Takeaways from the AP's investigation into how US prison labor supports many popular food brands
By MARGIE MASON and ROBIN MCDOWELL
Updated 10:26 AM CST, January 29, 2024
In a sweeping two-year investigation, The Associated Press found goods linked to U.S. prisoners wind up in the supply chains of a dizzying array of products from Frosted Flakes cereal and Ball Park hot dogs to Gold Medal flour and Coca-Cola. They are on the shelves of most supermarkets, including Kroger, Target, Aldi and Whole Foods.
PEOPLE OF COLOR DISPRORTIONATELY AFFECTED
The U.S. has a history of locking up more people than any other country currently around 2 million and goods tied to prison labor have morphed into a massive multibillion-dollar empire, extending far beyond the classic images of people stamping license plates or working on road crews.
The prisoners who help produce these goods are disproportionately people of color. Some are sentenced to hard labor and forced to work or face punishment and are sometimes paid pennies an hour or nothing at all. They are often excluded from protections guaranteed to almost all other full-time workers, even when they are seriously injured or killed on the job. And it can be almost impossible for them to sue.
And its all legal, dating back largely to labor demands as the South struggled to rebuild its shattered economy after the Civil War. In 1865, the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution outlawed slavery and involuntary labor except as punishment for a crime. That clause is being challenged on the federal level, and efforts to remove similar language from state constitutions are expected to reach the ballot in about a dozen states this year.
FULL story: https://apnews.com/article/prison-to-plate-investigation-takeaways-5debda3b0222c5c7de8b8a485084f206
bucolic_frolic
(46,835 posts)forced upon unwilling mothers by the state and entitled to recompense. THAT should get Republicans attention.
duhneece
(4,236 posts)He said in all honesty, of course we can produce the goods more cheaply than any company could. We pay inmates pennies on the dollar, with, as someone mentioned, no workers compensation, little or no training
AllaN01Bear
(23,006 posts)many of us do not remember the chain gangs that built roads , etc.
https://www.pbs.org/tpt/slavery-by-another-name/themes/chain-gangs/
A wide variety of companies such as Whole Foods, McDonald's, Target, IBM, Texas Instruments, Boeing, Nordstrom, Intel, Wal-Mart, Victoria's Secret, Aramark, AT&T, BP, Starbucks, Microsoft, Nike, Honda, Macy's and Sprint and many more actively participated in prison in-sourcing throughout the 1990s and 2000s.
live love laugh
(14,351 posts)Farmer-Rick
(11,328 posts)There is no way average workers can compete with this free labor. The government covers the prisoner's food and board. Tax payers pay for the prisoner's clothes and health care. The corporations need do nothing for these prisoners and get all the labor they want for free.
These corporations can out perform their competition because they get free labor. This is a slave economy competing with capitalism.
China does this too, that is why a lot of their products are so cheap.
Since we have already taken away a woman's right to bodily autonomy the next thing will be to force prisoners to give up their body parts if their organs are a match for a filthy-rich man on a donor's list. China and Russia do this too.
So much for capitalism. Are we now a slave economy?
Joinfortmill
(16,353 posts)SouthernDem4ever
(6,618 posts)I don't know if they are still doing this but I remember getting a guy calling to sell magazines acting like Moose and Rocco telling me to buy them or else. Then I heard it reported prisoners were being used.
1WorldHope
(890 posts)There is just so little about our history of "winning" that doesn't include cruelty and cheating.