I can tell you've never been to those countries at all.
Why do you think people take those opportunities? Because for those people, those jobs are not slavery, but a ticket to a better life for their children.
I remember going to India in the 80s and the main goal that most people had was to get out of the country. Yeah, there weren't Western companies, but many kids were still "exploited" because they had to work on the streets to make a living, often doing menial meaningless jobs to make ends meet. Now those same kids are being encouraged by their parents to go to school, so that they have a chance at a better life, working those jobs you call "exploitative". They understand the amount of work involved, they understand that they are being underpaid, but they are still better off than they were before.
If you take those jobs away, you make them worse off. This is something anti-market people will never understand. You can never improve someone's life BY TAKING AWAY A CHOICE.
I can tell from your post that you have no experience working a mindless job 70 hours per week...Seriously.
Also, I never proposed taking away anyone's jobs. My claim is simply that people should be treated like human beings and compensated fairly.
You're right. I've never been to any of those countries, but I have seen interviews from people who work in sweatshops and I understand what they mean when they describe their life. I have worked mindless physical labor jobs 70 hours per week, and I've met many other people who do. They don't see it as a choice like you do. They see it as "What else can I do? I have kids to feed...I have bills to pay... It's this or death" Some choice.
I did have more of a choice, but I can tell you exactly what it's like working those jobs. You barely exist. You barely think. You feel like a machine. All you have time for in your life is work. When you wake up, you think about work. Once you get to work, you pray for the day to end. When it finally does, you get the to enjoy your only comfort. Sleep. For MAYBE 6 hours before it starts all over again. You are constantly tired, but you can't really feel it. Your feet ache, but you ignore it. You're back aches, but you can't lie down. You're just numb. There's work to do. You finish one task and it's on to the next. Your boss says things to you, and you don't even register it. You just do it without even thinking. You understand only that he wants you to move faster and do more. So you do. After a while, you don't even notice people around you anymore. You are just a machine.
Then I woke up, months later, and it still feels like a dream. I am not exaggerating when I say the highlight of that time was the ice cream cone I would treat myself to once or twice a month. And the day when I got Christmas off, and I got to spend time with my cousins.
How did I get through it? It was temporary, and I knew it. I had to make money fast for a short period of time. It was my own punishment for mistakes I made, but I will never forget my coworkers. They did this for decades. This was their whole life. They were some of the best people I've ever known. Genuine. Kind. Intelligent. The very few interactions we had when we were able to talk always made me feel great. Later, I felt sorry for them. They were reduced to this terrible existence. What for? Because they weren't born in America. Because they didn't go to college, and now they can't afford it (they could barely afford their 20 year old cars, let alone a college education). And even with the loans they'd hear about, they barely had time to sleep, let alone take classes.
Occasionally, someone would get optimistic. "This isn't for me. I'm gonna find a way out of here. This company takes advantage of me. This is temporary, and I will do better." But they were there for 10 years. And before Wal-Mart, it was Rite Aid. Before Rite Aid, it was McDonalds. They never got out. They just changed the environment for a few days before their brain went numb again. One guy talked to the water mechanic for a bit and heard he made $40,000/year with just two years of schooling. He was flipping out. He talked to the water mechanic every day. Then he started talking to HR, since Wal-Mart has a tuition assistance program. This last for about a month. By the time I left, nothing had come of it.
Only a truly heartless person could think these people should be thankful that they are living like slaves rather than dead. Especially when the companies they work for rake in millions a day. I knew a women who spent 18 years of her life at Dunkin Donuts. She made $8 an hour and she worked her ass off. She easily did the work of two people, but the company had her convinced that she was actually only doing the work of one person. In reality, she was proably making over $100/hour for the company, while being paid a tiny fraction of that. It is disgraceful for people to do these kinds of things to others less fortunate than them. I don't care if they have a right to or not. It is absolutely wrong and disgraceful.
And what's really sick and ironic about it--My coworkers back then were better people than many of the people I work with now in the world of office work. I like my office coworkers a lot, but I am sure it is a HUGE slap in the face of my old coworkers to see how people with freedom they dream of spend their days--> sitting around at work doing NOTHING for hours at a time, going to bars, watching football, following celebrity gossip, watching TV, and sitting in front of a computer. It hurts me to imagine what they would think of me now.
and that sums up everything I have to say about the morality of these so-called "free markets."