Captive student workers protest in… China, India, Mexico? NO! In Pennsylvania at the Hershey plant!

FOREIGN STUDENTS PAID UP TO $6,000 TO BE IN A U.S. SPONSORED CULTURAL-EXCHANGE PROGRAM, working at Hershey’s chocolate plant in Pennsylvania. Mandatory company housing costs left them with $40-$140 a week after 40 hours of work, and they were threatened with deportation if they complained. Yeah, that seem like a legit foreign cultural-exchange program IN AMERICA, doesn’t it? Corporations are people, too! From the LATimes

The National Guestworker Alliance filed a complaint Wednesday on behalf of 400 international students who had apparently paid $3,000 to $6,000 to participate in a U.S.-certified cultural exchange program. The complaint, sent to the U.S. Department of State, says the students were exploited by Hershey Co. and that the company takes unfair advantage of the program.

The students also launched a protest at the plant. Those protests were continuing Thursday, with the students, labor leaders and Pennsylvania workers who have joined the fight rallying in downtown Hershey, according to an email alert the alliance sent to The Times

The organization, which helped organize the protests, has dubbed their efforts the Justice at Hershey’s Campaign.

The students, who hail from countries such as China, Turkey, Ukraine, Moldova, Mongolia, Ghana and Thailand, were recruited at their universities to participate in the U.S. State Department J-1 visa program, described on a U.S. State Department website as an Exchange Visitor Program. The program leads to a three-month visa that allows students to work in the United States while learning about American culture and improving their English skills.

The goal of the program, according to the State Department’s site, is to foster “global understanding through educational and cultural exchange.”

Instead, says a representative of the National Guestworker Alliance, students who wound up at the Hershey’s plant were living in “economic captivity,” forced to pay for mandatory company housing that left them with $40 to $140 a week for 40 hours of work.

“They were desperate and feeling isolated,” the organization’s communications director, Stephen Boykewich, said in an interview with The Times.

According to the complaint, conveniently made available to media, when the students complained about the violations of U.S. law, “they were threatened with deportation and other long term immigration consequences to remain quiet about the violations.”

HERSHEY’S RESPONSE: it’s the subcontractor’s fault! (LA Times)

Bill Maher: Republicans are are beginning to sound like Dr. Evil

“They are kind of saying ‘If you don’t agree to our demands, we will destroy the world economy.’ Which I think is what Dr. Evil said.”

BILL MAHER, on the GOP’s refusal to consider raising the debt ceiling, on Real Time

via inothernews

24 hour ultimatum from Gov. Scott Walker to MIA WI Democrats

Walker announced that if the Democrats don’t return to the State Capitol, Wisconsin will miss its chance to refinance it’s debt, which would cost taxpayers $160 million. As it always bears mentioning, the public employee unions have broadly agreed to compromise on Walker’s proposed changes, if he only won’t strip their very right to collective bargaining. Walker says no dice.

Reuters via shortformblog

Wisconsin: Prank Call ad

Greg Sargent points out a new ad that the unions are airing in Wisconsin, based on the prank call that Gov. Walker fell for last week when he thought he was talking to David Koch.  Sargent says,

[the ad] comes very close to suggesting that Governor Scott Walker contemplated violence against protesters in his conversation with the fake Koch, and hammers him for wielding the threat of layoffs as a political tool against state employees who have already agreed to the fiscal concessions he wants:

AZ Republicans Resign After Giffords Shooting, Citing Threats From Local Tea Partiers

 

Instead of saying “both sides do it,” it may be more correct to say that the Tea Party does it to “both sides:”

Think Progress:

Just hours after 22-year-old gunman Jared Loughner launched a shooting spree at a Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) constituent event in Tucson on Saturday that left six dead and 14 wounded, Legislative District chairman Anthony Miller, a Republican, announced that he would resign his position. In an email to the state’s GOP chair, Miller cited “constant verbal attacks” after his election last year “and Internet blog posts by some local members with Tea Party ties made him worry about his family’s safety.”

[…] The newly-elected Dist. 20 Republican secretary, Sophia Johnson of Ahwatukee, first vice chairman Roger Dickinson of Tempe and Jeff Kolb, the former district spokesman from Ahwatukee, also quit.

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