Like this:
This is part of the building that was built a year ago. As you can see from the photo, part of ledge has crumbled away (this is on the 4th floor), and by way of patching it, the workers have jammed some sort of concrete coated paper into the hole.
We are learning very quickly that these kind of dangerous and makeshift working conditions extend to almost every part of life here. For example, D was on campus earlier today and watched a team of worker clean the floor with
We've also watched people smoking cigarettes while working with propane, oil, and gasoline. And I've ridden on buses that have doors that won't close. I could go on and on. These are just common examples. [Clearly there are unsafe working conditions in the U.S. But they're not as out in the open, not as taken for granted. No one here even notices this stuff. It's just business as usual.]
There's a tension in this country right now -- a tension between fast growth (lots of stuff being built, a new middle class coming into being) and the desire to do things as cheaply as possible. This is, of course, the driving force behind capitalism, and it's being played out to the extreme here. It really makes me willing to pay more -- a lot more -- for quality made goods that are produced by adequately compensated workers.
What's really disheartening is that the U.S. is following in this path, too. It used to be that "made in the U.S.A." meant something good. Now it probably means that the item was made in some sweatshop by 10 year-olds.
2 comments:
Does your particular area of China suffer much seismic activity? Just wondering... I can't really tell from the quake maps I've seen.
H,
I don't know whether to say that's shocking or not; on the one hand I acknowledge your points, but wonder whether I am conditioned by my experiences as a "Westerner".
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