David Bacon
This article was reported in partnership with
The Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute and the Puffin
Foundation. Some names of the people profiled in this article have been
changed.
Roberto Ortega tried to make a living slaughtering pigs in Veracruz,
Mexico. “In my town, Las Choapas, after I killed a pig, I would cut it
up to sell the meat,” he recalls. But in the late 1990s, after the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) opened up Mexican markets to
massive pork imports from US companies like Smithfield Foods, Ortega and
other small-scale butchers in Mexico were devastated by the drop in
prices. “Whatever I could do to make money, I did,” Ortega explains.
“But I could never make enough for us to survive.” In 1999 he came to
the United States, where he again slaughtered pigs for a living. This
time, though, he did it as a worker in the world’s largest pork
slaughterhouse, in Tar Heel, North Carolina.
For complete article : http://www.thenation.com/article/165438/how-us-policies-fueled-mexicos-great-migration
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