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cjenny -> RE: Poisonous Chinese Imports target America (6/30/2007 4:29:13 PM)
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It is very hard to purchase Made In America items only. Many items aren't even marked as Chinese made, just marked on the parent company. Does anyone other than me think about the Chinese workers in all of this? I thought about them years ago. I, me hehehe was the person that went through everyyyyyy single blueprint plan for the first GM factory built there. (Sorry for bragging but I think that is just too cool). I wondered then if there was going to be any emphasis on safety or if it would be up to the owners whims. Oops I tangented in my own post, onwards we go. I've toured factories and plants there. As hard as it can be to buy American here, there is less of a choice there. These workers are saturated with chemical exposure & the pollution is horrific. They export so much and to so many places, I don't think that will change. I wish however, that the working conditions there would change. One factory was a silk factory. Intense heat inside and very dim lighting. All of the workers were women, they sat on the teensiest metal chair I've ever seen & spent their days dipping their hands into boiling water to snag a cocoon. They don't get breaks. They eat there & keep glass jars of tea at their sides until they are done. If the manufacturing conditions changed then it would not only change the quality of goods but also their places of work. I love China, the friendliest & gentlest of people who thought nothing of going far out of their way to help. Example, I was trying to find a certain market in Shanghai & per my usual self got lost [&:] . When I showed a street sweeper where I was trying to go she set her broom aside and actually walked the 2 miles with me to make sure I would get there. I speak almost no Cantonese (I can say 'hello, how are you' 'thank you' and 'no' lol) yet everyone I met was helpful beyond belief. A foreign speaking person seeking help on the streets here would likely be ignored & passed by. Another example. It was evening when I found the greatest tea shop, I hadn't enough cash on me for all I wanted to purchase so one of the clerks walked me over a mile to a bank then back to the shop. Yet you cannot even use tap water to rinse your teeth. The air pollution in Beijing is so tangible that you can actually taste it when you lick your lips. And yes I did eat dog while there. [8D] Possibly a cat too but I'm not sure, nor am I sure I want to know! Just something to think about. So many there depend on our buying their goods. Yet their goods are more and more often likely to contain things we do not want to consume.
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