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The Soon Coming Judgment Of God Upon America and How To Escape It                 208
4.
Xinjiang Public Road and Agricultural Development Project (1950s-1980s)
5.
Qinghai Province Public Road and Agricultural Development Project (1950s-1980s)
6.
Several mining operations in Shanxi province (Jinpushan, Yin-Ying, Xinzhi,
Yangfanghou (1950s-1980s)
7.
Ineer Mongolia Jier Railway Project (Jining-Erenhot) (1950s)
8.
Baolan Railway Project (Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Baotou City to Gansu
Province, Lianzhou City, 1950s)
9.
Chengkun Railway Project (Szechuan province, Chengdu City to Chongqing city,
1950s)
10.
Lanqing Railway Project (Gangsu Province, Lianzhou City to Quinghai Province,
Xining City, 1960s)
11.
Chengkun Railway Project (Szechuan Province, Chengdu City to Yunnan Province,
Kunming City, 1950s)
12.
Baocheng Railway Project (Shaanxi Province, Baoji City to Szechuan Province,
Chengdu City, 1950s)”
616
In 1992 the U.S. government officially recognized that slave labor was involved in the
production of some goods exported to the U.S. Wu writes:
On March 18,1992, the Federal register included section T.D. 92-27,
entitled “That Merchandise Imported from the People’s Republic of China Is
Being Produced by Convict, Forced or Indentured Labor.” It went on to say, “This
document advises that the Commissioner of Customs, with the approval of the
Secretary of the Treasury, has determined that certain diesel engines
manufactured by the Golden Horse Diesel Engine Factory…are being
manufactured with the use of convict labor and/or forced labor and/or indentured
labor.” It said that the importation was found to be in violation of the Hawley-
Smoot Tariff Act of 1930…
617
The Tariff Act of 1930 prohibits any goods where forced labor was involved in the
production. This would include goods were the raw material, parts or components were obtained
or manufactured by the use of forced labor but the final product was not. So in the case of the
diesel engine above, if salaried workers assembled the engines but some parts were
manufactured by forced labor or forced labor was involved in the mining or smelting of the iron
ore, the engines would still be banned from importation. Despite the widespread use of slave
labor in China, every administration from Nixon to Clinton has renewed the “most-favored-
nation” trade status with China.
618
This has led to a phenomenal increase in imports from China.
In 1985 the U.S. imported approximately $3.8 billion in goods from China. By 1997
imports from China had risen to $62.6 billion. In 2003 U.S. imports from China were a
staggering $152.4 billion. Between 1985 and 2003, U.S. imports from China rose 4,000%.
Without question China is making enormous profits from the lives of its slave labor force.
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