Did You Know 50,000 Mexican farmworkers are on strike?

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
36
They are paid $8 per day - that's right, not per hour, per day.






If your answer is no, you have plenty of company. The Los Angeles Times is the only English-language mainstream media venue to regularly cover the strike. Canadian media, predictably, only wants to know how it will affect food prices (link is external).

These farmworkers harvest the fruits and vegetables that fill our supermarkets and our tables.


They are paid $8 per day - that's right, not per hour, per day. They are gouged at company stores were they must purchase necessities, and see their pay routinely withheld without explanation. They are denied breaks and access to clean drinking water. They are not paid for overtime. Company housing is filthy and vermin-infested. Female workers are subjected to sexual harassment on a regular basis.


From Sonali Kolhatkar, writing in Truthdig:



Years ago the sparsely populated San Quintín area was converted into an industrial agricultural center by growers who imported indigenous workers from southern states such as Oaxaca. (link is external) Bacon compared the dozen or so ranches in the area to the maquiladoras, or factories, that sprang up along the Mexican side of the U.S. border. He described the conditions of the labor camps where workers live as “really awful and terrible.”

Starting in the 1970s many of Baja California’s workers began to cross the U.S. border through California into the Central Valley, and even to states like Washington. “These are all connected communities,” maintained Bacon, which is why the San Quintín strike is big news among farmworker communities in the U.S. such as Washington’s Skagit County.

Sadly, it is not very big news elsewhere in the U.S. When the strike began last week, the Los Angeles Times was the only English-language media outlet in the country to initially cover it. (Since then, a week later, The Associated Press and others have begun to report on the strike.)The farmworkers work for hugely profitable agribusinesses, including Driscoll's, the most popular berry supplier in North America, and a company that enjoys a labour-friendly image.

I didn't find much about how we can support striking farmworkers. The United Farm Workers (link is external) - the legendary union begun by the late great Cesar Chavez (link is external) - has a petition: sign here (link is external).

[PS: If you are interested in Cesar Chavez, it appears you should skip the movie. (link is external) See this one (link is external) instead.]
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
49,927
1,910
113


A lazy, feckless, flatulent oaf with a moustache, leaning against a fence asleep, looking at a cactus with a blanket with a hole in the middle on as a coat".
- Top Gear's Richard Hammond on the average Mexican
 

Ludlow

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 7, 2014
13,588
0
36
wherever i sit down my ars
Reminds me of the Steinbeck novel and movie "the Grapes of Wrath". Just the ethnicity is different.



A lazy, feckless, flatulent oaf with a moustache, leaning against a fence asleep, looking at a cactus with a blanket with a hole in the middle on as a coat".
- Top Gear's Richard Hammond on the average Mexican
Yeah that's how it is. ,,someone please teach me how to do the eye roll thingy.
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
1,666
113
Northern Ontario,
Reminds me of the Steinbeck novel and movie "the Grapes of Wrath". Just the ethnicity is different.


Yeah that's how it is. ,,someone please teach me how to do the eye roll thingy.
A lot of us are politically incorrect......While Richard Hammond along with his countryman Blackleaf is just an ***
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
60,318
9,512
113
Washington DC
Most people would not know or care if it was Canadian farm workers that were on strike.
Most people don't know that Canada has farms. The popular perception of Canada is fishing villages, snowfields, and forests, with friendly drunken lumberjacks playing pickup hockey on the frozen lakes with friendly Mounties in red coats officiating.
 

Ludlow

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 7, 2014
13,588
0
36
wherever i sit down my ars
Most people don't know that Canada has farms. The popular perception of Canada is fishing villages, snowfields, and forests, with friendly drunken lumberjacks playing pickup hockey on the frozen lakes with friendly Mounties in red coats officiating.
I'll bet the growing season is pretty short there. Love farm country . When I visited Illinois awhile back I took the off highways and drove through a lot of the farming communities miles and miles of cornfields. I liked it.
 

Ludlow

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 7, 2014
13,588
0
36
wherever i sit down my ars
My perception of Canada is what you see in the movies and the like. I always think of fishing when I think of that place.

The farm workers here in Arizona are predominately hard working people looking for a better life.
 

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
Sep 6, 2008
47,127
8,145
113
Rent Free in Your Head
www.canadianforums.ca
$8 a day in Mexico is a good days work... you can also rent a nice 4 bedroom home with all utilities for $150 USD a month. (Outside the tourist areas)

The wages are in relation to the cost of living..

If you live in the tourist areas you better make more money.. and speak English..

Taxco furnished 1 bedroom House for rent 450 per month. Rental ID 2102631

I think it's funny how people try to compare their standard of living based on their own, and they haven't even lived in that country, so are ignorant of the facts.

So when you start paying stupid people $15/hr to flip burgers at McDee's, (same ones who can't get a friggin order right) that same idiot will be paying an extra $200 a month for rent, higher prices for food, and so on..

The farm workers here in Arizona are predominately hard working people looking for a better life.

Yes they are, now you know why they immigrate to the USA, send a majority of their money home, and buy houses back in Mexico to return to..