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  • Essay / Popular Boycott: The Struggle for Human Rights - 728

    “Inequality, conflict and regulatory corruption are all part and parcel of capitalism, as history has repeatedly confirmed, unless Unless someone intervenes to break them, monopolies are the natural result of unbridled capitalism. Author John Perkins, also known as the "economic hitman," describes his role as a highly paid professional who helped the United States defraud poor countries around the world out of billions of dollars by providing them with more money they could not repay and later take control of their economies in exchange for natural resources such as oil. In the epilogue of his book "Confessions of an Economic Hitman", he expresses his thoughts on the need to take ownership and change the system by avoiding products made by overworked workers and developing boycotts to put end to labor standards and their promotion. Even though the United States is experiencing obvious economic growth, the popular boycott can affect the policies of multinational corporations by avoiding products made by mistreated workers and help reduce the self-destruction of the global empire as a whole, as people who live in poverty do not benefit from "voluntary trade", the ecosystem is disappearing and greed is built into the third world system. First, popular boycotts can affect the strategies of multinational corporations by avoiding products made from exploited workers; Contribute to reducing the self-destruction of our planet on an economic level in which they can include the poor by benefiting from voluntary trade. Those living in poverty have few options and must accept any deal that keeps them from starving. While the rich have many options and can choose those that will increase their rate of profit, in other words...... middle of paper ....... Perkins thinks people should protest against corporations who exploit desperate people in sweatshops. , demonstrating equality between people of different classes. Indeed, even if there are obvious economic gains in the United States, the popular boycott may affect the approach of multinational corporations in avoiding products made by exploited workers and reducing the self-eradication of the overall global peril. . These acts presented by John Perkins include: reducing oil purchases and consumption, seeking the truth on all matters related to government, and raising awareness about products that were not made here in the United States. Through the purchases you make every day, a consumer creates an economy where child labor and sweatshops cease to exist, and which also has the power to influence and control large corporations. After all: why not join the movement to create a better system?