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October 17, 2007
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| Nobodies: Modern American Slave Labor and the Dark Side of the New Global Economy |
IntroductionJOANNE MYERS: Good morning. I'm Joanne
Myers, Director of Public Affairs Programs. On behalf of the Carnegie Council, I
would like to thank our members and guests and C-SPAN Book TV for joining us
today.
Our guest is John Bowe. He will be discussing his book Nobodies: Modern American Slave Labor and the Dark Side of the New
Global Economy.
I would like to begin by asking a simple question. How many of you have ever
stopped to think about who is responsible for picking the oranges that brought
this juice to your table this morning or the strawberries placed there? Have you
ever thought about the individual who sews the label, "Made in America," into
the clothes that you wear? Take a moment and ask yourself, who are these people?
How do they live? How much are they paid for performing these tasks?
The answers just may surprise you, as our speaker unravels the connection
between our own consumerism and modern slave labor in America today.
In 1865, the 13th amendment to the U.S. Constitution officially abolished
and continues to prohibit slavery. Yet it is shocking to learn how little
progress has been made in this area, since involuntary servitude still continues
to flourish in many parts of the United States. Today in America, the number of
workers who are kept in horrendous work environments, where they are paid
sub-poverty wages without any benefits, the right to overtime, or the ability to
organize, or even leave if they so choose, would shock and appall you.
In Nobodies , John Bowe writes about these issues to highlight the
abuses and the immense indifference that exists in America, a country that
prides itself on being free and democratic. He is passionate and concerned. He
draws upon three case studies: farm workers in Florida, East Indian labor abuses
in Oklahoma, and forced labor in Saipan, a U.S. territory in the Pacific.
As he shares his findings, he poignantly demonstrates how globalization and
the actual slavery that results because of it have had the effect of degrading
not only foreign workers in the United States who are abused, but also the
character of our society as a whole. As one of our finest investigative
reporters, our speaker hopes that by sharing these stories and by studying how
free and powerful people respond to the unfree and less powerful, perhaps we
will then realize the potential hazards of our current enthusiasm for this
phenomenon we call globalization.
Taking advantage of someone's desperation may be more than exploitation, and
this is one of the things Mr. Bowe will be exploring this morning.
His writings have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times
Magazine, GQ, and The American Prospect. He has also
appeared on NPR's This American Life , as well as The Daily Show
With Jon Stewart.
In addition, he is coeditor of Gig: Americans Talk About Their Jobs, one of Harvard
Business Review's Best Books of 2000, and he is co-screenwriter of
the film Basquiat. In 2004, he received the J. Anthony Lukas Work in
Progress Award, the Sidney Hillman Award for journalists, writers, and public
figures who pursue social justice and public policy for the common good, and the
Richard J. Margolis Award, dedicated to journalism that combines social concern
and humor.
Please join me in welcoming someone who cares about what he writes and wants
us to be concerned as well, our guest today, John Bowe.
Remarks
JOHN BOWE: Good morning. Thanks for having me here, first.
Second, I should warn you, I'm a much better writer than a public speaker. I
think I have this tendency to make a lot of jokes, and stumble around a lot, and
make it seem like I probably don't care about my subject as much as I do. So
don't let the smooth taste fool you. I spent six years on this book, and it's
hard to sum it up in just a few minutes, on my feet.
Lately, there have been all these books about capitalism and globalization
and inequality between rich and poor. I have been going around for the last
couple of weeks on a book tour talking about this, and in every audience, people
are clearly very concerned about all this. Everybody knows there is something
going on. The scales are tipping somehow, and that is somehow problematic. Just
in general, in life, things should be in balance, and there is something that
looks like it's going out of balance.
I guess what I came to believe while working on this book is that this
problem is as scary as global warming. It is this reversion, sort of inexorable,
to a way of life pre-Enlightenment, pre-democracy, pre-we're-all-created-equal.
It is not something that people choose. A lot of it is just sort of the
structural, inexorable thing, a lot like global warning. Once it starts and gets
momentum, it's too late. Maybe I am wrong.
Currently, the top 1 percent of American households have gathered more wealth
than the entire bottom 95 percent. Since 1970, the bottom 40 percent of American
households have lost 80 percent of their wealth. This is not from the internet;
this is from the U.S. Department of Labor, the Census Bureau. The same trend of
growing inequality is spreading around the world. In the last 20 years, in 59
countries, average income is lower today than it was 20 years ago. The top
one-fifth of the world has 80 percent of the world's income. The poorest fifth
has 1 percent.
All of these trends are increasing.
Two hundred or 300 years ago, the difference in per-capita income from people
in rich countries was two or three to one. A hundred years ago, that had risen
to ten to one. It is currently 60 to one, and rising. Ironically, this change
has been partly because of the abolition of slavery, which freed up people's
productive capacity to work, be more productive, make more money. It's ironic
that now that is resulting in this increase in inequality and that that could
very possibly lead us back into slavery or something like slavery.
There is something that Justice Louis
Brandeis said in the 1920s, which, coincidentally, was the last time that
wealth inequality was where it is now in the United States. He said, "We can
have democracy in this country or we can have great wealth concentrated in the
hands of the few, but we can't have both."
This book is about three slavery cases here in the United States now, today.
It sort of breaks them down into the little psychic components and labor law and
human-rights law components—the technical thingies that make it possible. What
you realize—this is not a perfect statement or something I could argue
scientifically—is that slavery is the opposite of democracy. It's the exact,
perfect opposite.
One point that the book makes is that there are technical components that
make these things. There are technical things that take away freedom, technical
things that build freedom or enhance or promote freedom. They are actually
fairly simple things.
One way in which I am getting in trouble for this book is that I approached
it as a writer, not as a policy guy. That's all I know, journalism and writing.
Now that the book has come out, I'm sort of forced to be a policy guy, and I'm
not great at it. The solutions and the things that help a problem like this are
so many and so vast and tie into so many different areas of public policy and
morality and spirituality—whatever you want—that you could talk about 150
different things and you still wouldn't cover it.
But one of my primary concerns is just hitting at this blindness that we all
bring to the subject. A friend of mine, describing our attitude towards
privilege, said, "We can't see it because we can't see it." There is this
structural part of our brain, and it doesn't matter if you are rich or poor, or
liberal or conservative. In many, many parts of this book, when I was hanging
around with really, really poor people, it wasn't some big evil corporation
screwing over poor little Third World workers; it was some guy with a dime
raking over the coals someone who had a nickel. So you have to get it out of
your head that this is good versus bad. This is human nature. This is everybody.
I will put myself in that category, too. A while ago, I wanted to make some
bookshelves. What was my first thought? Did I think, "Oh, I should call the
union and find a carpenter and pay him 30 bucks an hour"? No, of course not. I
thought, "There must be some Mexican out there who would be just thrilled to
earn $8.00 or $10.00 an hour."
I think everything in this book plays out against this backdrop, worldwide.
In the back of everybody's mind, there is this calculator running—"Oh, Chinese
people make $60.00 or $70.00 a month. That's the going rate for labor now." I
don't think there are too many drywall plasterers here in this room. We don't
care what those guys get paid. You don't see and you don't notice, and you don't
see and you don't notice.
Anyway, this not noticing is one of the things that I just became obsessed
with, the ways in which we can't see. There are just a thousand of them.
Very briefly, the first part of the book is about a case in Florida, which I
wrote about for The New Yorker . I heard about it while going around
the country interviewing people for the last book I worked on, which was called
Gig: Americans Talk About Their Jobs . That was 125 interviews of
people, rich and poor, from supermodels to illegal aliens working in poultry
plants, talking about their jobs. It's like 125 little documentary films.
I was driving around doing that, and someone in North Carolina told me about
some people they knew in Florida who were working on a slavery case. I went down
and checked it out. I really had no idea what a vast subject slavery is. But,
really, in our heads, we should just think, there's music, there's painting, the
visual arts, there's dance, and then there are ways in which we screw each other
over. We have probably brought far more ingenuity to the last category, and
creativity.
I just fell down into this rabbit hole, and I have sort of been there ever
since, unfortunately.
The first part is about this case with some Mexican migrant workers who cross
the desert into Arizona and get driven by a guy named Shorty to the swamps in
Florida, where they are introduced to their new boss, a guy named El Diablo. El
Diablo is diabolic, to say the least.
He says, "Do you guys have the money to give Shorty for the ride from
Arizona?"
They come from the mountains in southern Mexico. They have never been to the
United States. They don't know Florida from Arizona. They had never discussed
their wages or what they were going to be paid or how much a dollar is.
When they are told that they owe Shorty $1,000, but El Diablo is going to be
gracious enough to give Shorty a check, they think, "Okay."
This is one of the things about globalization. Back in Mexico, in their small
villages, they said everything worked on the law of cojones. If your
boss didn't pay you, well, you all lived in the same small town, and if a boss
was bad enough, at night everybody would gang up and trash his house or do
something.
But with globalization, of course, you have people affecting each other who
don't come from the same place, and that enables all kinds of tricks to be
played.
What happens is, El Diablo tells them, "If you leave, I'm going to kill you."
El Diablo is a guy who has killed people and kneecapped people and thrown them
out of vans. He is a very scary guy.
During the course of writing about that, of course, I was able to get into
the numbers and the structure of the whole agriculture industry. Americans pay
6.5 percent of our income for food, which is the lowest of any country by a good
50 percent. I think Canadians pay half again as much; Swedes pay about twice as
much. It's not that we can't afford it. Agribusiness is the second-most
profitable sector of the economy, after pharmaceuticals. The federal government
gives about $47 billion a year to agriculture in various subsidies.
This is the opposite of trickle-down. They have a powerless workforce. This,
after all, is the industry that brought us Slavery 1.0. They have never
conceived of themselves, nor have we ever conceived of agriculture, as a
business that could or should play by normal labor rules. You don't see this in
the auto manufacturing business, because they have unions. For some reason, we
have always decided that it's okay if farm workers don't get paid.
So the story just traces the process by which these guys get sucked into this
little world, where they are trapped and they can't leave. There is a great
quote from a guy from the INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], who
says, "Look, these workers are so powerless. What would you do if you're down on
a dirt road, you're 17 miles from the nearest town, surrounded by swamps, and
there's someone saying they are going to kill you? If you leave, are you going
to leave with your brother or your cousin? How are you going to go? Are you
going to go through the swamp? You're going to make tracks like a herd of
elephants. And heaven help you if these guys find you."
That's what it is. As one of the slaves described it, "I felt like all of a
sudden I was in their pocket." You see the world just closing down, and that's
it.
In each of these cases, federal prosecutors have decided that, yes, this
person was a slave. In each of these cases, we are talking about bosses who rape
and kill, and are on record raping and killing. I think that's good enough for
me. The bottom line is, can you leave your job or not? I think that is a good
baseline. If you can't leave your job, it's probably a problem.
The second part of the book is about a case in Tulsa. It's about this old
Mississippi redneck, who is actually a likable guy, kind of a charming old guy.
He and his wife Tina, who looks like the late Tammy Faye
Bakker, started a welding company in the 1970s. It grew to become a big
place, where they make 200-ton big tanks for oil refining and electricity
generation. The business prospered and then, with the decline of American
manufacturing, he found it harder and harder to keep up with "them Koreans and
them Chinese," who don't have any government regulations and taxes and all that
stuff. He started to feel like he was losing out.
So he started a joint venture with some Kuwaitis to make these tanks over in
Kuwait. Typically, in the Gulf oil states, as most of you probably know, they
have imported workers, guest workers, from India, the Philippines, Pakistan, and
they pay them very little and they treat them very badly. That is what this guy
was going to do.
He recruited for workers in India and got these very skilled welders. He
decided he wanted to bring them over to Tulsa first, for a few weeks, and train
them, to teach them the American way, before bringing them to Kuwait. So he
brought over one group for three weeks, and that worked out okay. He paid them
$3.00 an hour, which was a violation of minimum-wage laws, but that's what they
were going to be making in Kuwait, so why be inconsistent? Then he shipped them
off to Kuwait. Then he brought over another group—the same thing, three or four
weeks—and then sent them to Kuwait.
I think at some point the gears started turning. He was looking at these guys
and looking at his American workforce and thinking, "Why am I paying these guys
$15.00, $20.00 an hour?"
Here was one of the good things, too, about the story: He saw himself as a
benefactor of the Indians. He was doing them a favor—because, of course, they
are all starving to death in India. That's a poor country, where they don't have
any money. So he wasn't just making a buck or saving money; he was doing them a
favor, helping the "Indian boys," as he called them.
So he devised this whole deal where he would have an Indian recruiting firm
find the workers and run them through some tests, and they would be the nominal
employer. He came up with this really complicated deal where he would send their
wages to India. He would wire the wages to this company, called Al-Samit, which
also did some work for Halliburton in Guantanamo. This company would wire the money back to Tulsa as
their wages, and then it would get paid to the workers. It was this sort of
hocus-pocus that you can do now with the internet.
He also decided that, instead of paying them minimum wage and instead of
going through all this labor nonsense, like Social Security and health benefits
and all that stuff, if this foreign employer was the employer, they could skip
all that. After all, these workers were just going to be training, not really
working. So it was sort of a different deal than just working.
At the same time, he thought, "Well, why should I have these guys all look
for their own apartments? I'll just house them on the company premises, and that
way they won't have to do all the work of finding apartments and wasting their
money on rent and all that stuff."
As he explained it, "Sure, I could have had the recruiting company pay them
minimum wage, then let the guys pay for their housing, food, and transportation.
But they were only here visiting for a short time. They had no credit, no Social
Security. No reason not to treat them as the guests of America they were."
So these guys come from India. They have paid a $2,000 bribe back in India to
get the job. Every single worker in America who comes here from another country
comes owing somebody money. It is a threat that probably nobody in this room can
really appreciate. Two thousand dollars in India is not a sum of money that you
are going to make at almost any job you can get. You have borrowed that money
from a loan shark. You are paying 10-to-20 percent a month in interest. These
guys have power over you in a way that my student loan company does not have
over me. If I default, it's a bummer. I might have some angst about it. But
these guys can lose their houses. Of course, the whole extended family lives in
a family compound, so if you lose it, there is this very, very real threat of
putting your entire extended family out on the street, and you will never return
to whatever respectability you had. They are dust.
So these guys come. For Mexican workers, it's about $1,500-to-$2,000; for
Indian workers, it's $2,000-to-$20,000. I just found out about a Thai scam. An
Israeli labor recruiter in Los Angeles has brought in 2,000 or 3,000 workers
from Thailand. They have all paid about $20,000. They are working right now in
14 different states. The same thing—they take away the passports when they get
off the bus, and they say, "Get to work," and then they just take away money
from their paychecks, deductions for this, deductions for that. Nobody speaks
English; nobody can talk about it.
What is interesting about this John Pickle guy is just what an amateur he
was. (John Pickle is the name of the Mississippi guy I am talking about.)
Everybody is doing this stuff. He put everything on paper. He wrote it up. He
said, "This is one of the most visionary and forward-looking training programs
in the history of cross-cultural business."
Here is a little deposition. This guy from the EEOC [U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission], who was
really great, was questioning him.
He said, "When you and your executives were thinking about putting this deal
together, did you consult any other companies to find out how might be some good
ways to do it?"
This is the old guy answering: "No."
"Do you know if your executives did?"
"No."
"Mr. Pickle, is it fair to say you don't know all the details that went into
the negotiation of each of the terms in this agreement?"
"That's a right statement."
"How long have you been president of your company?"
"Thirty years."
"And in that time, have you taken any courses at a college or seminars on
employment discrimination?"
"No."
"How about human resources-management courses?"
"No."
"Have you ever attended any courses or seminars on harassment?"
"No."
"How about the Fair
Labor Standards Act?"
"Nothing."
"How about any laws relating to pay generally?"
"Nothing."
"Immigration issues?"
"No."
"Tell me, if you have been president for 30 years and you haven't taken those
kinds of courses or training, why is that, Mr. Pickle?"
"Well, I work with some pretty sharp people and kind of put myself out for
them, just learned."
I want to match that kind of calculated ignorance up with what it looks like
on the other side. This is a phone call from some workers in Florida. The way
these workers get around from one area to another is with these secret van
services that we don't even know about. But you can call from a tiny town, from
a tiny Mexican grocery store. You call up, you buy actual tickets, and you say,
"I want to go from this place in the middle of Florida to this place in the
middle of North Carolina." These van services kind of flow with the crop season.
So you go from tomatoes or oranges up to cucumbers in North Carolina or over to
Indiana for blueberries or mushrooms or whatever. These van services, for a
cheap price, will give you a ride. They will drop you off in the middle of these
small towns.
El Diablo had this sort of network of cousins and in-laws and people he
worked with. They all communicated on their Nextel phones. They very much
dominate these small rural areas. When they would see these van services coming
to take away workers, whether or not the workers were their own, they would
swagger over and say, "Who's in this van? You're taking our people."
They killed a guy a few years earlier, but the FBI doesn't know how to
investigate these cases. You have a 6'2" white guy who doesn't speak Spanish
showing up at the trailer home where 10 Mexican guys are working, and he starts
speaking in English—"Where's Rafael? Is Rafael here?" Immediately they don't
want to talk to him. The FBI want to work from 9:00 to 5:00. These guys are
working from 5:00 in the morning until 7:00 at night, so how is that going to
happen? The case never moves forward.
So the murder never got resolved, and these bad guys were allowed to keep
going.
One part of the story is describing this attack, by some workers who were
trying to leave. They did not even work for El Diablo, but he thought that maybe
they did, because one of his workers had run away the day before. This is what
happens when a worker calls 911 in South Florida. In the background of this
cassette tape, you can hear windows being smashed and people screaming. It's
just total mayhem.
I should have brought the tape, but it's very difficult to understand.
The phone rings. A southern woman answers: "911, police emergency."
A male Hispanic says, "Speak Spanish?"
The dispatcher says, "No. You speak English?"
He pauses and goes, "Okay, uh —"
The dispatcher cuts him off and says, "You need police, ambulance, fire, or
what?"
The caller panics. He says, "El mercadito, Lake Placid."
The dispatcher—it really does seem like she is concerned, but it sounds like
impatience on this tape—she says, "Where?"
He says, "The store, mercadito, Lake Placid."
The dispatcher says, "What? At the store?"
He goes, "Yes."
The dispatcher goes, "What street?"
He says, "27th."
She says, "Okay. What's the problem?"
Then there is silence. Then there is panic and then there are shouts in the
background.
She screams, "What's the problem? Is there someone there who speaks English?"
Then the phone hangs up and you hear this dial tone. You hear the dispatcher
saying, "Hello? Hello?"
It's just heartbreaking.
Then the phone rings again. She says again, "911. What's your emergency?"
A different guy starts speaking, "I need a cop over here because there has
been fight with gun"
The dispatcher asks, "Where at, sir?"
He says, "El mercadito, store."
Mercadito just means "the little store," but it doesn't say which
store. The stores oftentimes don't have names.
The dispatcher shouts, "I'm not understanding what you're saying. Slow down."
Then you hear more bedlam in the background, and he goes,
"Mercadito, is the store."
The dispatcher says, "Spell it."
Now a third guy grabs it, "Hello? Hello?"
It keeps on going. Finally, the guy says, "Please, it's emergency here. Come
quickly. Hello? Emergency! Emergency! Everybody have gun!"
Then the phone clicks again and you just hear this dial tone.
This is a part of the country where we have 300,000 Spanish-speaking people
working. They don't get heard. They don't get police protection. If they call
the department of labor, they get a phone recording, a white person speaking,
not just English, but this special bureaucrat English—"By the way, our office is
open from 8:00 in the morning until 12:30 afternoon on Wednesdays."
So thanks for coming to our country. Thanks for picking our fruit. We're not
home. Good luck.
I want to take that little micro view. What I do in the book is hold that to
globalization. You see Thomas Friedman on TV talking about how great globalization
is. You look at The
World Is Flat. Every single interview is with a CEO. There is one
little five-word thing in there where he says, "Oh, yes, by the way, only .02
percent of Indians are employed in the high-tech sector." Meanwhile, the average
person—certainly, the 30 or 40 percent of the poorest people in India—has gone
down, down, down. I think the average kid in India used to get 900 calories a
day in the 1980s and now they get 600 calories a day.
There is a great quote from Joseph Stiglitz, which I think, in a very euphemistic way,
captures this whole thing. He says, “I think that political globalization hasn't
kept pace with economic globalization.” That is very much a way of describing
what is going on here.
What I worry about, in all these cases I kept finding that the people doing
the enslaving were usually able to present it as a positive—they said, "I'm
helping these people. I'm giving them a job. They don't have a job elsewhere.
Yes, even if I am doing X, Y, and Z to coerce them, and maybe I'm hiring an
armed guard to wait outside the factory premises in Tulsa, think how little they
were making back home."
There is this presumption that you can exercise this paternalistic, coercive
control because you are doing someone a favor.
I just read about the hundreds of millions of people around the world we are
lifting out of poverty and I compare that to the Spaniards coming to the New
World and "helping" the American Indians by giving them the benefits of
Christianity, and the white colonists "helping" the Africans by giving them the
benefits of civilization. Heaven save us from these people "helping" each other.
I think it's probably the first way to solve this problem.
A lot of times when I have been out talking about this, people start raising
their hands and saying, "What are we supposed to do?" I am worse at that part
than complaining and talking about how bad everything is. But there are,
certainly, plenty of things to be done. There is an Orwell quote
that says, "Economic and social injustice can stop the moment that we want it
to." We just have to decide that we want to do it. But as far as how to do it,
there are a million different ways.
There are consumer campaigns. There is a group that I write about a lot
called the Coalition of
Immokalee Workers in Florida, this heroic work advocacy group, this
"multiculti" Mod Squad down in the swamps of Florida, who have had amazing
success. They have teamed up with a lot of church groups and student groups.
They had a boycott against Taco Bell. When I called up Taco Bell—you look at the
pricing power that these large buyers of agricultural commodities have. They
really sort of set their own price. It has nothing to do with the free market.
Wal-Mart says what they are going to pay. Burger King says what they are going
to pay. The farmer doesn't just say, "I'm going to hold out for a better price."
If you are a tomato farmer, your tomatoes are going to rot in three days if you
don't sell them.
When I first called Taco Bell about this, I had this spokesperson on the
phone. I said, "There are slavery cases that have been popping up in the tomato
fields. There have been six of them in the last few years in Florida. What do
you think about that?"
He goes, "Well, it's heinous, but I just don't think it has anything to do
with us."
What this Coalition of Immokalee Workers managed to do was to, finally, over
the course of about four years, get Taco Bell to agree to pass on an extra penny
a pound for the tomatoes they buy, which sounds infinitesimal, but it actually
almost doubles the wages of the tomato pickers.
This is interesting, because it just totally bypasses any government
mechanisms. It totally just admits that the government is no longer helping with
this kind of problem, is no longer helpful with this kind of problem. We are
going to start negotiating with the real power in this world, with corporations.
Since Taco Bell, McDonald's was the subject of a campaign, and now they have
capitulated. Now they are going after Burger King.
It is actually pretty inspiring to see that these corporate campaigns can
work; they do work. I felt good when my article in The New Yorker came
out about the Florida case. The biggest shareholder of Taco Bell came in to the
next shareholders' meeting and said, "What am I doing holding stock in a company
like this?"
It's just too simplistic to say corporations are all evil and they don't want
to do anything. I think that's bogus and I think it's lazy. If it threatens
their profits, if there is a public-relations campaign that is effectively
mounted, they don't want to have slaves; we don't want to buy stuff from slaves.
Consumers want the same thing. There is a way to iron this out.
There is a bunch of other stuff, but I will save that for questions and
answers, as far as policy things or things that could be done to address this.
But for now, I should probably just shut up.
Thank you very much. I will take some questions.
JOANNE MYERS: Thank you for introducing us to the dark side
of globalization.
I would like to open the floor to questions.
Questions and Answers
QUESTION: Thank you for telling us about the dark side of
our country and suggesting that individuals can help make a difference.
The examples you gave were of men workers. What about women and sexual
slavery and women unable to control their own bodies, brought to places that
they never expected and sold, possibly, by their families, who need more money?
What about that whole story?
JOHN BOWE: When I said that you almost have to look at
slavery as being an art form, just like visual arts or dance or music—when I was
getting into slavery, it's such a huge subject that you have to choose which
neck of the woods you want to specialize in.
There are a couple of reasons why I don't even touch that subject with a
20-foot pole. Number one is that that has become a lightning rod for controversy
between liberals and conservatives. Sex sells. Sex trafficking has been written
about. It's horrible and it's real. It does happen. But the way that it has been
written about has been kind of exploitive.
On the cover of The New York Times Magazine , there was an article about four years ago by Peter Landesman. This is just
amazing to me. They show a Mexican schoolgirl in a Catholic school uniform from
the neck down, with her flesh showing on the cover. It was totally prurient.
This article was also one of the most poorly written—it was a horrible example
of journalism—super-dodgy ethics.
Anyway, I didn't want to confuse the two issues. For me, what is germane is
what I call labor slavery—that is, the manufacture of products that we all use,
that we all consider legitimate. I don't see sex trafficking as being a
contagion that could leap out of its bounds and fundamentally alter the way we
live. I do see this addition to cheaper and cheaper prices and cheaper and
cheaper labor as being vaster, more pernicious, and less written about and less
explained.
That's why I don't address that. It's certainly not the case that I think it
is unimportant or not horrible. I just had to choose which horrible thing I
wanted to write about.
QUESTION: You were able to uncover El Diablo's activities.
Why doesn't the government do something about his operations? If you can see it,
why don't they see it?
JOHN BOWE: They are not paid to see it. The reason the book
is called Nobodies is because I asked one of the guys at this Coalition
of Immokalee Workers—there are different tactics that people take to address
this stuff, but their sole mission really was to educate workers and to teach
them their own power, and have marches and demonstrations and stuff. To my way
of thinking, when I first started writing about that, that was uncool. These
were dated tactics that don't work. I found it embarrassing. I found myself at
one of their protests, and I was shrinking back. I hate that stuff. It reminds
me of the uncool 1970s hippies and stuff like that. That is not necessary
anymore. That is not how things are done now.
So I was always questioning them and being skeptical of them and asking them,
"Why don't you have a legal campaign? Why don't you have a lawsuit? Why don't
you lobby government?"
This guy just looked at me like I was so dumb (because I was). He said,
"Don't you get it? We're pelagatos . We're nobodies. We're losers.
Nobody looks after you when you're a loser."
That is really true. You look at who gives money to politicians. It's Taco
Bell; it's every big corporation. They get millions and millions and millions of
dollars a year from one side of the equation and zero from the other. We all go
to which side our bread is buttered on. That's human nature.
They don't exist.
In the book, there is just this battery of things from the Supreme Court,
from state legislatures, from the federal government—every single way, taking
these guys from poor and miserable, and knocking them down a few pegs from
there, taking away every avenue of legal redress, until they are just invisible.
It is as calculated and manifest as anything you ever saw.
QUESTION: And they are not voters.
JOHN BOWE: And they are not voters, right. They don't even
have the power to vote, exactly.
QUESTION: Thank you very much for your presentation, which
is part of a whole strand of criticism that has been in a lot of media.
There are different ways to look at these problems as sectoral
problems—McDonald's, Taco Bell —national approaches, international approaches.
Two of the people who have been here in the past have been Tom Friedman, whom
you mentioned, and Jeffrey Sachs. Joanne and I have had this discussion. I have
been struck by the difference between Tom Friedman, The World Is
Flat—that the United States has to catch up with China and India—on the one
hand, and Jeffrey Sachs on the other, who has written this book called An End
to Poverty, which is about lifting the 1 billion or more people in
the world from $1.00 a day to $2.00 a day.
I am wondering if you could say something about Jeffrey Sachs's view. In
other words, deep poverty can be eradicated. We cannot, in his view, lift
everybody to $6.00 a day, but it would be a big achievement to lift people in
Africa from $1.00 a day to $2.00 a day.
That juxtaposition is—Friedman ignores the billion who are very poor.
So instead of this sort of international minimum wage, which you alluded to,
do you think what is really important would be to bring people up in their own
societies, in their own frameworks, rather than trying to get everybody at a
certain level?
JOHN BOWE: I think there is a huge, very dense nexus between
economic and social justice. I am not smart enough to talk about it that well. I
don't know if anyone is.
It's interesting. I was reading a book by a guy named Kevin Bales,
who is an expert on slavery. He is the head of an American group called Free the Slaves. He has written a book called Ending Slavery. He writes very compellingly about these
very poor villages in India where antislavery efforts—like rescuing these kids
who had been kidnapped and trafficked into working at looms and making rugs—how
they freed those slaves and brought them to a school for a while, where they
were fed well and educated about their rights.
Then these kids would go back to their villages and, at the age of 12, become
village leaders and alert the whole village about trafficking and tell their
neighbors, "Don't sell off your kids for this little fake reward of $5.00,
because it's not going to work out," but also getting the village to act
collectively and fight against the landlords or the local corrupt officials or
whoever is keeping them from getting government benefits and keeping them from
getting good pay for whatever commodity they are producing.
All of this stuff starts with the political process, an awareness, a
democratic process. That leads to the economic process.
Innately, I tend to think from the outside in, in terms of, let's raise their
wages. So does someone like Jeffrey Sachs. But I think there is a whole other
approach, which is equally, and possibly more, valid, which begins with
democratic processes.
There is a great quote from—I can't remember who—that says, "Show me a man
who makes $3.00 more a week than his brother-in-law and I'll show you a happy
man," whether they are making $3.00 a week or $150 a week or $10,000. Everything
is relative. I think in a lot of these cases it really isn't always a question
of how much money people are making; it's just a question of whether they feel
like wealth is being distributed fairly in their community. That is a huge part
of this. If you address that, you address so many other issues of corruption,
nepotism, et cetera, et cetera.
QUESTION: I very much appreciate what you have done, because
I have actually visited some of these Florida places. But I am wondering about
how you deal with these things. For example, when Washington recently cracked
down on some Mexican illegal immigration, there were immediate responses in
California. Tomato growers started moving down to Mexico. I know you can't move
orange trees as quickly as tomato plants. But, still, I think there is that kind
of—that stuff really is moveable. I am not sure that the workers will be better
off if they grow tomatoes in Mexico as against California or Florida.
How do you take that into account in your suggestions?
JOHN BOWE: I say, move. If you want to move, move. People
have been threatening with that forever and ever and ever. That is sort of the
whole thing of globalization, right? If you unionize and you want nine bucks an
hour instead of the seven we are paying you, we will just have to move the whole
factory from Ohio to China.
At this point, my feeling is, okay, move. When it gets bad enough, people
will respond. What will happen is that enough production will be based outside
the United States, and 70 percent of Americans will be jobless, and they will
militate and they will get political again.
That was one of the really disturbing things. I didn't even talk about the
third part of the book. I went off and lived on this Pacific island called
Saipan for three and a half years. I don't want to explain the whole thing now,
because it's super-complicated. What it is, is a society where 25 percent of the
people are citizens and have passports and 75 percent of the people are guest
workers. It was really like going back and visiting Greece or Rome or what the
United States is going to be like in 50 years.
Then I would come back here to New York and all of my liberal friends would
be complaining about Bush and everything.
I would say, "So have you done anything political in the last few years?"
They would say, "God, you've gotten so cynical."
So now I just feel like—you know, it's not just people on the right or
conservatives or corporate people.
I saw that movie Knocked Up recently. I don't know if any people in this
room are big fans of movies like that. It just has these slacker kids who don't
do anything for a job. They are cute and funny, because they are such losers and
stuff like that.
But those guys are the problem, too. The thing that enables them to not have
jobs is the fact that people in China are working for $60.00 a month. That's
what lets them have this slacker lifestyle.
Now my disdain for those people—if they don't want to be political and they
don't want to be informed about the world, fine. Wait 30 years and see what your
life is like.
QUESTION: One of the things that I found most moving about
the book is kind of what you just said. You talk a lot about your own
progression and your own shift from being cynical and kind of disdainful about
political action, and what can be accomplished by it—and what people can do for
themselves—to really being respectful and admiring and excited about it.
The way you wrote it, you put yourself with the people you knew in New York
and the people you were used to hanging out with, and what you begin to discover
that they didn't see.
I wonder if there is more you can say, either about your own experience of
that or maybe—not exactly the policy version of that, but that feels like
another avenue to think about. What can be done to make the vision that you got
from going firsthand, something that people can get by reading your book?
Do you know what I am asking? Is there some way of thinking about how people
can start seeing these things that have been so invisible? It sounds like you
had a lot of experience mediating between this world where people saw it and
where people didn't —not just how bad it was, but the idea that action,
political action, could do something about it, that there wasn't a reason to be
completely despairing because the Coalition of Immokalee Workers could be
successful.
JOHN BOWE: If I understand your question correctly, I would
say that—I don't want to tell other people what to do, but most people are
concerned with this stuff. Most people care about this stuff, rich or poor. They
don't want to live in a world with slavery. But then, when they look at this
whole thing, they just think, "Oh, this is too big. What can I really do? It's
hopeless."
I think the important thing is to do something. You are not going to take on
the whole economy at once. One person is not going to stop the juggernaut of
globalization. But if you use that as an excuse to do nothing, that's pretty
lame and that is not really acceptable.
So I guess my own journey now is, I don't want to hear a second of
complaining. I am so uninterested in hearing anybody complain about anything. I
have gone to a lot of these readings and people raise their hand, "And there's
another thing," and they complain. I have gotten really rude, where I will just
say, "Give me an answer. Don't give me a problem."
If you start looking into this stuff, there are a million things to do. There
are fair food campaigns. There are these corporate campaigns. Now that the
Democrats control Congress, why not start writing Ted Kennedy
and George Miller, who control the labor committees, and say, "You
know what? The budget for the Department of Labor has been going down and down
and down for 30 years, ever since Reagan got elected. Now there is one Department of Labor
inspector for every 150,000 workers. It used to be one inspector for every
30,000 workers."
That right there—why don't we hire more Spanish-speaking DOL employees? Why
don't we even hire some Indians from southern Mexico, from the hills down there,
so that they can go investigate conditions where their own people are working?
Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Whatever one of those things you like, great. Don't do 20 things. Do two
things and do them avidly.
QUESTION: Don't be inhibited about being a speaker. You are
really terrific.
[Applause]
JOHN BOWE: I got lucky today.
QUESTIONER: We had a speaker here in the last few weeks [Garry
Wills] who is a major religious voice. The discussion was the separation of
church and state. In the course of his conversation, he actually made the
distinction that slavery is not mentioned in the Old Testament or in the New
Testament. I don't think he was proposing slavery. He was trying to show that
there are political issues that have to be decided by citizens and there are
religious issues.
I found myself sort of taken aback by his interpretation of that.
The question that I have for you is, where is the role of the religious
people or the churches or synagogues in this issue? This is such a remarkable
story. If there is any place for religion in this world, it seems to be to stand
up for issues that you are describing.
JOHN BOWE: I think that the role of religion in this country
is always poorly reported, because it's always reported by educated elites from
either coast, who don't venture often enough into the hinterlands. I think the
whole, quote/unquote, rise of religion was just stupidly reported.
I used to go hitchhike and ride freight trains and go meet just regular
people at random. I did it for that reason, so I could see what is out there. I
was fascinated.
The number of super-religious people I met was incredible. I would get people
wanting to be preachers. People would pick me up and say, "I just picked you up
because I want to practice my sermon. Can I do that?" It was just indie rockers
or indie filmmakers. This was a way to be cool in your community.
I found that a lot of times it was charming, or it might be a whole bunch of
racism buttressed up with something completely charming and inspired.
I always felt like, "God, there are about 30 percent of the people out there,
and that's what they care about." I think this whole reporting of the rise of it
and this whole characterization of it as being this redneck, only-conservative,
only-anti-gay, pro-life/anti-abortion contingent is ludicrous. It's nonsense.
The Bible mentions social justice a million times more than it mentions gay
bashing. There is a lot of stuff in there. I think there is a huge contingent of
religious people in this country that are sort of waiting for leadership.
Remember when somebody a few years ago came up with that "What would Jesus
drive?" thing, the anti-SUV thing? That was the first time in a while I heard
some kind of progressive note coming out of the reporting on that world.
But I think a huge chunk of that world could just as easily be lured to the,
quote/unquote, liberal—which I don't think of as liberal anymore—that side of
American debate. There is a lot of energy waiting to work on this stuff, if
anybody talked about this stuff in a clearer way.
QUESTION: John, I was struck by your comment about the FBI
investigating this murder. Obviously, what you said about the rigidity of their
work habits, the personalities, has wider ramifications, particularly against
terrorism—the lack of cross-cultural awareness.
Did you happen to go into any FBI field office down there and talk to them, a
supervisor, about the appropriateness of their people and their training and
their ability to operate in that environment? I don't know whether you had a
chance to do that, but it would have been interesting to see what their reaction
might have been.
JOHN BOWE: I talked to different people at the Department of
Justice and different FBI investigators, and also some INS investigators. What I
found in most cases was that there were people who were genuinely interested in
tackling this kind of crime. It took them a couple of years to learn how to do
it, but eventually they did. Then they would get transferred to bank robbery in
Pennsylvania. That just happened again and again and again. A lot of these
people kept up their interest in trafficking and slavery cases, and they would
try very hard to inform other people. But, just institutionally, there was this
structural problem. They kept throwing away whatever expertise was accruing.
With the Department of Justice, A, they are being racked by all this nonsense
from above, but also even the most well-meaning people—these cases are
incredibly hard to try, because you are dealing with populations that are
scared; they are broke; they don't have the money or leisure or patience to sit
around for two or three years while the wheels of justice do their slow process.
They need to be sending money back home to pay for the sick kid or to pay for
the debt that is getting 15 percent interest. Nor do they have any reason to
trust the government, since they come from countries where the government is
corrupt.
So it takes so many people—and these community groups are really essential—to
bridge the gap between the FBI, the investigator, and the worker, or between the
DOJ, the prosecutors and the FBI, and the worker. They need to be finding food
for these people and translating and doing social services and calming down
anybody who has been through this traumatic experience. All of that stuff needs
to be worked out.
I don't suspect that any time soon the FBI is going to develop an ability to
do that. But they are developing an awareness that they need to work with these
community groups. I think that is the beginning of something that might be good
enough.
QUESTION: Thank you, first of all, for writing the book and
for dealing with an issue that I think has been one of the biggest disgraces
this country has had since 1865.
Is there anyone on the scene politically—and I mean on the national level—who
seems sensitive to some of these issues?
JOHN BOWE: No. To be honest, I have tuned out largely from
American politics—not politics as a whole, but I am not that inspired by seeing
one person who is subsidized by Corporate America running against another. That
is no longer interesting to me.
QUESTIONER: I'm not either. That's why I asked you the
question.
JOHN BOWE: I think John
Edwards—for somebody to actually bring up class and race, after 30 years of
hearing this nonsense argument that class isn't important or that if you bring
it up you are a troublemaker or you are dumb—just to mention the word "class"
and to start introducing the notion—that's life. That's the sport. That's the
game.
Of course it's a class struggle. There is nothing wrong with that. That is
the whole tune.
So I think someone embracing that is exciting.
QUESTIONER: Yes, I happen to agree with you. I think Edwards
is the only one who has had the courage to even open up discussion on that
subject.
QUESTION: Could you talk a little bit more about the issue
of legalization? It seems to me that most of the cases you have talked about
really concern illegal immigrants and their powerlessness. Would it not, in a
structural sense, be addressed in a large way if legalization could move ahead
faster? What do you think the prospects are for that?
JOHN BOWE: There are a couple different parts to the answer,
I think.
One is, agriculture has been a bad egg forever. These are the people who
brought us slavery the first time. Since slavery has been abolished, there has
been one ruse after another, like tenant farming, chain-gang labor. They used
POWs from Germany for a while—any sorts of labor they can get, one guest-worker
program after another. You read the history of any guest-worker program, from
German redemptioners coming to the colonies in the 1700s all the way
up to H-2A workers now. They get abused every time they are brought
in by the business elite and the political elite. They always undermine the
working population of every area. It's a very non-democratically arrived-at
decision. The local population is always angry about it. Their wages go down,
because here is a captive population, one that is not equal to full citizenship
level.
Really, this is something I am rabid about and focus on very specifically in
the book. The difference between citizen and non-citizen is enormous. It is
radical. Introducing non-citizens is corrosive.
What is going on now with illegal aliens is the latest wrinkle on a very old
problem. The problem is not that they are illegal. That is just what is being
seized upon right now to gain an advantage. But then you flip that around and
the fact of their illegality and the fact that there are not 10 million of them,
but, as a Bear
Stearns report said a couple of years ago, it's more like 20 million. This
report was warning investors to not believe the U.S. census, that they needed to
know the real picture. These guys are not exactly Bolsheviks over there.
That is a huge percent of the population. I liken it to introducing AIDS into
a body. It might only be a few cells that are HIV-infected, but it has a really
big effect. You do not want to have non-citizens floating around your otherwise
polity, because it totally ruins that idea of "all people are created equal."
In the end, I arrive at a very, very conservative position on immigration.
The current immigration debate includes Senators Feinstein
and Kennedy joining up with Bush and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to argue that
we need to increase the guest-worker program, the H-2A program, from what it is
now, about 120,000 workers, to something like 500,000-to-700,000 guest workers.
That is a disaster. That is the quickest way to suicide that I can think of, in
terms of working people's wages. You are just going to pit these people who are
already taking it on the chin against these people who are not citizens. They
can't vote. They can't fight for their job rights or anything.
I don't know what the answer is as far as how to clean up the current mess.
But I have to say, having guest workers and stuff like that is horrible. I think
they need to go after employers. Social Security numbers are the key. It's very
easy to check whether a Social Security number is valid or not. As long as you
can make it so people will quit screwing around with that—$1 billion a year
would take care of that problem.
JOANNE MYERS: Thank you, John, for speaking about the
unspeakable.
Watch Bowe's talk on C-Span.
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