Should sweatshops be supported by the U.S?
While many people in the United States receive and purchase items that come from sweatshops, few people are aware of the horrors that take place in such establishments as Nike, Adidas, Disney, and many more. Some words that are not as common are sweatshops and sweatshop operators. A sweatshop is “A shop or factory in which employees work for long hours at low wages and under unhealthy conditions” (Merriam-Webster). Another definition is sweatshop operator which is, “Employers who violate two or more labor laws, from the prohibition of child labor, to health, safety, fire and building codes, to forced-overtime and the minimum wage” (Miller 9). The horrors of sweatshops, characterized by inhumane working
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Some examples are demanding workloads that cause the employees to get injured or sick, extremely tight schedules that make it hard to see their family and spend time with their loved ones, and harsh management systems have led to severe psychological problems, including stress and anxiety (Jiang et al. 1). In addition to the already rising levels of stress and anxiety that the world is experiencing (Abrams 2), the sweatshops are simply adding to it by inducing these problems in their workers. Moreover, the individuals do not have time to deal with these hardships due to the excessively long hours that they have to work. Because of this, many of these workers experience depression, violence, and even suicide (Jiang et al 1). Another reason that the sweatshop workers are affected negatively in regards to psychology is that they know that they do not have an escape. Since the sweatshop workers do not have the choice to leave, they can get damaged mentally knowing that they will have to suffer another day tomorrow. Essentially, the sweatshop workers have no hope. Also, the sweatshop workers know that they are being treated like trash and cannot do anything about it. Sweatshops leave long lasting physical effects on its workers. Sweatshops are “a brutalization and assault on human dignity” (Miller 9). Sweatshops laborers have to do so much physical toil that it is like they do not treat them as humans; …show more content…
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61, 2001, pp. 8–14. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/20710102.
Miller, John. “Teaching about Sweatshops and the Global Economy.” The Radical Teacher, no.
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