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Jim Hightower on Sweatshop Crucifixes [VIDEO]

Posted by Jim Hightower, AlterNet at 12:00 PM on December 6, 2007.


Just in time for Christmas comes something that Christians worldwide will consider to be an abomination.
Hightower: Sweatshop crucifixes

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Just in time for Christmas comes something that Christians worldwide will consider to be an abomination: crucifixes and other religious articles made in deplorable sweatshops in China and being sold not only in America's Christian stores - but even in churches.

A highly-respected workers' rights group, The National Labor Committee, has documented the brutal sweatshop conditions at the Junxingye factory in Southern China. Here, young women workers - many only teenagers - are forced to toil from 8 am to 11:30 pm, seven days a week, making Christian artifacts.

They're paid 26 1/2 cents an hour - less than half of China's miserly minimum wage. Out of this meager pay, workers are docked for bad food and bunks in cramped, filthy dorms. This lowers their pay to nine cents an hour - less than $10 a week. They get no sick days, holidays, or maternity leave - and, ironically, they have no religious rights.

National Labor committee found crucifixes from this factory being sold at New York's St. Patrick's Cathedral - for $29.95 a piece! The Cathedral has now pulled these products from its gift shops, which is an essential ethical step, but barely a start. The church must use its full moral authority and enormous purchasing power to clean up China's sweatshop factories engaged in religious commerce.

Far worse than any one gift shop is the Association for Christian Retail - a consortium of some 2,000 religious stores that do nearly $5 billion a year in sales of Christian products. Like Wal-Mart, this profitable economic entity has shifted its manufacturing en masses to China, yet it has not revealed the addresses of its factories, much less the labor conditions in them.

This is Jim Hightower saying... Surely they can answer the question: What Would Jesus Do? For information, call the National Labor Committee: 212-242-3002.

Digg!

Jim Hightower is a national radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of "Thieves In High Places: They've Stolen Our Country And It's Time to Take It Back." He publishes the monthly "Hightower Lowdown," co-edited by Phillip Frazer.


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Pass it on...
Posted by: peachmcd on Dec 6, 2007 2:32 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you identify yourself as a Christian, as I do, I hope you will join me and forward the link to this video to your pastor and two other Christian friends.

"O Come...and ransom captive Israel...."

peace - Peach McD in Durham NC

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I don't even know what to say to this . . .
Posted by: Scientz on Dec 6, 2007 3:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
. . . !!!

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Why So Blind, O Yea of Belittled Faith?
Posted by: Overburdened Planet on Dec 7, 2007 8:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why the shock for people of faith? Where was the realization many nonreligious products in the US come not only from China but from many other developing nations with equally poor labor conditions and civil rights abuses? And how do all those missionaries miss seeing this type of abuse, or why no real stance has been taken on the issue? I'm still waiting for the nationwide outcry...

If Wal-Mart buys from China and people keep buying from Wal-Mart, what makes anyone think this isn’t happening in other industries, including the church-supply industry? Besides, why do Christians always forget their churches have a long tradition of tolerating cheap labor, slavery, sexism and other civil rights abuses?

Churches in America are hugely pervasive and expansive structures, and as tax-free institutions (businesses) willfully take any break (like secular tax money given to Unconstitutional Faith-Based Initiatives). Their mission is to find cheaper sources of labor, increasing profit margins and lowering the cost of financing the spread of their ministry around the world. If this doesn't sound like a business, I don't know what is.

How many Christians are knowingly complicit and blatantly unwilling to stop their support of a nation with no freedom of religious expression that has been known to drown newborn girls in buckets (because boys are more valuable?)...and there’s that pesky population problem.

Add to this everything I’ve mentioned earlier, and well, I’m having a difficult time separating the tolerance of human rights abuses in China with the so-called ethics of Christian business practices. Correct me if I’m wrong, but it seems the more “religious” people are, and/or the wealthier they get, the worse they treat their fellow human being; Jesus was nothing like these people, businesses, and churches.

So I’m curious why anyone would mention they’re a Christian on this site as part of their response to reading this article. Can anyone explain what that has to do with the article in question or anything in general? I mean if this is so shocking to Christians, tell me how this finding is any worse or different in your minds than other ongoing abuses around the world?

And does anyone really think representatives of that gift shop in New York's St. Patrick's Cathedral were acting accountably when they pulled product that came from sweatshops in China? Where are they going to get their product now, and who’s going to stay on top of this story to make sure every church, including their suppliers, complies with fair labor practices, and why haven’t we heard of church leadership doing something about these things a decade ago? I’m still waiting for an answer on that one.

Why do churches tell people how to vote these days, but say nothing about where to buy their things from? Something is seriously wrong with churches in America today, and it's obviously missing from any equation regarding humanity as seen through the teachings of Jesus. I say again: I just don’t see Christians leading by example.

Imagine the reported $5 billion a year in annual sales through the Association for Christian Retail’s consortium of 2000 religious stores? That money represents a lot of churches buying from this consortium that “has shifted its manufacturing en masses to China, yet it has not revealed the addresses of its factories, much less the labor conditions in them.”

Demand accountability from your churches. And good luck living life without products from China, religious or otherwise, but it is interesting to see how far Christians would be willing to go to live the life and sacrifices of their Savior. And don’t forget how you treat the least of his people is how you treat him. Or something along those lines…

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the secular leading the sacred
Posted by: vasumurti on Dec 7, 2007 9:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Joe Conason writes in his latest column on Salon.com: "If (Mitt) Romney is going to attack humanists and secularists as 'wrong;' then let him explain why they were so far ahead of his church on the greatest moral issues of the past half-century."

Similarly, in this article on AlterNet, a progressive writer is alerting the religious community to the fact that their religious items are being produced in sweatshops. It's another case of the secular leading the sacred; i.e., secular people are ahead of true believers when it comes to ending injustice.

It is for this reason that although I would like to see the religious community help end injustices towards animals, I tend to side with secular progressives.

I had the opportunity to hear John Robbins, author of the Pulitzer Prize nominated Diet for a New America, speak at a Unitarian church here in Oakland, CA several years ago. The church was PACKED!

John Robbins mentions sweatshops when discussing social progress in The Food Revolution (2001):

"The revolution sweeping our relationship to our food and our world, I believe, is part of an historical imperative. This is what happens when the human spirit is activated. One hundred and fifty years ago, slavery was legal in the United States.

"One hundred years ago, women could not vote in most states. Eighty years ago, there were no laws in the United States against any form of child abuse. Fifty years ago, we had no Civil Rights Act, no Clean Air or Clean Water legislation, no Endangered Species Act.

"Today, millions of people are refusing to buy clothes and shoes made in sweatshops and are seeking to live healthier and more Earth-friendly lifestyles. In the last fifteen years alone, as people in the United States have realized how cruelly veal calves are treated, veal consumption has dropped 62 percent."

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Oh for Christ's sake.
Posted by: thekidde on Dec 7, 2007 2:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whatever happened to "Ye shall make unto yourselves no graven images"?

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