Monday, February 5, 2007

The Big Elephant in the Room


How many of you have done a 17 hour shift at work? In China Blue, directed by Micha Peled, hundreds of Chinese children work that shift every day.

Attached is a article by Beverly Berning, who explains how China Blue gives a personal face to what we only knew as a concept, child labor in sweatshops. Beverly later describes how Peled draws the problem of sweatshop labor on not the sweatshop laborer, but the multinational corporations (in this case, Wal-Mart), cold-shouldered American inspectors, and us, the consumers. Peled makes the viewer recognize this truth by avoiding the "sad sermon", and says just enough for us to recognize this national epidemic.
"It would be enough if China Blue simply worked as an exposé of the harsh lives these young girls live, but director Peled is too much of a leftwing activist to leave it at that. He has bigger fish to fry, namely the multinational retailers who set the agenda, the ones who pressure men like Lam (who comes off here less as a villain than an arriviste) to sell their blue jeans at ridiculously low prices. "
"Globalization is here to stay, and it presents us with yet another set of problems that we must address. China Blue does not offer solutions, but it might help get us to stop ignoring the problems. It is the little elephant that roared."

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