The article “Swarms Of Terror” by Lauren Tarshis and the article “Growing Up On A Farm” by Ryder Staples, the articles talks about farm life, “Swarms Of Terror talks about farming in 1875, while the article “Growing Up On A Farm” talks about farming now days. Farming is still very similar today as it used to be back in 1875. Farming is still hard work as it was many years ago in 1875. Back in 1875 the Rocky mountain Locutus bug attacked and “It was a catastrophe” (Tarshis 15). And nowadays many farmers still have hard back breaking things to do on farms, their are not technologies to do all the farming for them.…
Sayre, L. (2009). THE HIDDEN LINK BETWEEN FACTORY FARMS AND HUMAN ILLNESS. Mother Earth News, (232), 76-83.…
Government camps are able to provide medical supplies to migrants. These camps care about migrants’ health. Steinbeck states, “In case any of the family are sick the camp manager or the part-time nurse is called and treatment is carried out” (Article IV). Government camps make sure that the migrants do not get terribly sick and weak. Speculative farms did not provide any medical care because the farm owners did not care about the laborers’ well-being. These farms do not care about the migrants’ health because all the speculative farms care about is the profit they…
Farm workers in Ontario had been one of the most vulnerable agriculture workers for a long time and farm work continues to be dangerous in Canada. The situation isnt getting any better in Ontario and this needs to change since this had lasted for many years. The way farm workers are being treated are not equal as everyone else, I think farm workers deserve the same rights and equality as everyone else in Canada.…
Since the workers are daily grinding they are worn out and enervated. Also they are working in harmful factories with germs and diseases in the air. Does this make it safe for them or how about the consumers? The answer is everyone is at risk. In meat packing factories, employees would get cut by their butcher knives or by machinery. They would have no nails, they had worn them off pulling hides; their knuckles were swollen so that their fingers spread out like a fan ( Doc 1). It was a bit safer in clothing factories but still workers were still working in unhealthy conditions. Everyone was bunched in hot rooms. Diseases were easily spread. Once one person got sick everyone got sick. The machinery used in the factories was not safe. People lost their hands and fingers. This brought depression to people’s lives. In 1912 New York changed working conditions. New York State Factory acquired automatic sprinklers for all floors above seventh floor of buildings; broadens regulation and inspection of workplace safety (fire escapes, safe gas jets, fireproof, receptacles, escape routes, fire drills) ( Doc 4). This brought better changes in the way the employees…
The unforeseen problems that agribusiness has brought to the host cities range from the increase in crime, health problems, communication problems, increase in migration (documented, undocumented, refugees) that leads to prejudice and culture clashes, inhumane working environments, increase in housing cost while working for minimum wage, environmental problems, and much more. In the book, Slaughterhouse Blues: The Meat and Poultry Industry in North America, David D. Stull and Michael J. Broadway point out that the current state of the meat and poultry industry is unstable and inhumane. If large meat and poultry corporations like Tyson and others want to decrease these unwanted problems that come with the food industry, Stull and Broadway…
A problem that many farmworkers still faced was their exposure to dangerous pesticides. One incident was a pregnant mother who worked in the fields not knowing that the pesticides would affect her unborn child. The foremen and growers would lie to her, telling her that the pesticides that was sprayed on the crops were harmless towards her. When her newborn baby was born, he was born without arms or legs. The pesticide that was used on the grapes that had affected her was teratogenic pesticides which would cause birth defects.…
When Immigrants first arrived in America, various types of jobs were available to men and women at dockyards, gas refineries, ironworks, slaughterhouses, book publishers, sweatshops, and factories producing everything from clocks, pencils, and glue, to cakes, beer, and cigars. The work was not always safe and the work environment was not always healthy. The workers were not always provided with all the necessary equipment to complete the job successfully. These types of jobs relied heavily on hard labor, long hours and harsh working conditions-all for very little…
Schlosser also addresses the high number of migrant workers working today, as well as being the poorest workers in the United States. Yet, Schlosser does not touch on the health risks that represent working in the fields. I plan to emphasize more on the health risks that are present in the everyday life of a migrant farm working. I will discuss how pesticides have a negative effect on the life of workers, but also to their families. Children of farm workers are at a greater risk of having health risks because of their high exposure to pesticides. Sociological implications that come along with doing this research are or might be the constant demand that [we] consumers make to the agricultural companies, to supply us with fresh fruits and vegetables. This not only has a negative impact in the industry but also to the farm workers. The pressure that consumers places upon the industries makes them produce more and use more harmful chemicals that affect the lives of farm workers but also to those living…
Working on the farms was very difficult for the farm workers , especially for the Chavez family, due to the extremely long hours, they had very few bathrooms and, very little bit of drinkable water. The farm workers suffered quite a lot because…
In 1848, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the war between the United States and Mexico. This Treaty gained the United States more than half a million square miles of former Mexican territory. It also forfeited more than seventy-five thousand former Mexican citizens to the United States. The Treaty articles implied there would be full United States citizenship and continued land ownership for Mexican residents who now found themselves and their property within the boundaries of the United States. This turned out not to be true and was one of the first exploitations and acts of discrimination of Mexican…
A complex social and political issue that has enrooted employment history for a long period of time; child labor is evolving into a new phenomenon that is having negative impacts on children all throughout the globe. Children involved with child labor can have several different paths to their occupation which can be determined by factors such as poverty, family’s economic status, history, health, and many others. Their work can have major implications such as social disadvantages, poor health, pitiable physical development, and lack of education. Lack of wages are also implemented into the child’s work life, hardly ever approaching minimum wage. Lack of current and future support such as benefits, retirement funds, or insurance, are attached…
Last year I was chosen to be a part of an Alternative Spring Break that focused on harvesting communities with migrant farmworkers in Immokalee, Florida. There, we learned about the injustices migrant farmworkers faced both in the fields and in their community and volunteered at locations that gave us an insight into their day-to-day life. Prior to our trip, we read articles depicting the discrimination most of the farmworkers face due to their immigration status, as well as articles on laws aiming to help workers earn their fair share. While reading an article on the increasing poverty levels in Immokalee, we decided that making an impact in the community did not have to last a week.…
Migrant farmworkers, in the United States commonly facing structural violence, that’s committed by industries or their employers. Structural violence can be when a worker is prevented their basic needs often due to their identity or class status. Structural violence includes the health problems frequently faced by agricultural workers. Nearly all migrant workers are under rated for the field work they perform, and the work takes a toll on their body, and overall health. Migrant Farmworkers are mostly seasonal workers, where they can travel with the seasons, in order to acquire money to survive. “Much of the structural violence in the United States today is organized along the fault lines of class, race, citizenship, gender, and sexuality.”(Pg 43) The pay from these jobs aren’t much either with low pay, and no health benefits as described by Seth Holmes. Due to their social ranking, race, and citizenship the migrant workers are oppressed, and are being taken advantage of.…
While driving past factory farms, anyone would assume that animals live a satisfying life style. At first sight, the animals look very robust and one would think that they have a healthy diet. Appearances can always be deceiving. What one observes while driving past these farms is not what factory farms actually are. Behind closed doors, many things go on that society would never expect. Every year, animals on factory farms encounter unimaginable suffering and go through horrid living conditions.…