From: Apartheid Still Matters: Framing and African American Internationalism
For myself, I see corporate globalization as fairly inevitable; it's had too big a head start, has too much momentum to be stopped in its tracks. But I think it can be deflected. It doesn't have to be the great evil it has the potential to be.
Posted by P6 at September 25, 2003 09:18 AM | Trackback URL: http://www.prometheus6.org/mt/mt-tb.cgi/1752The article highlighted some of the more disturbing trends in developing countries, like privatization of the water supply and specifically focuses on past economic crimes in South Africa as a result of apartheid, so my comment here doesn't really directly address those issues. I think one practical solution for American corporate globalization would be to support a countervailing globalization of the American labor movement.
Why not laws in this country that mandate that each time an American company sets up a factory to do business in a developing country, that it be a union shop? I know what the reaction to that will be from the globalists and the free traders and the Wall Street Journal editorial page, but why not? What better more practical way to ensure the rights of workers who currently have no power to defend and protect themselves against multinatis. (hey if the conservative crowd can rail against "multiculti" I can rail against "multinati" :-))