Posted on 18 September 2014. Tags: Amancio Ortega, Cambodia, Garment Industry, Slavery, Workers United
Recently, I mentioned Seymour Hersh’s observation that, while most people count sheep to fall asleep, Henry Kissinger, who orchestrated the massive secret, illegal bombings of Cambodia, must count burned and maimed Cambodian babies. Which makes me wonder: has Amancio Ortega picked up a version of the Kissinger habit, counting overworked Cambodian slaves who have made him the fourth richest person in the world?
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Posted in General Interest
Posted on 09 October 2012. Tags: 2012 Election, Barack Obama, Cambodia, Indonesia, Jobs, Minimum Wage, Mitt Romney, Poverty, Vietnam
It’s not surprising that a growing number of workers around the globe are losing faith in political leaders. After all, the economic debate often seems completely divorced from the realities of workers’ lives, whether it’s blaming workers for national budget squeezes actually caused by bankers or CEOs imposing mass layoffs to cover up obscene executive compensation at the heart of bottom-line revenue shortfalls. The debate in the United States is a good example.
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Posted in General Interest
Posted on 20 August 2010. Tags: "Free Market", "Free Trade", Bangladesh, Cambodia, CEO Greed, Middle Class, Poverty, Unions, Vietnam, Wages
Yesterday, I wrote about how the decline of U.S. wages has made workers here cheaper to hire than workers in India, at least in the call center industry. Today, the news hails from Asia where workers are rising up against poverty-level wages. From the Financial Times (and, as a side observation, the FT gives […]
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Posted in General Interest
Posted on 15 May 2005. Tags: "Free Trade", Cambodia, Garment Industry, Labor, Mark Levinson, Quotas, textiles
I’ve been writing about labor rights and the world economy for so long that I was a bit suspicious after first reading Elizabeth Becker’s May 12th piece in The New York Times entitled “Low Cost and Sweatshop-Free.” (a side note: the web version of this article does not carry that headline but only the sub-head: […]
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Posted in General Interest