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Showing Original Post only (View all)Getting Paid 93 Cents a Day in America? Corporations Bring Back the 19th Century [View all]
http://www.alternet.org/rights/155061/getting_paid_93_cents_a_day_in_america_corporations_bring_back_the_19th_century/
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Sweatshop labor is back with a vengeance. It can be found across broad stretches of the American economy and around the world. Penitentiaries have become a niche market for such work. The privatization of prisons in recent years has meant the creation of a small army of workers too coerced and right-less to complain.
Prisoners, whose ranks increasingly consist of those for whom the legitimate economy has found no use, now make up a virtual brigade within the reserve army of the unemployed whose ranks have ballooned along with the U.S. incarceration rate. The Corrections Corporation of America and G4S (formerly Wackenhut), two prison privatizers, sell inmate labor at subminimum wages to Fortune 500 corporations like Chevron, Bank of America, AT&T, and IBM.
These companies can, in most states, lease factories in prisons or prisoners to work on the outside. All told, nearly a million prisoners are now making office furniture, working in call centers, fabricating body armor, taking hotel reservations, working in slaughterhouses, or manufacturing textiles, shoes, and clothing, while getting paid somewhere between 93 cents and $4.73 per day.
Rarely can you find workers so pliable, easy to control, stripped of political rights, and subject to martial discipline at the first sign of recalcitrance -- unless, that is, you traveled back to the nineteenth century when convict labor was commonplace nationwide. Indeed, a sentence of confinement at hard labor was then the essence of the American penal system. More than that, it was one vital way the United States became a modern industrial capitalist economy -- at a moment, eerily like our own, when the mechanisms of capital accumulation were in crisis.
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Getting Paid 93 Cents a Day in America? Corporations Bring Back the 19th Century [View all]
xchrom
Apr 2012
OP
The irony is if your expenses exceed your pay they may get more disposable income than the worker.
dkf
Apr 2012
#2
I think these are privately run prisons. Corporations are being paid to run our prisons now.
robinlynne
Apr 2012
#21
Not to mention that prisoners spend a lot of time wondering if they are going to get raped,
Art_from_Ark
Apr 2012
#7
New legal slavery: among the most evil business profit plans yet by the one percent.
woo me with science
Apr 2012
#13