Rigged. Forced into debt. Worked past exhaustion. Left with nothing.

Disir

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Sep 30, 2011
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Los Angeles — Samuel Talavera Jr. did everything his bosses asked.

Most days, the trucker would drive more than 16 hours straight hauling LG dishwashers and Kumho tires to warehouses around Los Angeles, on their way to retail stores nationwide.

He rarely went home to his family. At night, he crawled into the back of his cab and slept in the company parking lot.

For all of that, he took home as little as 67 cents a week.

Then, in October 2013, the truck he leased from his employer, QTS, broke down.

When Talavera could not afford repairs, the company fired him and seized the truck -- along with $78,000 he had paid towards owning it.

Talavera was a modern-day indentured servant. And there are hundreds, likely thousands more, still on the road, hauling containers for trucking companies that move goods for America’s most beloved retailers, from Costco to Target to Home Depot.

These port truckers -- many of them poor immigrants who speak little English -- are responsible for moving almost half of the nation’s container imports out of Los Angeles’ ports. They don't deliver goods to stores. Instead they drive them short distances to warehouses and rail yards, one small step on their journey to a store near you.

A yearlong investigation by the USA TODAY Network found that port trucking companies in southern California have spent the past decade forcing drivers to finance their own trucks by taking on debt they could not afford. Companies then used that debt as leverage to extract forced labor and trap drivers in jobs that left them destitute.

If a driver quit, the company seized his truck and kept everything he had paid towards owning it.
Rigged. Forced into debt. Worked past exhaustion. Left with nothing.

That is a lengthy read. That's why mass immigration is so great.
 
Yep. The CA economy would collapse without this type if labor.
 
Yep. The CA economy would collapse without this type if labor.

It'll collapse anyway.

It might not be that simple. The US probably cannot afford the jail cells that would be needed in bankruptcy for all of the crooked politicians that have committed financial felonies. Unfunded pension liabilities, real estate write downs and literally dozens of other problems make this a huge mess. Stationing troops around the state, give 60 days to get out of state and declare California one or more countries is probably the least costly exit strategy.
 
I dunno. There are federal laws regulating how many hours a driver can be behind the wheel. Why didn't he go to the authorities? Something doesn't sound right.
 
I dunno. There are federal laws regulating how many hours a driver can be behind the wheel. Why didn't he go to the authorities? Something doesn't sound right.

While very much a broad brush I would suspect felony conviction or illegal immigration is the main culprit of this report.
 

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