MADE IN AMERICA-by slave labor, killing American jobs

Most Americans advocate for being hard on crime. For locking up criminals and throwing away the key. Which is why America has one of the largest prison populations in the world.
See: AMERICA-Land of the Free??? Never mind that most of these prisoners are in for minor drug offenses. Because more importantly, they are cheap labor that contributes to American unemployment.
Welcome to Unicor.  Selling everything from Electronics to clothing and even providing call center services (Look out India). Unicore, a division of the U.S. Government employs  at least 13,000 Federal Prisoners at as much as .23 cents an hour making high margin products that are then sold to government agencies in competition with private business owners who must pay medical benefits, unemployment insurance and local, state and federal taxes.  So not only do we lose jobs to the prisoners, we also lose revenue to local municipalities who, home to factories who by law are not allowed to use slave labor?

According to a cnn report, Unicore spokeswoman, Julie Rozier refutes small business owners criticisms with,
the unique costs associated with operating within a prison. For example, Unicor employs more supervisors than a private sector firm would, and security lockdowns disrupt production.  
However those wanting even cheaper labor can of course skip the feds and jump straight to the state prisions. For example, from the Nation:
The breaded chicken patty your child bites into at school may have been made by a worker earning twenty cents an hour, not in a faraway country, but by a member of an invisible American workforce: prisoners. At the Union Correctional Facility, a maximum security prison in Florida, inmates from a nearby lower-security prison manufacture tons of processed beef, chicken and pork forPrison Rehabilitative Industries and Diversified Enterprises (PRIDE), a privately held non-profit corporation that operates the state’s forty-one work programs. In addition to processed food, PRIDE’s website reveals an array of products for sale through contracts with private companies, from eyeglasses to office furniture, to be shipped from a distribution center in Florida to businesses across the US. PRIDE boasts that its work programs are “designed to provide vocational training, to improve prison security, to reduce the cost of state government, and to promote the rehabilitation of the state inmates.”
That the example used is from Florida is no surprise.  Florida's "good ol boy" system of corrections and legislation had been using prisions as financial carrots for years. See:



teaching Florida prisoners to raise bees.
Because we all know there is huge demand for beekeepers.

Florida Corrections-A warning bell for America

But then one must keep in mind. During the last election Florida was unable to field a gubernatorial candidate that had not been criminally investigated. The difference is, they get more than .20 cents an hour.



BUt of course these are just isolated examples correct?  Oh no. Lets take a look at just a few of the American Companies that benefit from inmate labor:

BANKS: American General Financial Group, American Express Company, Bank of America, Community Financial Services Corporation, Credit Card Coalition, Credit Union National Association, Inc., Fidelity Inestments, Harris Trust & Savings Bank, Household International, LaSalle National Bank, J.P. Morgan & Company, Non-Bank Funds Transmitters Group

ENERGY PRODUCERS/OIL: American Petroleum Institute, Amoco Corporation, ARCO, BP America, Inc., Caltex Petroleum, Chevron Corporation, ExxonMobil Corporation, Mobil Oil Corporation, Phillips Petroleum Company.

ENERGY PRODUCERS/UTILITIES: American Electric Power Association, American Gas Association, Center for Energy and Economic Development, Commonwealth Edison Company, Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc., Edison Electric Institute, Independent Power Producers of New York, Koch Industries, Inc., Mid-American Energy Company, Natural Gas Supply Association, PG&E Corporation/PG&E National Energy Group, U.S. Generating Company.

INSURANCE: Alliance of American Insurers, Allstate Insurance Company, American Council of Life Insurance, American Insurance Association, Blue Cross and Blue Shield Corporation, Coalition for Asbestos Justice, (This organization was formed in October 2000 to explore new judicial approaches to asbestos litigation." Its members include ACE-USA, Chubb & Son, CNA service mark companies, Fireman's Fund Insurance Company, Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc., Kemper Insurance Companies, Liberty Mutual Insurance Group, and St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company. Counsel to the coalition is Victor E. Schwartz of the law firm of Crowell & Moring in Washington, D.C., a longtime ALEC ally.
Fortis Health, GEICO, Golden Rule Insurance Company, Guarantee Trust Life Insurance, MEGA Life and Health Insurance Company, National Association of Independent Insurers, Nationwide Insurance/National Financial, State Farm Insurance Companies, Wausau Insurance Companies, Zurich Insurance.


PHARMACEUTICALS: Abbott Laboratories, Aventis Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Bayer Corporation, Eli Lilly & Company, GlaxoSmithKline, Glaxo Wellcome, Inc., Hoffman-LaRoche, Inc., Merck & Company, Inc., Pfizer, Inc., Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of
America (PhRMA), Pharmacia Corporation, Rhone-Poulenc Rorer, Inc., Schering-Plough Corporation, Smith, Kline & French, WYETH, a division of American Home Products Corporation.
MANUFACTURING:American Plastics Council, Archer Daniels Midland Corporation, AutoZone, Inc. (aftermarket automotive parts), Cargill, Inc., Caterpillar, Inc., Chlorine Chemistry Council, Deere & Company, Fruit of the Loom, Grocery Manufacturers of America, Inland Steel Industries, Inc., International Game Technology, International Paper, Johnson & Johnson, Keystone Automotive Industries, Motorola, Inc., Procter & Gamble, Sara Lee Corporation.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS: AT&T, Ameritech, BellSouth Telecommunications, Inc., GTE Corporation, MCI, National Cable and Telecommunications Association, SBC Communications, Inc., Sprint, UST Public Affairs, Inc., Verizon Communications, Inc.
TRANSPORTATION: Air Transport Association of America, American Trucking Association, The Boeing Company, United Airlines, United Parcel Service (UPS).
OTHER U.S. COMPANIES: Amway Corporation, Cabot Sedgewick, Cendant Corporation, Corrections Corporation of America, Dresser Industries, Federated Department Stores, International Gold Corporation, Mary Kay Cosmetics, Microsoft Corporation, Newmont Mining Corporation, Quaker Oats, Sears, Roebuck & Company, Service Corporation International, Taxpayers Network, Inc., Turner Construction, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
ORGANIZATIONS/ASSOCIATIONS: Adolph Coors Foundation, Ameritech Foundation, Bell & Howell Foundation, Carthage Foundation, Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation, ELW Foundation, Grocery Manufacturers of America, Heartland Institute of Chicago, The Heritage Foundation, Iowans for Tax Relief, Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation of Milwaukee, National Pork Producers Association, National Rifle Association, Olin Foundation, Roe Foundation, Scaiffe Foundation, Shell Oil Company Foundation, Smith Richardson Foundation, Steel Recycling Institute, Tax Education Support Organization, Texas Educational Foundation, UPS Foundation.
Of course do not think this modern day reversion is discriminatory.  Since 2007 Farmers have realized the advantage of switching from illegal low paid immigrants to legal lower paid prisoners, See: US Farmers Using Prison Labor.
And for those of us who ride Motorcycles?  No problem!  According to The Pueblo Chieftain: 
Rick FitzpatrickBy TRACY HARMON |tharmon@chieftain.com | CANON CITY — Eager to do more than make license plates, inmate workers here are bustin' out.    Canoes and custom motorcycles are among the newest products being made by inmates working under the Colorado Correctional Industries program. Fishing rods and flies also are recent additions.
We should keep in mind however that there is historical precedence for using inmate labor. During World war II Messerschmitt, the leading supplier of Nazi Air Power, relied heavily on slave labor to produce much of the parts needed for  planes during the second half of World War II; these parts were assembled in an enormous underground tunnel system in Sankt_Georgen_an_der_GusenAustria. Slave labor was provided by inmates of the brutal KZ Gusen I and Gusen II camps, and by inmates from nearby Mauthausen concentration camp, all located near the St. Gorgen quarries. 40,000 inmates from Spain, Italy, Poland, Slovenia, France, Russia, Hungarian Jews and twenty other nationalities were murdered during the production of these planes at KZ Gusen. Messerschmitt officials maintained barracks at the concentration camp to oversee the work being done by the inmates. Messerschmitt, and its executive Willy Messerschmitt also occupied the famed Villa Tugendhat in BrnoCzech Republic, designed by Mies van der Rohe andLilly Reich in the 1920's; the Messerschmidt aircraft factory office and the Gestapo occupied the property during the war. (source Wikipedia).


Kinda gives a whole new meaning to "Made in America" doesn't it?

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