David A. Love's Blog

David A. Love

David A. Love
Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Birthday
June 18
Bio
David A. Love is the Executive Editor of BlackCommentator.com, where his Color of Law column appears weekly. He is a contributor to the Huffington Post, the Progressive Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, theGrio, News One, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media Center. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention and Prisons (St. Martin's Press, 2000). Love is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania Law School. He also completed the Joint Programme in International Human Rights Law at the University of Oxford.

FEBRUARY 27, 2010 10:36PM

Tiger Didn't Apologize for Dubai's Slave Labor

Rate: 4 Flag

When golf giant Tiger Woods made his public apology recently, he said he let a lot of people down. Personally, I cared very little about his personal dalliances and extracurricular activities. With an economic and political crisis afoot in this crumbling empire, it seems that this salacious celebrity gossip is nothing more than that--a media-created distraction to help us forget how bad things really are in America. This is a sideshow, like the gladiator games in Rome, or feeding the Christians to the lions.

A personal matter, the subject of Tiger's apology really was not intended for the general public, though it was made before an audience of millions. Rather, his plastic, controlled, manufactured pseudo-press conference, no doubt the creation of some well-paid public relations firm, was intended for the people closest to him. And more importantly, it was meant for his corporate sponsors who have backed out and bailed out on him, or those who are fixin' to do so. This is about dollars.

So, Tiger didn't owe me an apology, because I had no expectations of him. But Tiger did disappoint me in one regard. He failed to apologize for his failure to put human rights and human dignity ahead of his profits. To be more specific, plans are still in motion for Tiger Woods Dubai, an expansive Woods-designed golf course and luxury home development in Dubai. The $100 million project is being built in Dubailand, the adult playground of the Mideast. Mansions and villas in the 580-acre resort are reportedly selling for $12 million to $23 million, and Woods plans to build a 16,500-square-foot mansion overlooking his course.

The problem is, Dubai is built on slave labor, and Tiger has had nothing to say about it. And I don't mean slavery as in hundreds of years ago. I mean slavery as in over the past thirty years, including now. The home of the world's tallest skyscraper, Dubai is a sparkling city of excess built by slave labor from the Third World, including the nations of the Indian subcontinent, the Philippines and Africa. Companies lure these workers with a promise of making a ton of money, and in the end steal their passports and their money as well. Migrant workers work 12 hours a day, six days a week in hot temperatures. And they earn an average of $175 a month, with no minimum wage, and some making as little as $8 a day, according to Human Rights Watch. I know, how dare I spoil other people's fun, and stand in their way as they try to earn a dishonest living on the backs of slaves, as dictated by the free market.

And you'd think that your average high-profile celebrity athlete or entertainer, often in tune with social and political causes, might have a low threshold of tolerance when it comes to slavery, much less people who profit from the practice of slavery. Never mind looking at it from the glaringly obvious moral perspective, just look at it from a PR point of view for a minute. But when that high-profile person is himself a descendant of slaves, the expectations are even higher. So the question that we must ask Tiger is, exactly how much money do you need, man? Were there no black history lessons in your childhood? Did all of those African-American heroes before you make their sacrifices, and endure the racial taunts, the hostility, the beatings, and the threats to life and livelihood, for this?

A person who would take money from people who have used slave labor, look the other way and not ask questions is truly a slave--a slave to his riches and to his corporate masters. Such a person is a billion-dollar monster, created by a mixture of extraordinary talent, excessive media hype and unprecedented corporate promotion.

But then again, maybe Tiger's statement about his devotion to the Buddhist faith is more than mere empty rhetoric. Perhaps he will see the light and make a correction to this previously unaddressed character flaw. But I wouldn't hold my breath.

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The bloom is off the rose in Dubai, I doubt much if any of that complex will be built or more importantly finished. Dubai and the rest of the Middle East is fueled by slave labor. Hell, the venerable state of Israel has a thriving sex slave trade going on. There is not shortage of mess in this world but we could start cleaning things up by not making billionaires out of guys that can hit a ball into a hole. Or giving a poop if they screw around on their wives.
If Dubai continues to crater like Ablonde mentioned, it won't get built. But yeah, it sucks that we turn a blind eye to so many deplorable things. monkey fingered.
yep, slavery is an inherent problem of capitalism. there is a name for a slave in a capitalist system. its called "wage slave"
Excellent post! I couldn't agree more regarding Tiger.

Yes, slavery is alive and well today. Capitalism relies on exploitation.