They aren't using "slave labor".
Chinese from the countryside are FLOCKING to the cities to get jobs in factories that make products sold at Walmart and every other store in the developed world. Its the biggest migration of people from the countryside to cities in the history of the world, dwarfing the migrations seen in countries like the USA in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Chinese are fighting to get those factory jobs you describe as "slave" jobs because they are easier and pay far better than backbreaking subsistence farming available previously. Those factory jobs, while paying nothing compared to similar jobs in the USA, pay a LOT more than they can make in their old jobs in the countryside.
One factory worker in the city, making stuff for Walmart, often supports an entire family.
Are the hours long? Yes. Is it "slavery"? HELL NO! When was the last time you heard of "slaves" fighting for those jobs?
The conditions in those Chinese factories, while obviously not as good as we have here today, are far better than they were in US sweatshops less than 100 years ago.
Also, I shouldn't need to tell you this, but I probably have to- if Walmart wasn't buying from those factories, then Target or Kmart or Carrefour or Karstadt whatever would. All you'd be doing is changing the name of the buyer, the life of the workers wouldn't change one bit...
Yeah, they're fighting for those jobs because those are the only ones available because there's no incentive for companies to provide better ones
because people buy from the companies that pay $3 for 14 hours of back-breaking labor.
They might keep a small family barely alive with those wages, but it's hardly "support" in the true sense of a decent life.
Didn't you know? Slaves will fight for jobs if that's the only way they have to get food to eat in order to stay alive.
And I shouldn't have to tell you this, but the concept is universal among stores, regardless of brand name.
And BTW, companies are moving to places like Vietnam now because $3/day is higher than the even poorer will work for.
The movie posted earlier showed women in Bangladesh brushing their teeth with ashes on their finger because
they can't afford toothbrushes with what they're getting paid.
Is that better than starving to death? Yes. But does it make it right? No.
If people want to live an abundant lifestyle on the backs of the poor, that's their choice,
but I prefer to try and follow The Golden Rule, "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you".
And take to heart the spirit behind the words, "What you have done to the least of them, you have done to me".
What caused conditions to change in America? Was it by supporting the same ol' same ol'?
Or standing up against the greed of those who took advantage?
As long as people support the way things are, they will never change.