and he was happy. Before Dell, he earned
less than a dollar a day. When I hung up the telephone, I cried.
Yet,
in
India
, a country that Corporate
America is actively outsourcing American jobs to in record-breaking
numbers is a country that purportedly exploits and abuses children as
laborers. Working conditions are often filthy and many bosses are worse
than inhumane. NAFTA and WTO turn a blind eye; so do our rich and
super-rich corporations.
Rajesh
is a partner in an executive search firm. He is well educated, from the
Indian Institute of Management – Ahmedabad, as are many of his
counter-parts. Rajesh refers to his alma mater as “The Harvard of the
East”. He also bemoans regrettably, that so many of his brethren with
MBA’s are applying for call center jobs. A waste of their impeccable and
hard-earned degrees. But until
America
actively sought employees
from
India
, opportunity was even far
less.
They
offer accent trainers to teach Indians to speak like a Yankee; they have
soft skill trainers teaching how to approach an American client. He has an
event manager that updates and teaches about American events and festivals
and he says they have doctors on the premises and on call because working
odd hours, Rajesh says, “has its consequences. Health is definitely a
concern”.
Obviously,
Rajesh is not one of the employers that disregard his employees. In fact,
he is a man of great sensitivity and grace. He struggles with the concerns
of Americans and he worries about their anger about their jobs going
abroad. “So much money has been invested. So much controversy. Such
uncertainties.”
The
sole winner for outsourcing is Corporate America. Everyone else loses.
After
9/11, President Bush announced to the world “that if any country
harbored, fed, housed, or protected terrorists, then they would be as
guilty as the terrorists.” Does the same not hold true for us if we do
business with countries that abuse workers; that enslave women and
children? Does it not count because we have the entitlement of NAFTA and
WTO? Are we not breaking the greater laws of human dignity?
Now
our President wants to Fast Track NAFTA and WTO and open free trade to all
of
Latin America
. Considering the supreme
success NAFTA has been to the American worker, his motivation is very
clear indeed. Money talks…
Pointing
fingers and assessing blame is a favorite pastime of the left and the
right, the democrats and the republicans. It would appear that there is
plenty of blame on both sides of the fence. Richard Nixon may have
grandfathered the concept that begot NAFTA. It may have been Ronald Reagan
that first introduced it and George Bush, Sr., who endorsed it, and Bill
Clinton who signed it momentously into law. But of all the candidates
running for the office of President of the
United States
, only one promises to repeal
NAFTA the day after he is sworn into office.
Perhaps
it is time for the electorate to put our elected officials on notice.
Perhaps it is time that we found our voice and expressed our displeasure
in the only way they seem capable of hearing. Perhaps we should write our
legislators and let them know that we are adamantly opposed to The Thomas
Bill, HR 3005, because it will catapult the further decline of the
American worker. NAFTA and WTO and President Bush’s new Fast Track are
designed to destroy the American worker and to further demoralize and
destroy the countries on faraway shores and keep everyone beholding to
Corporate America.
It’s
time to say, No!
Bio:
Norma Sherry is co-founder of Together Forever Changing, 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
This
article is copyright
Ó
Norma Sherry 2003
and originally published by opednews.com
but permission is granted for reprint in print, email, blog, or web media
so long as this credit is attached.
Side
Note: Norma Sherry will be a
guest on the national radio show, The Chris Moore Show, Saturday, November
15th from
7 – 8 pm
, 1020 on the AM dial, KDKA,
Pittsburgh
,
Pa.
She will be discussing outsourcing.
Listeners can call-in.
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