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Gap Kids: New Frontiers in Child Abuse

By Barbara Ehrenreich, Barbaraehrenreich.com. Posted November 2, 2007.


It's enough to make you vomit on your new denim jacket: The Gap has been caught using child slave labor in an Indian sweatshop.

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It was enough to make you vomit all over your new denim jacket. The Gap has been caught using child labor in an Indian sweatshop, and not just child labor -- child slaves. As extensively reported on the news, the children, some as young as ten, were worked 16 hour days, fed bowls of mosquito-covered rice, and forced to sleep on a roof and use over-flowing latrines. Those who slowed down were beaten with rubber pipes and the ones who cried had oily cloths stuffed in their mouths.

But let's try to look at this dispassionately -- not as a human rights issue but as a PR disaster, ranking right up there with the 1982 discovery of cyanide in Tylenol capsules. Think of this as a case study in a corporate Crisis Communication course: How is The Gap handling the problem, and could it do better?

This is not the first time The Gap has been caught using child labor, but CEO Martha Hansen went on the air to state that the situation was "completely unacceptable" and that the company would "act swiftly." Two problems here: One, she failed to detail the actions. It would have been nice, for example, if she had announced that some of the top-producing child slaves would be reassigned to manage Gap outlets in American malls, and that the under-performers would be adopted by Angelina Jolie.

The other, more serious, problem is that she got defensive about child labor. This is the mistake Kathie Lee Gifford made in 1996. When accused of using child labor in Honduras to manufacture her Kathie Lee line of clothing, Gifford broke into tears on TV. Maybe Hansen meant to cover herself by saying that The Gap would not "ever, ever condone any child laborer making our garments" rather than saying the company does not condone child labor itself. We already knew, from the rubber pipes and oily cloths, that The Gap does not condone much from its child laborers.

Hansen underestimated the potential support for a full-throated defense of child labor. More and more American children are tried and punished as adults today. And the ubiquitous conservative pundit William Kristol will surely be enthusiastic, considering his recent -- though possibly facetious -- statement that "whenever I hear anything described as a heartless assault on our children, I tend to think it's a good idea."

The core of the argument, though, is that anyone who opposes child labor has not witnessed its opposite, which is child unemployment and idleness.

Hansen claims to be a mother herself, but I wonder how often she has returned home from a hard day in the C-suites to find her unemployed offspring Magic Marker-ing the walls and crushing the Froot Loops into the carpet. This is what jobless children do: They rub Crazy Glue into their siblings' hair; they spill apple juice onto your keyboard. Believe me, I see this kind of wantonly destructive behavior every day. Vandalism is a way of life for unemployed children, and they do not know the meaning of remorse.

In fact, corporate America should go further and make a strong statement against the sickening culture of dependency that has grown up around childhood. Why are jobless children so criminally inclined? Because they know that whatever damage they inflict, the Froot Loops will just keep coming. The Gap should portray its child-staffed factories as part of a far-seeing welfare-to-work program, which will eventually be extended to American children as well.

To appeal to American parents, our own child factories should be run more like Montessori schools, where the children are already encouraged to regard every one of their demented activities as "work." If they're going to pile up blocks and knock them down all day, then why not sew on buttons and bring home a little cash? But even American families will have to brace themselves for the inevitable cost cutting measures. First the cookies and milk may have to go, then, as in India, the toilets and beds. Wal-Mart has already pioneered the price-cutting defense of human rights abuses, and The Gap should follow suit.

The company can of course expect some lingering opposition. Just as there are vegetarians and pacifists, there will always be some men, for example, who would rather wear skirts than blue jeans impregnated with the excrement and tears of ten-year-olds. Well, let them shop at American Apparel or some other "sweat-free" vendor, and if they can't find anything there, let them wear dhotis. In a nation that cannot bring itself to extend child health insurance (SCHIP) to all children in need, child-made clothes make a fine fashion statement. And why not accessorize your denim jacket with a scarf derived from one of those oily cloths stuffed in weeping workers' mouths?

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See more stories tagged with: india, child labor, the gap, gap kids

Barbara Ehrenreich is the author of thirteen books, including the New York Times bestseller Nickel and Dimed. A frequent contributor to the New York Times, Harpers, and the Progressive, she is a contributing writer to Time magazine. She lives in Florida.

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My pledge.
Posted by: ShoShenQ on Nov 2, 2007 2:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I pledge right here a solemn vow to never ever buy anything from Gap.

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a one-sided article: judge, jury & executioner
Posted by: KaptainSpiffy on Nov 2, 2007 3:47 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in a country of over a billion people how can you be absolutely sure child labor doesn't creep into your line of manufacture?

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» Simply... Posted by: JMTulip
» missing my point Posted by: KaptainSpiffy
» simple world for simple minds Posted by: KaptainSpiffy
yawn...
Posted by: El Hombre Malo on Nov 2, 2007 4:37 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I never get tired of reading texts that follow Swift's Modest Proposal spirit.

Irony and Satire are such good tools in the hands of a good writer that it hurts to see them handled like a sledge hammer. The issue at hand is grave enough to use such a finer pen to comunicate it.

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What was that?
Posted by: charlief on Nov 2, 2007 4:49 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I normally like Ehrenreich's writing, but I just didn't get that piece at all. I couldn't make out if she was being ironic or sarcastic. Either take, it was unacceptable for a respectable writer to seemingly make light on this disgusting practice.

And the comment about the CEO's own children marking the walls and crushing froot loops into the carpet, WTF? Then there's: "I see this kind of wantonly destructive behavior every day. Vandalism is a way of life for unemployed children, and they do not know the meaning of remorse." What!? Can't we be serious here? This story shouldn't have been hijacked with sarcastic [or whatever it was] writing about under-achieving rich American kids - we hear enough about them every day. Hell, there's even one occupying the Presidency.

What is the point of these comments? Really. It's not like this subject isn't new - it's been practiced by many of the major name brands in the world using so-called EPZ's - for many years. And yet the fact it's still being practiced by the likes of GAP should shock most of us, not be an excuse for a frivolous, misdirected piece by one of the left's most respected writers [in the US anyhow].

I'm really saddened by this piece.

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» maybe she just hates kids? Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: What was that? Posted by: talkville
Made in America
Posted by: rocketman on Nov 2, 2007 5:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Stop buying products made overseas. Made in America has all but disappeared.

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Strange piece...
Posted by: Leman on Nov 2, 2007 5:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Very strange.

I'll go on a bit of an off-topic rant. I like heavy metal music (and many other styles as diverse as baroque, trance and Country Western - that's beside the point). I like its polished pop varieties like Def Leppard and Bon Jovi, it's heavier yet still shameless sell-out manifestations like Metallica and Slayer, its virtuoso drive-for-the-sake-of-drive pieces from Megadeth and I really love listening to unknown geniuses of Swedish black metal (no, it's not where they rap) on a local college radio station. Some of the pieces are delightfully complex and very advanced in terms of technique. But at some point you reach the threshold when a band is just throwing every trick in the bag in your face, trying to impress you with high-speed drumming, killer base roar, several guitars going on seemingly independent high-speed races and a "singer" pretending to be a rabid bear. This is when it becomes just annoying obnoxious noise.

I guess you can see where I am going with this. Witty writing is cool. Angry statements have their place. Sarcasm is great. And the author is clearly very good at all of the above. But take each of these to the extreme, throw it all together and you get another "masterpiece" from an obscure death metal label - a pile of annoying obnoxious noise, an incoherent mess of five peoples' virtuosity for the sake of making an impression.

Surprising, very surprising to hear to see such a thrash hit from this particular author.

I wonder what happened...

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It's bad enough that Indian farmers are forced to give up their lands to GAP and other MNCs even to
Posted by: maxpayne on Nov 2, 2007 5:51 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the point of committing SUICIDE ! It's even worse when their children have to live through DEATH in the form of sweatshop hell and yeah, corruption, privatization, deregulation, etc ... are pervasive just like in the US. In fact, notice that Pat Robertson praised the FAKE "left" in India all the while showing his hate on the real Left as was the case in Hugo Chavez.

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Plain Sad
Posted by: Jbuuty on Nov 2, 2007 6:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lots of comments on the quality of the writing and the use of satire. Personally, I like most of what Ehrenreich writes. But all of that seems to truly pale when we hear a story such as the one she tells.

I basically feel an angry numbness. Powerless to do much to change anything.

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» RE: Plain Sad Posted by: talkville
A little early to draw this conclusion
Posted by: woodbee on Nov 2, 2007 7:10 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gap is saying it's just one subcontractor on one small batch of clothing. Could we wait and see if this might be true?

They're also asking the guy that found this sweatshop to help them see if there are any more.

And maybe we could look at our own role in this. Do we really have to have that storage bin full of inexpensive clothes? I've always liked to have a lot of variety, but I don't look at buying them as a hobby like some people seem to do.

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» I disagree Posted by: abbadon2007
» one possibility Posted by: KaptainSpiffy
Absolutely disgusting- but what ISN'T made in sweat shops?
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Nov 2, 2007 7:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Absolutely disgusting- but what ISN'T made in sweat shops aside from American Apparel (which does not fit the average American ) and organic cotton/hemp clothes that set a t-shirt buyer back $62.00??

There should be laws against child labor and parents who send their children into enslavement should be sterlized and forced to do the jobs they sent their children to do.

But we can not enforce laws in other countries/cultures.

BRING OUR MANUFACTURING BACK HOME. Let good old illegal aliens do it!

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Just "Free Trade" in Action
Posted by: sofla100 on Nov 2, 2007 7:51 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is just the tip of the iceberg. If you look at how much of manufacturing is done in countries like China, India, Indonesia, etc., you will find many, many examples of children, prisoners and other forced, low or no paid laborers. It's what American business and President Bush has been fighting for. The right to the cheapest way to make or assemble products, in order to create the highest level of profits for entrepeners and the business class. We have shipped all the American jobs overseas so that little children can make our products and we can buy them, perhaps a little cheaper, at Wal-Marts. And, it goes on and on.

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You Vote with your Dollar
Posted by: ksun77 on Nov 2, 2007 8:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And that is your only vote. So learn to use it wisely.

I am in favor of labelling in this country that rates: environmental status of the company, whether they pay a living wage, whether the product promotes sustainable future for the planet and our species, whether the packaging is appropriate, necessary and recyclable, how far the materials and products are shipped, and any number of critical data that will help consumers make bright choices about what they buy.

There are more ways to be capitalistic than some people think, and not all of them have to be so destructive.

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Casablanca and Claude Rains
Posted by: zooeyhall on Nov 2, 2007 8:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The reaction of the the corporatocracy, the politicians, and their lapdog media to all of this--- strongly reminds me of the corrupt policeman played by Claude Rains in the 1942 classic "Casablanca":

"I'm shocked---SHOCKED!"

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Brilliantly written
Posted by: helenwheels on Nov 2, 2007 9:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not easy to satirize something so horrible, but this author did it well, in my humble opinion. GAP is despicable, and so are the other companies who do this. They are part of the reason our own economy is tanking. I wish I could just buy "american" but you can't even be sure what a "made in america" tag means... there are so many ways we are fooled. As a country, we don't manufacture things any more. WE just import things. That's dangerous & obviously this is where it's gotten us. THe only other company I can think of that is worse is Nike. Please don't ever buy Nike products!!!

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gap chutzpah
Posted by: DeAnander on Nov 2, 2007 1:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the windows of the Gap in my town are postered with huge pictures of happy African kiddies who are being "saved" from AIDS by generous donations augmented by every piece of Gap clothing you purchase, I kid you not. with smarmy slogans like "Can a T Shirt Change the World, Yes It Can." and some kind of red ribbon theme.

it makes me want to puke. preferably on the plate glass. think I'll go take a few photos this weekend for my own blog, as the contrast between their fake humanitarianism and their actual practise is so more than usually sickening.

but hey folks, this is what you get when you sincerely believe in Ricardo's treacherous theory of Comparative Advantage.

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Mmmmm that's good satire
Posted by: newtype_alpha on Nov 2, 2007 4:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oddly, this is the kind of article I'd expect to see on Stephen Colbert's talking points (or Bill O'Reily, as the case may be). It would be funnier if it wasn't such an accurate prediction of the thought process of neoconservatives: if it happens in the context of globalist capitalism (i.e. "for profit") then it's a good thing. I mean, after all, it's been proven about a billion times that socialism--and anything resembling socialism--is utterly destructive to every country that has ever tried it, so the opposite of socialism (wanton exploitation of everyone at all times and government subsidies for the rich) must be the right way to go.

The only thing you left out was the handwaving from professional pundits to the effect of "America loves low prices. If you get rid of child labor, consumers will feel the pinch!"

I can hear the spin from Wallstreet already: Surely we're all wise enough in the ways of economics to understand that those ten-year-old Indian kids are doing all the jobs that ten-year-old American kids just won't do; hell, our entire economy would collapse like like a Minnesota bridge without those sweatshops! Go ahead and turn your backs on child slavery, but just know that if you do, wages will stagnate, the housing bubble will burst, our country will end up trillions of dollars in debt and American money will be worth less than Canada's!

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The Shocking Thing
Posted by: jaby on Nov 3, 2007 1:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
isn't that the Gap (or Banana Republic or Old Navy) uses child labor, it's that people spend money on clothes at these places. Sure, I've been in all the aforementioned stores on several occasions, but always found the product shoddy at best. I take that back. I bought a fall/spring coat at Old Navy 5 years ago that I am actually quite happy with. Everything else has sucked.

For good clothes made in a "fair practice" manner, try Fair Indigo or another such online retailer. There isn't tons of variety when it comes to fair-trade, organic, and/or hemp clothing, but neither is there much variety at the Gap.

Seriously, this couldn't have been anyone's first clue that the Gap sucks. Buy clothes elsewhere. Vote with your money, it is the only kind of voting that counts anymore.

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Bringin' it home...
Posted by: talkville on Nov 4, 2007 3:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Follow also the work of a writer named Bowe, who presents us with a book entitled "Nobodies" and treats of the fact of slavery (working definition: cannot leave work) in this very country in the State of Florida in the United States of America among other related goings on as we speak and type!

Plato preached to his minions in a society based on Slaves; Bush, Cheney, Friedman, Greenspan, Hagee, Rice (the roster is in millions (but still about 1% of the world, or 2% of the US) -- well, they preach to a country and among countries, based on Slavery. The delusion of the Demi-god is a requirement of office (in board-rooms and government).

And beware when they bring in British eminences to preach, that means they're worried and deferring to Mom. Germans, French, Swiss and Swedes? well they're useful for more practical concerns -- they don't preach too good.

The Gap? Clothes, Furniture, Fruits and Vegetables, Toys, Gas, Cars, TV's, Cell-phones, Ipods.... everything we consume has invisible threads that inevitably lead us to the same places and times. At this end, we're 'the blessed', at that end they're 'the condemned'; at this end we're the good; at that end they're the bad; at this end we are Virtue; at that end they are Selfishness; at this end we're Ayn; and that end they are Rand; at this end we are Spirit; at that end they are Flesh; at this end we are Pure; at that end they are Impure; at this end we are Health; at their end they are Disease; at this end we are Master; at that end they are Slave; at this end we are Steward; at that end they are Ship.

Who but the Elect and the Demi-gods can decide what each of us IS and what each of us can become or even where each of us came from?

This Class of Meta-physicians, Logicians, Mystics and Ascetics wants to Rule, has ruled and continues to rule. They self-identify as Masters (think about the various meanings of that word!); and Masters need Slaves (in their multiple forms of existence). No political system is able to Identify them - they are self-identified; least of all democracy! they have problems even with Monarchy!. But "conserving" what is, is ok by them -- by any means necessary. This hierarchy of slaves has worked reasonably well up to now, and most slaves are doing ok thank you! why rock the boat (us)?

And as society 'grows' in Extension, it also "grows' in Depth. As the Master becomes 'purer', the Slave too becomes 'purer'

When one of this Class utters the word "Freedom", he (or she) refers to the exact anti-thesis of this word to that other Class.

All through History, it's been actual flesh and blood real humans who have concocted and developed these theories and are darn good at it, one must say!. Democratic living now! we get to choose what 'master' (once again, check out a Thesaurus or a Dictionary for various interesting meanings) we want, for how long, and on what terms!!! Send those who believe themselves to be demi-gods back to their cloisters and cells and their luscious abodes to mutter and cackle and talk to themselves or others of their Class.

Among the many "life-styles" to lead these days is the democratic one. When one of their Class speaks, consider carefully what you hear; slavery as the basis of our society.

Let the Gap give account for it's "business model" (master as model!). I, for one, am past vomiting; I'm experiencing dry-heaves and stomach muscle soreness. How 'bout you? How're you doing? The 'tone' of the MSM and most of the Corporate Media in general is soothing, reverent, thank-ful, humble, and pious. They 'care' SO much! Thus Spake Zarathustra! But why? for whom? Why now? Where? They got the tone down pat, lots of practice! Democratic questions for the preachers of slavery.

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lol
Posted by: tsukiyomi07 on Nov 3, 2007 10:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i've always hated those kinds of clothes like abercrombie and fitch designer labels, and it doesnt really suprise me that the maker of such clothes are evil now i on whether the makers of mine are i really havent the slightest clue... but the article could have been better sorry it was a bit lame and more of a bitter ranting but i understand the point which was made of their absurd sickening hypocrisy.

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Gap and child labor
Posted by: sadashivan on Nov 12, 2007 11:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gap or Wal-mart or any other and even an exporter who supplies would not know the involvement of child labor in stitching garments, as is hidden practice and media takes advantage for its publicity. Media does not care the reasons or does not wish to highlight reasons and issues of child labor. Shame on such Media or organizations those do not highlight solutions to child labor eradication rather expose for own advantage. child labour and society Number of child prostitution and street children are increasing each day, each month and each year. Arresting child labor in factories in several countries have opened numerous fields for young children to opt alternate ways of sourcing money. New fields like pornography, sex tourism, plastic items, plastic bags and garbage collection, begging in streets, pick pocketing. Check video how children perform acrobat in streets and roadside. My video clip children street performance through You Tube

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Gap Kids: New Frontiers in Child Abuse
Posted by: sadashivan on Nov 14, 2007 10:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The best practice for GAP, Wal*Mart, Ikea or other textile importers would be to establish own production units with dyeing, stitching machines, finishing and packing in rural village. Over 70% of tailors and garment workers migrate to urban cities to work for sub-contractors of garment or home furnishing exporters. Majority of them are either illiterate or semi-literate so don’t know what child labor (child labor and society) issue is? For them the issue is survival in expensive urban cities raising money for future life in their own village. Most important factor is that job is unstable so can not settle down at one place; move from one unit to another to get better wage as they are on wage per piece produced and wage decided by demand and supply. Under such circumstances, giving education in schools to children is not easy. For them education to their children is learning survival skill that children learn through child labor (child labor and society)For them child not only learns practical skill rather also earns for home. They find their children future more secured than the unemployed graduate in developing world. So they seek help of their children to contribute towards home.
Nearly 80% of garment and home furnishing exporters get production done through sub-contractors (fabricators). For exporters having own unit in urban cities is presently not viable due to lack of sufficient finance, incompetent production capacity, labor issues and expensive affair. Most exporters of urban cities outsource their production from small unorganized stitching and embroidery, button-hole (kaj) units located in either unauthorized or poor residential areas of the cities. For illiterate or semi-literate sub-contractors such places are convenient and cheaper to operate. Such areas are beneficial to avoid government attention, escape labor laws and other benefits too to cut cost of production.
A packed garment or home furnishing piece in the rack of a store of an importing country goes from many hands and stages from raw cotton, polyester or other fiber to finished and packing stage. If Garment export units are located in rural villages from where the workers migrate, would be of more help to them towards earning and avoiding children from child labor. Rather would help generating jobs in more areas of manufacturing accessories like; button, laces, threads, machine accessories, hand embroidery and etc;. Child labor (child labor and society)elimination depends on improving living standard of the parents. Avoiding contractors or subcontractors is minimizing extra cost would fetch more benefits to direct buyers and the garment workers. Finally, a unit with all manufacturing facility in rural village from weaving to packed shipment would fetch minimum 25% cost reduction.

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