: DC:
: Nike keeps the workers working, with an allocation of capital no greater that four bits a head.: Stoller:
: Correction: 20¢ an hour (The Nation, 20 December 1999, p. 8).
: : Y'all are forgetting that in countries like Indonesia, where Nike sets up (sweat)shop, the rights of the workers to unionize, or even demand decent conditions in a non-union environment, are quashed by armed thugs in the employ of the governments, and often nourished by corporate and U.S. dollars. McArthur-Freeport in Indonesia and Gulf Oil in Nigeria are two examples of corporations which had a direct hand in the deployment of soldiers against poor workers; massacres followed.
: No, comrade, I'm NOT forgetting that at all---hell, I still believe in Lenin's imperialism thesis.
: Doc, on the other hand supports a 'Reaganesque foreign policy', so he'll just cheer when he reads your post. . .
You see, Barry, we don't disagree on everything. By the way, I knew I made a mistake with that "Y'all have forgotten" bit as soon as I hit the "submit" button. I knew you already knew that, based on your politics. As for Doc, I think he's oblivious to a whole lot of things.
None.