Donald Trump and Radical Republicans indicate the lives of the immigrants working in meatpacking plants are worth less than the lives of pigs in a slaughterhouse.
A former GOP governor and current South Dakota senator, Mike Rounds, asked Trump to intervene to keep meatpacking plants open during the pandemic.
The senator argued that farmers killing pigs themselves rather than sending them to processing plants is justification for sending immigrants and other workers back to their jobs. Many will get sick and some will die.
"They will be euthanizing — killing — over a million head of hogs a month, very, very shortly, beginning here in the next one to two weeks," Rounds said Sunday. "There's no way we can stop that until we start opening up these production facilities again."
As recently as 2015, almost 30% of meat and poultry workers in our country weren't citizens, according to a GAO report. Companies like Smithfield Foods and Tyson were hiring more immigrants and undocumented workers because they were less likely to unionize. A Smithfield slaughterhouse in Tar Heel, N.C., took 15 years to unionize.
"Hispanic people are sort of modern slaves of this country," said poultry worker Carlos Ramos.
More than 5,000 meat and food-processing workers have been infected with or exposed to coronavirus. At least 20 have died.
"I lost him because of that horrible place," said Angelita Rodriguez. Her husband Augustin, a Smithfield employee in Sioux Falls, S.D., died after about two weeks on a ventilator.
More than 1,000 people have fallen sick from exposure tied to the Smithfield plant in Sioux Falls. A company spokeswoman blamed the size of the outbreak on immigrant employees with "living circumstances in certain cultures."
ICE has repeatedly raided meatpacking plants. About 680 employees were arrested at seven poultry plants in Morton, Miss., in August 2019, the biggest workplace immigration raid ever in a single state.
Koch Foods owns the largest plant in Morton which employs more than 1,000 people. In 2018, Koch Foods paid $3.75 million to settle a lawsuit filed by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission over allegations of sexual harassment and discrimination.
A Smithfield employee sued the company in federal court over working conditions at its plant in Milan, Mo. — including bonus payments that encourage employees to sign in sick and not giving employees enough time to wash their hands. She asked that the plant be declared a public nuisance.
Smithfield asked federal Judge Greg Kays to dismiss the lawsuit, saying the issues created by the pandemic are "outside the conventional experience of judges."
Today's judges have not lived through plagues. But Kays and others who Trump will try to use to kill off immigrant workers for the profit of meatpacking titans might look to how early Christians responded to plagues.
During the Plague of Cyprian in the mid-200s in Rome, agricultural production collapsed as farmers died, and people fled to the cities. Christians "heedless of danger … took charge of the sick, attending to their every need."
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