The Daily Bruin (UCLA) January 31, 2001

Slave labor means big bucks for U.S. corporations

By Michael Schwartz

Los Angeles -- It seemed like a normal factory closing. U.S. 
Technologies sold its electronics plant in Austin, Texas, leaving its 
150 workers unemployed. Everyone figured they were moving the 
plant to Mexico, where they would employ workers at half the cost. 
But six weeks later, the electronics plant reopened in Austin in a 
nearby prison.
At the same time, the United States blasts China for the use of 
prison slave labor, engaging in the same practice itself. Prison labor 
is a pot of gold. No strikes, union organizing, health benefits, 
unemployment insurance or workers' compensation to pay. As if 
exploiting the labor of prison inmates was not bad enough, it is 
legal in the United States to use slave labor. The 13th Amendment 
of the Constitution states that "neither slavery nor involuntary 
servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall 
have been duly convicted shall exist within the United States." 
There are approximately 2 million people behind bars in the United 
States -- more than three times the number of prisoners in 1980. 
The United States now imprisons more people than any other 
country in the world. In fact, in the last 20 years California has 
constructed 21 new prisons while in the same amount of time, it 
has built only one new university. That statistic is even more 
astounding when we think about the fact that it took California 
almost 150 years to build its first 12 prisons. Another five new 
prisons are under construction and plans are in the works to build 
another 10.
The question that needs to be answered is -- why? Why are 
prisons such a booming business? The answer lies in the prison 
industrial complex. At the same time that prisons clear the streets 
of those you feel are a "threat" to society, prisons also offer jobs in 
construction, guarding, administration, health, education and food 
service.
Prisons in impoverished areas often end up with inmates from 
the local area who had previously worked in the community. Often 
they were laid off from a factory job that moved overseas and they 
turned to alcohol or drugs, which ultimately landed them in prison. 
Others are luckier and get a job in the prison. One of the fastest-
growing sectors of the prison industrial complex is private 
corrections companies. Private prisons also have an incentive to 
gain as many prisoners as possible and to keep them there as long 
as possible.
Many corporations, whose products we consume on a daily 
basis, have learned that prison labor can be as profitable as using 
sweatshop labor in developing nations. You might have had a first-
hand experience with a prison laborer if you have ever booked a 
flight on Trans World Airlines, since many of the workers making 
the phone reservations are prisoners. Other companies that use 
prison labor are Chevron, IBM, Motorola, Compaq, Texas 
Instruments, Honeywell, Microsoft, Victoria's Secret and Boeing. 
Federal prisons operate under the trade name Unicor and use their 
prisoners to make everything from lawn furniture to congressional 
desks. Their Web site proudly displays "where the government 
shops first."
Federal safety and health standards do not protect prison labor, 
nor do the National Labor Relations Board policies. The 
corporations do not even have to pay minimum wage. In California, 
inmates who work for the Prison Industrial Authority earn wages 
between 30 and 95 cents per hour before required deductions for 
restitutions and fines.
State Corrections agencies are even advertising their prisoners 
to corporations by asking these questions: "Are you experiencing 
high employee turnover? Worried about the cost of employee 
benefits? Getting hit by overseas competition? Having trouble 
motivating your work force? Thinking about expansion space? Then 
the Washington State Department of Corrections Private Sector 
Partnerships is for you."
Prisons are being filled largely with the poor, the mentally ill, 
people of color, drug addicts and many combinations of these 
characteristics. They are not reserved for violent people who are 
extremely dangerous to society. In fact, of the nearly 2 million 
prisoners, about 150,000 are armed robbers, 125,000 are 
murderers and 100,000 are sex offenders. Prisons are certainly not 
filled with corporate criminals who make up only 1 percent of our 
nation's prisons.
In California, then-Gov. Pete Wilson signed the "three strikes 
and you're out" law in 1994. The law states that if an offender has 
two or more previous serious or violent felony convictions, the 
mandatory sentence for any new felony conviction is 25 years to 
life. Though people thought the three-strikes law was intended to 
protect society from dangerous career criminals, the actual 
enactment of the law has been dramatically different. Kendall 
Cooke was convicted under the three-strikes law for stealing one 
can of beer with two previous convictions of theft. Clarence 
Malbrough was sentenced to 25 years to life for stealing batteries, a 
crime that would usually send someone to jail for about 30 days. 
Eddie Jordan stole a shirt from a JC Penney store, Juan Murro 
attempted to steal wooden pallets from a parking lot and Michael 
Garcia stole a package of steaks from a grocery store. All of these 
people are facing life in prison for petty theft. They are fueling the 
prison industry. They are not the exception, either. Eighty-five 
percent of those sentenced under the law in California faced prison 
for a nonviolent offense. Two years after the law went into effect, 
there were twice as many people imprisoned under the three-
strikes law for possession of marijuana as for murder, rape and 
kidnapping combined. More than 80 percent of those sentenced 
under the three-strikes law are African-American and Latino.
In the 1980s, Congress established several different mandatory 
minimum sentences. These laws require offenders of certain crimes 
to receive fixed sentences without parole. Mandatory sentences, 
especially for drugs, are largely responsible for the ever-increasing 
number of people behind bars in the United States. In May of 1998, 
drug defendants made up 60 percent of the federal prison 
population, up from 25 percent in 1980. The disproportionate 
number of African Americans being sent to prison for drug use, 
however, is largely due to racism in the actual mandatory minimum 
laws themselves. Though crack and powdered cocaine are virtually 
the same drug (crack is powder cocaine mixed with baking soda) 
possession of five grams of crack gets you a mandatory five years 
in jail, while it takes 500 grams of powdered cocaine to get this 
same sentence. The U.S. Sentencing Commission reported that in 
1995, whites accounted for 52 percent of all crack users and 
African Americans, 38 percent. But just 4.1 percent of those 
sentenced for crack offenses are white, while 88 percent are 
African Americans. Seventy percent of our nation's prisons are 
made up of African Americans. You now know that they are there 
through a variety of unjust racist laws. Corporations are happily 
using these people for slave labor, which is perfectly legal under 
the constitution. Almost 2 million human beings are now locked up 
in our nation's prisons. The vast majority are not there because 
they are murderers, rapists or other violent people. They are there 
because prisons are a business in this country, whether we're 
talking about private prisons or private companies using prison 
labor. The next time you think of prison slave labor you don't have 
to think of China, think of the United States. And go take a look at 
the 13th Amendment.



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