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Title: Workers’ Paradise
Author: Kevin Carson
Date: November 10, 2005
Language: en
Topics: China, state capitalism
Source: Retrieved on 4th September 2021 from https://mutualist.blogspot.com/2005/11/workers-paradise.html

Kevin Carson

Workers’ Paradise

In the past, I’ve noted neoliberal portrayals of Red China as an

exemplar of the “free market.” Its so-called “market reforms” and

“liberalization” have made it the promised land for offshored production

by American corporations. To add some substantive content to those

cliches, just consider the Chinese government’s repression of

independent labor activists, and of local resistance to “rampant

industrial pollution” and “widespread evictions and land seizures by

corrupt local governments in cahoots with increasingly powerful property

developers....” (“Land of 74,000 Protests”).

Here’s another story on the same topic. From Independent World

Television Blog: “China’s New Activists”

Rural unrest throughout China is on the increase. The government says

3.6 million people took part in 74,000 “mass incidents” last year, up

from 58,000 in 2003. In April, villagers in Huankantou, in Zhejiang

province, beat off 1,000 riot police in a dispute over pollution from

chemical factories built on disputed property. In June, six residents of

Shengyou village, in Hebei province, 125 miles south of Beijing, were

killed by 300 government-hired men seeking to seize farmland from

villagers. Last month, hundreds of farmers in Meishan county in Zhejiang

staged a demonstration against a battery factory. Hundreds of smaller

incidents are thought to go unreported every week.

The natives are also restless in the workplace. Here’s how the rules of

labor organization work in the “dictatorship of the proletariat”:

The country’s only legal union, the All-China Federation of Trade

Unions, is an 80-year-old Communist Party institution that for decades

has aligned itself more closely with management than workers; in some

cases its local branches are even headed by factory owners. Independent

unions are banned, and workers suspected of organizing strikes are

routinely jailed.

The collusion between Western sweatshop employers and the Chinese

“people’s state” reminds me a lot of that scene in Animal Farm, when the

pigs hold a summit conference with the neighboring farmers: “If you’ve

got your lower classes, we’ve got our lower animals!”