“Blood and Earth – Modern Slavery, Ecocide and the Secret to Saving the World,” by Kevin
Bales, 2016
This is a journey
into the origin of granite counter-tops and headstones, digital devices, fish
and shrimp, beef and gold. In a global
economy, commodities are laundered from land and earth through labor to
transport, production and sales, ending up in your living room or kitchen. We aren’t supposed to know anything except
they are the new things we just bought.
Yet some of that ‘stuff’ comes from the estimated 35M modern slaves in
the world.
Bales has
written a number of books on the topic of modern slavery, and here he ties it
to environmental degradation. Export
economies based on illegal labor decimate the land, mangrove swamps, forests,
jungles, water and animals because the slavers don’t give a damn. While Bales himself doesn’t see the
connection between our world capitalist commodity economy and slavery, like
crime they seem peas in a pod. His
solutions are better government, better auditing of sub-contractors and better
laws. He thinks “heroes of the new
economy” like Peter Thiel will save us, along with informed consumer choices. Don't laugh.
Lessening
consumption, including certain imported foods; reducing the production or
purchase of “cool” throw-away electronics or even labor action are not on his
radar, let alone anti-capitalism or class war.
He complains that slavery undercuts the capitalist ‘free market,’ but he
ignores the fact that these products get sold in that very market. Both methods revolve around earning profits
after all. Indigenous slavery in the silver mines of Potosi, Bolivia
was the foundation of many European banks.
Chattel slavery in Brazil,
the Caribbean and the U.S. South was a great boon to the capitalists in the U.S. north and in Europe,
something that Marx would call a form of ‘primitive accumulation.’ All this is still going on. In a way his book contains its own
contradiction. It’s like discovering a
massacre by two perpetrators, then recommending steps against only one of them.
THE SITES
Bales
visits a granite mine in India
producing headstones and countertops worked by families of debt slaves, including
women and children. He slips into the
eastern Congo
and spies on illegal cassiterite, coltan and tantalum mines worked by slaves,
guarded by gangs of killers and rapists, some just children. When the militias are not selling blood
minerals they cut down mahogany trees for lumber and charcoal or they kill mountain
gorillas and hippos in national parks for sellable meat. He visits an island shrimp farm in a
decimated mangrove in southern Bangladesh
full of deceived and bullied children sometimes forced to work 24 hours a day
in cold water. These protective Bay of Bengal mangroves sequester four times the carbon
of ordinary forests or jungles and they are being cleared for seafood farms. He interviews a woman working in a shrimp
processing factory in nearby Khulna
city that is full of brutalized and irregularly paid women. He studies the decimation of Brazil’s
Matto Grosso and Amazonian frontier forests by slaves. The jungles are being replace by
eucalyptus trees for paper, cocoa trees for chocolate, soybeans for cattle
feed, pastures for cattle ranges or raw wood for charcoal making. He describes slaves hand-making bricks in primitive
ovens in Pakistan
using old tires and used motor oil as toxic fuels that spew ‘black carbon.’
Bales
visits the debt-slaves working gold mines in Ashanti
Ghana, mining gold laundered
through the good capitalists of Dubai’s
gold market. The silicosis-laden quartzite
where the gold specks hide will kill many of these slaves, while nearby streams
are polluted with toxic mercury from washing out the gold, the air from toxic
mercury vapors emitted from heating the gold. 1/3rd of Ghana is now
deforested due to gold mining.
I could go
on, but you get the point.
Bales looks
at the striking parallels between debts and fake fines that lead to debt
bondage across the world now and those Jim Crow practices that led to spurious
arrests and fines in the U.S. South. Under
Jim Crow arrested African-American men had to ‘work off’ their fines by slaving
for private capitalists in iron ore mines, turpentine camps or cotton
plantations. One of the ‘crimes’ was
loitering, which I might add is still heavily used in the U.S. South
against African-American youth.
Bonded Labor / Bonded Land |
The Problem
Deforestation,
especially in Latin America, Asia and Africa,
is perilous to carbon capture, as forests and water bodies are the key natural ways
to absorb carbon. Whether deforestation
is done by legitimate capitalists or illegal slavers it amounts to the same
thing, though the worst deforestation comes from slavers according to Bales. National parks and protected forests,
treaties or laws mean nothing to them, so attempts to slow or reverse
deforestation won’t work as long as illegality and slaveholders function.
Few of
these governments care, as they back the local capitalists or slavers and state
bureaucrats get a cut of the proceeds. Corporate
audit programs are frequently inadequate – taking the word of suppliers - or
deceived. In Khulna industrialists run small factories
that serve as Potemkin villages for auditors, where the building is clean and
the workers are told to lie to the auditors.
Bales saw
hope in Brazil
with the election of Lula and the Workers Party in 2006. They put into place a working anti-slavery
effort that began to free slaves and stop illegal deforestation. But the large Brazilian landlords began to
fight back with assassinations, the favorite tactic of the fascist right. Bales also documents how local government and
police did not back the effort. Now the
landlords have used corrupt legal processes to install Jasir Bolsonaro instead
of Lula. He is allowing the destruction
of the Amazon as we speak. So ‘success’ within a capitalist, bourgeois-democratic
context is actually inherently reversible. That should lead us to another solution about
how to solve slavery and the destruction of the environment.
This is an
illuminating book about the impact of modern slavery on humans and nature, but
its proposed solutions are almost purposely inadequate. It brings home the fact that slavery is not
something just in the past. You might
conclude that socialist ‘abolitionism’ is the order of the day. And even that the only way to crush the
slavers is with a new anti-slavery ‘blue-jacket’ army.
P.S. - The Conversation reports 2/14/20 that while chattel slavery may be illegal in every country, it has never been criminalized in half of the world (94 countries). I.E. you cannot go to jail for keeping slaves in those countries.
P.S. - The Conversation reports 2/14/20 that while chattel slavery may be illegal in every country, it has never been criminalized in half of the world (94 countries). I.E. you cannot go to jail for keeping slaves in those countries.
Prior
reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left: “Slavery
by Another Name,” “Modern De Facto Slavery,” “Slave States – the Practice of
Kafala” and the word “slavery”
for reviews related to older versions of slavery in the U.S. and Caribbean.
And I got
this at the Athens, Georgia library!
Red Frog
February 11,
2020
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