More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Ron Soodalter

GET UPDATES FROM Ron Soodalter
 

Slavery is Alive and Well in the US: In Support of California Transparency in Supply Chains Act

Posted: 08/20/10 02:14 PM ET

In just a few days, we will commemorate the International Day for Remembrance of the Slave Trade. Although most of us might be unaware that the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade lasted some 350 years, we do tend to believe that slavery is a thing of the past -- that the Emancipation Proclamation and the 13th Amendment banished it forever from our shores and that America has been slavery-free ever since.

Sadly, nothing could be further from the truth. Most Americans are unaware of the extent to which both foreign nationals and U.S. citizens are victimized by human trafficking and various forms of slavery in our country today. And if we think that our own lives are untainted by the products of slave labor, we must think again. As Free the Slaves president Kevin Bales and I point out in the newly updated paperback edition of The Slave Next Door: Human Trafficking and Slavery in America Today (UC Press, 8/23/2010), there's a very good chance that the clothes we wear and the food we eat have been tainted by slavery. Cotton, that symbol of bondage in the pre-Civil War South, is now being picked by slave labor on three continents, and marketed as clothing here at home. The orange juice and tomatoes we have with our burgers at lunch could very well have come from a Mexican or Guatemalan immigrant working under coercion. The rug we walk on at home could have been woven in India, Pakistan or Nepal by one of a hundred thousand child slaves, seven, eight, nine years old. Cell phones and lap tops require an element called tantalum; it comes from an ore that is mined in the Congo, often by slaves.

In The Slave Next Door, we document the use of slave labor in such circumstances as the manufacture of clothing in America Samoa, and the cultivating and harvesting of our crops in Florida, Georgia, New York, Colorado and the Carolinas. We point out that while such mega-corporations as Burger King, Yum Foods, McDonald's and the giant Compass Group have signed agreements pledging to purchase only goods provided by free labor, other buyers, such as Wendy's, Publix, Quizno's, Costco, and Wal-Mart, have refused to climb on board. Slavery in our markets is happening all around us, yet we remain blissfully ignorant of this blight on our nation.

Does this mean that all tomatoes, all oranges, rugs, cotton shirts, cell phones and lap tops are the products of slave labor? Certainly not; but some are, and we just never know. It's that insidious. We simply cannot hope to eradicate what we can neither see nor understand. For this reason, it is vital to support and pass such legislation as the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act of 2010. It provides the consumer -- us -- with a window through which we can examine the development, from first to last link in the chain, of our consumer goods. With weapons such as this, we can begin to effectively combat the presence of slavery in our daily lives. It's a powerful first step.

 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 6
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
Halsey
"There is a price to pay for speaking the truth. T
12:40 PM on 08/23/2010
when I see a bin of t-shirts 5 for $10.00, I look and truly expect to see little drops of blood from the young Bangladesh girl who probably sewed the damn shirt. I'm not surprised at all the the Great Wall-Mart of china won't sign on to the transperancy; sadly, Wendy's surprised me. I think that if the founder were still alive, they probably would have; now it's simply a huge food corp.
If Americans would settle for one t-shirt for $10.00 made here in the US, or even elsewhere, where the seamstress made a liveable wage that would fix a lot. But NO...we want more of everything (ergo the huge mobs that wait overnight at Wall of China-Mart for their pre-xmas specials, even when a greeter gets killed in the onslaught to buy stuff). It's a very hard decision; yes they NEED the jobs in the Congo, but at what price? Humanity is so very cruel when gargantuan (sp?) profits are the only motive (I've NOTHING against profit; but how much is enough?)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
godwithin
07:31 PM on 08/21/2010
"Cell phones and lap tops require an element called tantalum; it comes from an ore that is mined in the Congo, often by slaves." I recently came to know of this and have since learned over 6 million people have been murdered and millions raped for conflict minerals. Worst crimes on humanity since WW2, however not much public knowledge in our electronically informed world. The gadgets which keeps our world informed comes from the murder and rape of millions.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:00 AM on 08/21/2010
Here via CAST Los Angeles. Thanks so much for this blog post. Looking forward to the book!
09:32 PM on 08/20/2010
The Dayton Human Trafficking Accords

WHEREAS,

WE THE PEOPLE can end human trafficking and slavery, but only if we solemnly commit ourselves to that common purpose.

We must confront the global scourge of trafficking and slavery beginning in our own local communities.

We as individuals and all institutions of society have a moral responsibility to end trafficking and free slaves from their captivity.

NOW THEREFORE,

WE undertake a solemn commitment, beginning now, to end the scourge of trafficking and slavery

And to take immediate action in our communities to

Stir society’s conscience to action against trafficking and slavery

Rescue and restore victims of trafficking and slavery

Identify and punish traffickers and slavers

Promote legislation and public policies to eradicate trafficking and slavery

Address the social, cultural and economic causes of trafficking and slavery

So that

We will end human trafficking in our Lifetime.

www.daytonhumantraffickingaccords.com
07:56 PM on 08/20/2010
This is an important book that needs to be read far and wide. The research is comprehensive and the stories of modern slavery shocking. Perhaps instead of spending time and space on trivial matters like so-called "reality" TV shows, TV networks and cable "news" channels ought to use their power to inform Americans and policymakers about today's very real slavery.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
evalela
04:23 PM on 08/20/2010
It's also a sad fact that Americans' tax dollars also are unwitingly contributing to slavery in the form foreign aid we send to theses countries which we all know does not trickle down to the people who need it,but only bolsters the despots who run these countries!!!!