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enjoy your cheap goodies - here's the real cost

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realshanti View Drop Down
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  Quote realshanti Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: enjoy your cheap goodies - here's the real cost
    Posted: Yesterday at 7:58am
 
This is a fairly longish article and I know how much patience you nobs have with reading but too f-n badTongue for those that can read, don't mind reading, and care to be informed about anything - this is just a small taste of what mexican immigrants to our fair USA land are running from....this is what the North American Treaty Agreement hath wrought....besides the swift migration of American jobs to Mexico and other parts of the world...This is why I fcking HATE corporations and everything they stand for and why I will never set foot in one of these souless places ever again in this life.... If you work for one of these monoliths well fcking shame on you to the seventh generation....This article was written in 2003 but nothing has changed ...nothing at all....and the beat goes on....
cheers
mel
 
 
23 July 2003

In the Mexican border city of Juarez, women keep dying. In the last 10 years, hundreds, maybe more than 1000, women have been murdered in Juarez and, despite increasing feminist organisation, authorities have yet to even slow the phenomenal death rate.

Juarez, population 1.5 million, is a maquiladora city. More than 500 factories operate in the city, employing mostly women at an average of US$55 for a 45-hour work week. More maquiladora workers live in Juarez than in any other Mexican city.

In 1993, as the sweatshops were cranking up, the murder rate of women in Juarez jumped to three a month, the official level it has remained ever since. Unofficially, the rate is even higher. While some 330 women have been listed as murdered since 1993, another 600 have been reported as missing.

And while the bodies of murdered women keep turning up in dumpsters, the desert and urban lots, police are still refusing to systematically search for more. Some of the murdered women have turned into mere skeletons by the time they are found.

Garnering most of the media attention has been the “serial killer” murders, accounting for around 90 of the confirmed homicides. These women were kidnapped, raped, tortured, killed and dumped.

Many women have been kidnapped while travelling to and from work. The corporations running the maquiladora, however, have refused to take any responsibility. Factories refuse to stop the last-minute shift changes that force women to travel alone.

Claudia Gonzalez was turned away at the factory gate for being four minutes late to work, and attempted to walk home. Her body was found a month later. Her employer, Lear Corporation, told the September Salon magazine that the company did not need to change its practices, because the murder “didn’t happen on Lear property”.

The North America Free Trade Agreement exempts the sweatshops from any laws requiring them to provide better security — because such laws might interfere with “the ability to make profit”. Eighty per cent of the Juarez factories are US-owned, and they generate US$16 billion a year in profits. Yet most of their workers live without telephone access, many without electricity, and the companies pay only token taxes.

The authorities reaction to these murders has not been better. A Spanish-language documentary, Senorita Extravida, features the region’s assistant attorney-general arguing that a curfew would solve the problem. “All the good people should stay at home with their families”, he said. The attorney-general was worse: “Unfortunately, there are women who are in danger because of their lifestyles. After all, it’s very hard to go out on the street when its raining and not get wet.”

The police have have refused to change the regulation requiring 72 hours to pass before someone can be reported as missing, despite many of the victims being tortured for days before being killed. One rumour suggests the police are involved in the killings.

Other rumours attribute the murders to one or a group of serial murderers, snuff movie production, drug-related gang wars, a bus-driver homicide network and an organ-stealing racket. But none of these explain the misogyny that appears to have much of the city in its grip.

Most of Juarez’s murdered women were not killed by strangers — although their cases receive less media attention. They are being killed by boyfriends, husbands, fathers, uncles, brothers, drug dealers and crime gangs with astonishing frequency and brutality.

Women drug dealers have been dissolved in vats of acid, wives set alight and young children raped by relatives and dumped in the desert to die. A teenager tortured his girlfriend (and her sister) for days before killing her — because she kissed another boy.

Esther Chavez founded the first, and only, women’s crisis centre in Juarez. She argues that the murders are related to the profound social changes the sweatshops have created.

The maquiladora have turned traditional Mexican gender relations upside down. The sweatshops employ women almost entirely, since — due to centuries of sexist bigotry — they are cheaper than male workers and have less experience of union organisation. As the sweatshops have taken over the town, most of the better paid, male employment has vanished, leaving many families dependent on a low, female wage.

A growth in US visitors to Juarez, combined with rapidly increasing poverty, has increased drug sales and prostitution. One resident told University of Texas sociologist Pablo Vila that the city needed to be cleaned of “evil things”, not only the bars, but “the women”.

“Men are no longer king of the home”, Chavez told author Debbie Nathan in 2001. She described Juarez as “awash with male rage”, adding: “This city has become a place to murder and dump women.”

Far from easing the problems by creating stable, well-paid work for everyone, better services for women and education programs on sexism and violence, the corporate bosses continue to argue that the situation has nothing to do with them. The police continue to claim that the situation is under control. And the women of Juarez just keep disappearing.

Green Left Weekly first reported on the situation in Juarez in July 2001. Since then, another 100 bodies have been found, and another 300 women have been listed as missing. The murder rate of women in neighbouring Mexican cities is now increasing. Last month, the bodies of three murdered women were found in nearby Chihuahua City.

BY ALISON DELLIT

From Green Left Weekly, July 23, 2003.

Melinda Mohn



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  Quote acoustimick Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Yesterday at 12:32pm
It highlights the case for our own survival mel.....and i think it looks bleak.  We are human beasts...not beings!.  Wild animals are tamer than us.  Brings back a song i wrote about the hypocrisy of society, the huge food mountians being stored all over the EEC, and left their to rot before they would give out to the needy....the clamour for shoes costin hundreds of pounds to buy, and pennies to make.....by a child.
It makes me mad, sad, and bad! towards the so called leaders, politicians, businessmen, rats, weasels, and slime that try to pull the wool over all of this by offering u a 10% sale on everything.......or a 0.25% reduction in mortgage rates.....or...ach...fk i could go on n on!.
 
Seems everytime we save a penny in our `civilised society`, someone somewhere suffers untold misery...all for that one penny
 
 
 
Thnx for the read......and in perhaps my 1st real post in ages.....u make me mad by lettin me read this lol.  Oh its all downhill this year alreadyOuch


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  Quote Fudgepacker Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Yesterday at 1:49pm
Thank you for the information.
 
A few of us once discussed an idea one of us had. He asked us, if everytime you had sex someone in China was executed for no reason whatsoever, would it stop you having sex? To a man and beast we said no. One of us said something else but its not ok to repeat it here.
 
There is no moral here, other than we choose with great self-interest when we want to look the other way. And that is very much a human condition that we are all guilty of.
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  Quote realshanti Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Yesterday at 2:22pm
yeah  - all too too true Fudgie - over 500 multinational corporations in Jaurez which means that most of us around the world are prolly using something made there so even if we don't actually work for the bastards we still have a hand in it and thats not easily sorted is it?
 
didn't mean to depress ya Mick....was pondering the immigration issues we have here in the states and why peeps risk their lives to cross the border from Mexico -  just got me to thinkin and with our elections coming up this year and me thinkin nothing's gonna change cause its always about the damn corporations and their almighty fckin profits in the end - dunno -
just made me want to eat glass...
 
my only consolation is that what seems endless now will end one day cause all empires fall and give way to something else....
Melinda Mohn



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  Quote Rosemarie Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Yesterday at 5:46pm
Thank you Mel for bringing our attention to one devestating effects of capitalism at its worst.  It's not real capitalism because there is not free and fair information.  We, as a society do not assign cost to deceiption.  Capitalism isn't supposed to kill the planet but our global economy doesn't consider the long term cost of air, water, fertile land, animal and human suffering . . . 
 
Commerce is king.  Every one of us are blinded subjects of King Commerce.  Each one of us participate in the problem, whether we like to realize it or not.  Anyone eat at Mickey D's (McDonald's)?  Shop at Walmart?  Work for an industry with a Political Action Committee that is legislating the company's best interest?  It's nearly impossible to avoid providing support to all that is corrupt.
 
"And war, ughhhh, good god, what is it good for? Absolutely nothing!  Say it again."  War is good for the economy.  Haven't you heard ?  Why do we kill, occupy and destroy (I mean re-build)?  Because it is in "our" best interest to do so.  Who is "we"?  Certainly not you and I. 
 
Our best interests are in no way determined by the pawns of business (elected officials) deciding we need to maintain control over the greatest remaining source of oil instead of finding new sources of renewable energy.  Our best interests are not satisfied by corporations hiring people speaking English as a second language (to pay cheaper labor) to read a script to us instead of really helping us with technical support.  And our interests are certainly not served by companies sending jobs to Mexico to abuse slave labor and circumvent standards of decency.
 
Like you said, "that what seems endless now will end one day cause all empires fall and give way to something else . . . "
 
May we give rise, for the first time in human history, to the reign of love and may each one of us become part of the solution.   
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