I hesistated, at first, to publish this photo here, but if the professional journalists at TIME Magazine think that it’s OK for an unsuspecting audience, well, then it’s probably OK. I’m betting that many of you won’t have seen it.

“Cheap Labor”: Bangladeshi photographer Taslima Akhter captured this heart-wrenching iconic image of unearthed garment workers at collapsed Bangladeshi factory outside Dhaka.
Please click on the link above for the full original story in TIME. The photographer, who says that he still has found new clues about who the victims of the collapse of the factory were or whether the relationship between them was anything more than chance proximity as the building buried them alive, writes in part:
I spent the entire day the building collapsed on the scene, watching as injured garment workers were being rescued from the rubble. I remember the frightened eyes of relatives — I was exhausted both mentally and physically. Around 2 a.m., I found a couple embracing each other in the rubble. The lower parts of their bodies were buried under the concrete. The blood from the eyes of the man ran like a tear. When I saw the couple, I couldn’t believe it. I felt like I knew them — they felt very close to me. I looked at who they were in their last moments as they stood together and tried to save each other — to save their beloved lives.
Every time I look back to this photo, I feel uncomfortable — it haunts me. It’s as if they are saying to me, we are not a number — not only cheap labor and cheap lives. We are human beings like you. Our life is precious like yours, and our dreams are precious too.
When our corporations send jobs overseas to rickety factories like this, cutting costs and skirting regulations so that they can have much higher profits and we can have slightly cheaper clothes, this carnage is part of the cost. But that may not be enough for some readers, so let me pick at your enlightened self-interest.
When people overseas see the economic system that we impose on the rest of the world leading to this sort of result, the treatment of “human capital” as disposable — after all, there are plenty of other unemployed Bangladeshis who will take the next factory job like this out of economic desperation — when it would not be so hard to built factories up to (dare I say?) western standards that would not bury these people like this. They could have building codes — in fact, we could demand it of them. They could allow their workers to grieve against such things as bad working conditions without reprisal — in fact, we could demand it of them. But we don’t.
People overseas (and many right here at home) see our society as seeing their citisens as disposable. They don’t like it. It makes them less likely to become our friends. They are more likely than otherwise, in fact, to become our enemies. If something like this happened despite our best efforts, it would be one thing — but we’re not even in the same galaxy as giving “our best efforts.” They’re cheap labor — and rather than pressing for change we tend to do what we can to prevent them from rising from “cheap” to merely “inexpensive.”
You can take it seriously, or not. They take it seriously — and if we care what the rest of the world thinks of us, given that they can side with us or our enemies in the future, so should we.
(And yes, I do recognize that, to a lesser extent, I could be writing about Texas instead of Bangladesh.)
I agree with you on 99% of this post Greg.
I don’t agree with:
“Why we unionize” – unions are not necessary.
“we impose our economic system” – we do not.
However, we need to and have the ability to impose standards.
*Dr. Skally, always so off target…..it must take talent that is impossible to grasp.
Coal Miners? Detroit Auto Manufacturers? Textile Workers? Child Labor? No pay for overtime? No Health and Safety? Owing your soul to the Company Store? Yeah……same thing went for Chinese workers laying rails of our TransContinental Railroad.
You just keep thinking Skally……that’s what you seem to do best.
A combination of exorbitant union demands and our collective failure to demand working condition standards of foreign manufacturers have led to the decimation of union auto and textile manufacturers. Have you seen the online photos going around depicting 1945 Detroit and Hiroshima – comparing those 1945 cities to the current day? Unions are fast becoming irrelevant and hated by the public.
Necessary and beneficial are two different things. Unions are beneficial…to many people, as the Winships highlight above.
I’ll discuss unions with you later, but:
“We do not impose our economic system”? Please let me know how far out on that limb you plan to climb so I can choose an appropriately sized saw. Damn, there goes my weekend.
Skally,
Unions are very important to workers rights. Employers get away with a lot more when employees have no leverage. Sometimes employees have to pull the strike card to get things done.
Inge – I agree that unions have the right to strike – and they should strike for all they can get. For you see those unions will be and are the cause of their own demise. Think Detroit and Twinkies.
Shame on Wal-Mart (I never shop there) and (I was surprised) the GAP are the ones who do business with the owners. I heard on NPR that both companies don’t want to pay for upgrades or allow inspections because of possible bad publicity. How about doing the right thing and make the workplace, pay better wages, etc. instead of being greedy bastards?
This is why we should buy American made..there are some like American Apparel. We all know why these businesses go over seas to avoid the laws we have here.
It is 1911 all over again. I think its f***ed up that stores like The GAP charge like 30-50 bucks for these clothes and still have wal-mart styled practices. They should be able to absorb the costs for modernized factories like a foxcomm factory that makes Apple and Sony stuff.
as my grandfather from ohio once said, unions are very important, everybody should own one
*Henry Ford believed that too. Ford paid the highest wages in the auto industry but the continuing pressure he put on his employees fo work faster, harder and longer finally caught up with him. When the riots came, Ford brought in the Pinkertons and they wound up killing several Ford employees.
He immediately put a stop to that. He brought in the Union and then called in the leadership of the Union. He asked them how much they wanted to be sent to “their Swiss Bank Accounts”. He wanted to know the number. The Union Leadership would change, but Ford got more work out of its workforce and other Corporate Moguls followed Ford’s lead. Except of course, the Coal Miners of West Virginia….John L. Lewis came in and “Tennessee” Ernie Ford sang the song….”I owe my soul…..to the Company store!”
Unions, sadly….no matter how corrupt, are no more corrupt than the Corporate Moguls that ask employees to buy out their companies..in rigged games or ship jobs to China while they take their profits to off shore – no tax havens. Meanwhile, Union Employees have gotten Health Care, better than average wages and the ability to hold on to a job…..at least more so than Non Union workers.
There will never be a time – that Unions are not needed. As long as there is greed and cruel people that hire people…….even with all their faults…..we will still need Unions.
Made me laugh, you cur.
then my work here is done
Thanks Greg. I couldn’t say it any better. Just because we may be protected (because of union efforts) from such dangers in our personal lives does not mean that those protections are universal, even in the U.S.
We want the cheap stuff, so mush that many will drive for miles, wasting potential savings in gas, to that Walmart across town to get them. We forget that the few dollars we save, costs far more than we know in exploited and disposable human lives.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/11/dov-charney-bangladesh_n_3253763.html?utm_hp_ref=business#slide=1992409
“This situation of manufacturing clothing and paying wages that won’t even buy you an iPhone after a year is not going to work. Start making clothing in a human way.”
Damn straight!