Upton Sinclair said, “I aimed at the public’s heart and by accident hit it in the stomach.” What Upton Sinclair meat by this was that he was trying to show the readers the life of an immigrant in the meat factory. But throughout the book it shows the reader how the meat was handled, and the awful conditions in the factory where their meat that they were eating came from. Hitting the reader right in the stomach. Upton Sinclair shined a light on a huge issued that not many people knew about and by writing The Jungle created a change to the industry. The Jungle had a direct correlation with the passage of the Pure Food and Drug Act in 1906. The Pure Food and Drug Act in 1906 was the first law to regulate manufacturing of food. It prohibited dangerous …show more content…
According to U.S. News, “Between 2001 and 2013, the expanded trade deficit with China cost the U.S. 3.2 million jobs, and three quarters of those jobs were in manufacturing” (Peralta). Although it is smart as a business owner to export their jobs because it is cheaper, it’s still not ethically alright to do that to the people in third world countries. It’s less of an expense the business must pay causing the company to make a larger profit at the end of the day. But all in all, the businesses should try to keep jobs in the United States in order to help the American economy. But it is not ethical to pay these workers such a low wage that they can barely survive and provide for their families. Having traveled to Guatemala and seeing how most people live in third world countries the fact that well know American companies treat their oversees employees so poorly makes me angry. While in Guatemala many of the people there would work multiple jobs and still don’t make enough to be able to support their families. Their working conditions that I saw were terrible and their living conditions were not favorable just like the ones that were showed in the Nike sweatshop video. Although many people are looking for work in these third world countries to support their families, companies need to respect them and give the workers what is deserved. I believe that sweatshops still exist today, it’s changed from over time and they all have moved overseas because there are not many global laws that prevent against the harsh working conditions for these