india's child slave laborers<<<FALL INTO THE GAP>>>
sweetpotato
Posts: 1,278
jesus h christ, is there no fucking END to how greedy and cruel people can be? i am sick of this shit. no more fucking gap clothes for me or my kids.
Gap Kids: New Frontiers in Child Abuse
By Barbara Ehrenreich, Barbaraehrenreich.com
Posted on November 2, 2007, Printed on November 2, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/66709/
It was enough to make you vomit all over your new denim jacket. The Gap has been caught using child labor in an Indian sweatshop, and not just child labor -- child slaves. As extensively reported on the news, the children, some as young as ten, were worked 16 hour days, fed bowls of mosquito-covered rice, and forced to sleep on a roof and use over-flowing latrines. Those who slowed down were beaten with rubber pipes and the ones who cried had oily cloths stuffed in their mouths.
But let's try to look at this dispassionately -- not as a human rights issue but as a PR disaster, ranking right up there with the 1982 discovery of cyanide in Tylenol capsules. Think of this as a case study in a corporate Crisis Communication course: How is The Gap handling the problem, and could it do better?
This is not the first time The Gap has been caught using child labor, but CEO Martha Hansen went on the air to state that the situation was "completely unacceptable" and that the company would "act swiftly." Two problems here: One, she failed to detail the actions. It would have been nice, for example, if she had announced that some of the top-producing child slaves would be reassigned to manage Gap outlets in American malls, and that the under-performers would be adopted by Angelina Jolie.
The other, more serious, problem is that she got defensive about child labor. This is the mistake Kathie Lee Gifford made in 1996. When accused of using child labor in Honduras to manufacture her Kathie Lee line of clothing, Gifford broke into tears on TV. Maybe Hansen meant to cover herself by saying that The Gap would not "ever, ever condone any child laborer making our garments" rather than saying the company does not condone child labor itself. We already knew, from the rubber pipes and oily cloths, that The Gap does not condone much from its child laborers.
Hansen underestimated the potential support for a full-throated defense of child labor. More and more American children are tried and punished as adults today. And the ubiquitous conservative pundit William Kristol will surely be enthusiastic, considering his recent -- though possibly facetious -- statement that "whenever I hear anything described as a heartless assault on our children, I tend to think it's a good idea."
The core of the argument, though, is that anyone who opposes child labor has not witnessed its opposite, which is child unemployment and idleness.
Hansen claims to be a mother herself, but I wonder how often she has returned home from a hard day in the C-suites to find her unemployed offspring Magic Marker-ing the walls and crushing the Froot Loops into the carpet. This is what jobless children do: They rub Crazy Glue into their siblings' hair; they spill apple juice onto your keyboard. Believe me, I see this kind of wantonly destructive behavior every day. Vandalism is a way of life for unemployed children, and they do not know the meaning of remorse.
In fact, corporate America should go further and make a strong statement against the sickening culture of dependency that has grown up around childhood. Why are jobless children so criminally inclined? Because they know that whatever damage they inflict, the Froot Loops will just keep coming. The Gap should portray its child-staffed factories as part of a far-seeing welfare-to-work program, which will eventually be extended to American children as well.
To appeal to American parents, our own child factories should be run more like Montessori schools, where the children are already encouraged to regard every one of their demented activities as "work." If they're going to pile up blocks and knock them down all day, then why not sew on buttons and bring home a little cash? But even American families will have to brace themselves for the inevitable cost cutting measures. First the cookies and milk may have to go, then, as in India, the toilets and beds. Wal-Mart has already pioneered the price-cutting defense of human rights abuses, and The Gap should follow suit.
The company can of course expect some lingering opposition. Just as there are vegetarians and pacifists, there will always be some men, for example, who would rather wear skirts than blue jeans impregnated with the excrement and tears of ten-year-olds. Well, let them shop at American Apparel or some other "sweat-free" vendor, and if they can't find anything there, let them wear dhotis. In a nation that cannot bring itself to extend child health insurance (SCHIP) to all children in need, child-made clothes make a fine fashion statement. And why not accessorize your denim jacket with a scarf derived from one of those oily cloths stuffed in weeping workers' mouths?
Barbara Ehrenreich is the author of thirteen books, including the New York Times bestseller Nickel and Dimed. A frequent contributor to the New York Times, Harpers, and the Progressive, she is a contributing writer to Time magazine. She lives in Florida.
© 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/66709/
Gap Kids: New Frontiers in Child Abuse
By Barbara Ehrenreich, Barbaraehrenreich.com
Posted on November 2, 2007, Printed on November 2, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/66709/
It was enough to make you vomit all over your new denim jacket. The Gap has been caught using child labor in an Indian sweatshop, and not just child labor -- child slaves. As extensively reported on the news, the children, some as young as ten, were worked 16 hour days, fed bowls of mosquito-covered rice, and forced to sleep on a roof and use over-flowing latrines. Those who slowed down were beaten with rubber pipes and the ones who cried had oily cloths stuffed in their mouths.
But let's try to look at this dispassionately -- not as a human rights issue but as a PR disaster, ranking right up there with the 1982 discovery of cyanide in Tylenol capsules. Think of this as a case study in a corporate Crisis Communication course: How is The Gap handling the problem, and could it do better?
This is not the first time The Gap has been caught using child labor, but CEO Martha Hansen went on the air to state that the situation was "completely unacceptable" and that the company would "act swiftly." Two problems here: One, she failed to detail the actions. It would have been nice, for example, if she had announced that some of the top-producing child slaves would be reassigned to manage Gap outlets in American malls, and that the under-performers would be adopted by Angelina Jolie.
The other, more serious, problem is that she got defensive about child labor. This is the mistake Kathie Lee Gifford made in 1996. When accused of using child labor in Honduras to manufacture her Kathie Lee line of clothing, Gifford broke into tears on TV. Maybe Hansen meant to cover herself by saying that The Gap would not "ever, ever condone any child laborer making our garments" rather than saying the company does not condone child labor itself. We already knew, from the rubber pipes and oily cloths, that The Gap does not condone much from its child laborers.
Hansen underestimated the potential support for a full-throated defense of child labor. More and more American children are tried and punished as adults today. And the ubiquitous conservative pundit William Kristol will surely be enthusiastic, considering his recent -- though possibly facetious -- statement that "whenever I hear anything described as a heartless assault on our children, I tend to think it's a good idea."
The core of the argument, though, is that anyone who opposes child labor has not witnessed its opposite, which is child unemployment and idleness.
Hansen claims to be a mother herself, but I wonder how often she has returned home from a hard day in the C-suites to find her unemployed offspring Magic Marker-ing the walls and crushing the Froot Loops into the carpet. This is what jobless children do: They rub Crazy Glue into their siblings' hair; they spill apple juice onto your keyboard. Believe me, I see this kind of wantonly destructive behavior every day. Vandalism is a way of life for unemployed children, and they do not know the meaning of remorse.
In fact, corporate America should go further and make a strong statement against the sickening culture of dependency that has grown up around childhood. Why are jobless children so criminally inclined? Because they know that whatever damage they inflict, the Froot Loops will just keep coming. The Gap should portray its child-staffed factories as part of a far-seeing welfare-to-work program, which will eventually be extended to American children as well.
To appeal to American parents, our own child factories should be run more like Montessori schools, where the children are already encouraged to regard every one of their demented activities as "work." If they're going to pile up blocks and knock them down all day, then why not sew on buttons and bring home a little cash? But even American families will have to brace themselves for the inevitable cost cutting measures. First the cookies and milk may have to go, then, as in India, the toilets and beds. Wal-Mart has already pioneered the price-cutting defense of human rights abuses, and The Gap should follow suit.
The company can of course expect some lingering opposition. Just as there are vegetarians and pacifists, there will always be some men, for example, who would rather wear skirts than blue jeans impregnated with the excrement and tears of ten-year-olds. Well, let them shop at American Apparel or some other "sweat-free" vendor, and if they can't find anything there, let them wear dhotis. In a nation that cannot bring itself to extend child health insurance (SCHIP) to all children in need, child-made clothes make a fine fashion statement. And why not accessorize your denim jacket with a scarf derived from one of those oily cloths stuffed in weeping workers' mouths?
Barbara Ehrenreich is the author of thirteen books, including the New York Times bestseller Nickel and Dimed. A frequent contributor to the New York Times, Harpers, and the Progressive, she is a contributing writer to Time magazine. She lives in Florida.
© 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/66709/
"Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States, Barack Obama."
"Obama's main opponent in this election on November 4th (was) not John McCain, it (was) ignorance."~Michael Moore
"i'm feeling kinda righteous right now. with my badass motherfuckin' ukulele!"
~ed, 8/7
"Obama's main opponent in this election on November 4th (was) not John McCain, it (was) ignorance."~Michael Moore
"i'm feeling kinda righteous right now. with my badass motherfuckin' ukulele!"
~ed, 8/7
Post edited by Unknown User on
0
Comments
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most of ehrenriech's piece is facetious, of course, but she makes her point.
FUCK the Gap."Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States, Barack Obama."
"Obama's main opponent in this election on November 4th (was) not John McCain, it (was) ignorance."~Michael Moore
"i'm feeling kinda righteous right now. with my badass motherfuckin' ukulele!"
~ed, 8/70 -
All these companies are upto something, we should try and find the moral ones, if they exist.Keep on rockin in the free world!!!!
The economy has polarized to the point where the wealthiest 10% now own 85% of the nation’s wealth. Never before have the bottom 90% been so highly indebted, so dependent on the wealthy.0 -
That's a supremely annoying article though... can anyone find a different non-op-ed-like source?... and the will to show I will always be better than before.0
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... and the will to show I will always be better than before.0
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meme wrote:That's a supremely annoying article though... can anyone find a different non-op-ed-like source?
Here is a link to an article
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/10/29/gap.labor/index.html"When one gets in bed with government, one must expect the diseases it spreads." - Ron Paul0 -
... and the will to show I will always be better than before.0
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good to see kids getting a job nowadays. american kids are spoiled rotten0
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jlew24asu wrote:good to see kids getting a job nowadays. american kids are spoiled rotten
They didn't actually get the job. They were sold by desperate, starving parents, to this factory, and tried to slave their way out among beatings. A parenting strategy you recommend? To toughen the brats out, I mean.... and the will to show I will always be better than before.0 -
we should probably add every major retailer to your list of boycotts. in india, china, south america, asia, mexico, probably even in some american basements, this is standard shit. world is an ugly place.0
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jlew24asu wrote:we should probably add every major retailer to your list of boycotts. in india, china, south america, asia, mexico, probably even in some american basements, this is standard shit. world is an ugly place.
Yes, true.
We can also be very earnest in our condemnation and do everything we can to allow children the world over to be safe and healthy.... and the will to show I will always be better than before.0 -
It seems as if poverty is the source of this. Some of the things you can do to help are; lobby your government to provide more foreign aid, lobby your government to forgive 3rd world debts, lobby your government to drop farming subsidies allowing 3rd world farmers to compete on an even playing field, give charitable donations.“One good thing about music,
when it hits you, you feel to pain.
So brutalize me with music.”
~ Bob Marley0 -
surferdude wrote:It seems as if poverty is the source of this. Some of the things you can do to help are; lobby your government to provide more foreign aid, lobby your government to forgive 3rd world debts, lobby your government to drop farming subsidies allowing 3rd world farmers to compete on an even playing field, give charitable donations.
good ideas, all. some i already engage in, actually.
btw, there's a typo in your sig.
"Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States, Barack Obama."
"Obama's main opponent in this election on November 4th (was) not John McCain, it (was) ignorance."~Michael Moore
"i'm feeling kinda righteous right now. with my badass motherfuckin' ukulele!"
~ed, 8/70 -
The best surgical instruments are made by kids in pakistan. They then are used all over every american hospital.
I wonder if anyone would refuse to be saved by these tools if in the hospital. "No! kids made those, let me die or use a kitchen knife!"0 -
Stop shopping at Wal Mart and the likes and buying all the useless crap you don't need, otherwise other countries will continue to be exploited.
Cause and effect. The west loves their cheap products and bargains like no other. The reality is that someone has to pay the price one way or the other.
Stay out of debt, stop buying useless shit you don't need, and support your own economy by buying local.Progress is not made by everyone joining some new fad,
and reveling in it's loyalty. It's made by forming coalitions
over specific principles, goals, and policies.
http://i36.tinypic.com/66j31x.jpg
(\__/)
( o.O)
(")_(")0 -
RolandTD20Kdrummer wrote:Stop shopping at Wal Mart and the likes and buying all the useless crap you don't need, otherwise other countries will continue to be exploited.
Cause and effect. The west loves their cheap products and bargains like no other. The reality is that someone has to pay the price one way or the other.
Stay out of debt, stop buying useless shit you don't need, and support your own economy by buying local.
more proof you havnt been to america. in many towns, wal-mart is the only local option. but good advice though.0 -
Walmart is NEVER the only option.jlew24asu wrote:more proof you havnt been to america. in many towns, wal-mart is the only local option. but good advice though.
Never.
I have been to every state in this country, excluding Hawaii. And there is ALWAYS an option. And I have been to places too small to even consider a Walmart.Cause I'm broken when I'm lonesome
And I don't feel right when you're gone away0 -
How does this help the poverty in other countries that is driving the child/slave labor?RolandTD20Kdrummer wrote:... and support your own economy by buying local.“One good thing about music,
when it hits you, you feel to pain.
So brutalize me with music.”
~ Bob Marley0 -
jlew24asu wrote:more proof you havnt been to america. in many towns, wal-mart is the only local option. but good advice though.
I haven't been to America? That's an idiotic statement if I've ever heard one.
Anyhow.... I only stopped by here for a few mins. I'm on my way out the door... it being Friday night...Progress is not made by everyone joining some new fad,
and reveling in it's loyalty. It's made by forming coalitions
over specific principles, goals, and policies.
http://i36.tinypic.com/66j31x.jpg
(\__/)
( o.O)
(")_(")0 -
surferdude wrote:How does this help the poverty in other countries that is driving the child/slave labor?
You'd have to talk to the corporations on that one. They do the hiring....we do the consuming...Progress is not made by everyone joining some new fad,
and reveling in it's loyalty. It's made by forming coalitions
over specific principles, goals, and policies.
http://i36.tinypic.com/66j31x.jpg
(\__/)
( o.O)
(")_(")0 -
RolandTD20Kdrummer wrote:You'd have to talk to the corporations on that one. They do the hiring....we do the consuming...
back from vacation, eh?
i wonder about the parents allowing this. i started working at 8 years old but my parents monitored me. they'd never let me work in those conditions.0
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