As Daniele Lorenzini reminds us, the coronavirus pandemic exposes nothing if not the differential precarity of our biopolitics. Sure, biopolitics is about promoting life, but it’s also about deciding that some people can die in order that others may live. The most obvious candidates are “essential” workers in various parts of the supply chain who form what Marx calls the "disposable industrial reserve army" of capitalism.
In case there was any doubt about this, Trump is apparently about to invoke the Defense Production Act to force meat packing and processing plants to stay open. This is the same Donald Trump who has routinely failed to use the same DPA to get medical supplies to hospitals and caregivers.
But what about when it’s a question of protecting a bunch of mostly Latinx folks with a median annual wage of under $28,000 and whose working conditions look like this:
“The demographics in the meatpacking industry may be multicultural in the 21st century, but workers share many of the same characteristics. They are uneducated and work in extremely unsafe work conditions. Nearly every worker in meatpacking plants has injuries. Cutting stations are located close to each other, automated lines move too quickly for workers to keep up, and workers must put in long shifts or fear losing their jobs. Men and women must wear goggles, hardhats, stainless steel mesh gloves, rubber aprons and chaps. Still, every worker from the line cutter to the cleaning crew is in danger of suffering amputations, body part crushing, burns, punctures and other traumatic injuries. Though the demographics have opened up to include all segments of society, poor safety conditions in the plants continue to plague workers. According to Human Rights Watch, the poor labor market has caused safety concerns to backslide in the United States. Collective bargaining eroded, and by 2005, the injury rate was twice as high in the meatpacking industry as any other industry in the country.”
Trump wants you to know: sustaining Americans’ egregious overconsumption of cheap meat, which involves the brutal exploitation of vulnerable workers in the best of times, is more important than PPE’s for healthcare workers! Oh, wait, Trump says (per the Bloomberg piece) that “the government will provide additional protective gear for employees as well as guidance.”
I wonder if that will arrive before, or after, the additional protective gear for hospitals? But let no one accuse Trump of inconsistency! He’s using the DPA to ensure that vulnerable workers, many or even most non-white and/or female, are at high risk for Covid.
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