Here is an alternative Invidious link: https://invidious.nerdvpn.de/watch?v=T51yekxcXCE
“We’re going against our own Canadian values.”
A tense moment in Ottawa as a witness for Clean Energy Canada is pushed to explain why we should allow Chinese EVs into our market despite major human rights concerns. If the “economic choice” relies on forced labour, is it even a choice at least some Canadians are willing to make?
It’s so great of a fit then. Canadian values appear to be using migrant wage slaves, so this goes hand in hand.
After watching it, it looks like a non-issue. Clean Energy Canada agrees and disagrees with blanket banning China and going for a targeted approach.
Like the Clean Energy Canada lady said about iPhones and everything else. How convenient it’s supposed to be a “good first step” when we’ve walked a goddamn mile in this already. Let’s do this when we need it for this specific use-case and not a moment beforehand.
At this point, I would rather be driving Chinese slave labour over American ‘definitely not slave’ labour.
At least China is trying to reduce it, instead of filling up prisons and granting billions of dollars to modern day Gestapo against court order specifically to make the slavery legal.
Nothing says Canadian Values like the noble TFW program that has for sure never been used to exploit cheap foreign labour.
There are human rights concerns in almost every product we import, this is a weird spot to draw the line.
It doesn’t even need to be imported. We have tfw’s with sketchy work conditions here in Canada. If you eat meat or vegetables or wear clothing produced in North America there is a chance it has some part done by not strictly legal labour. Most Canadians are happy not to think about why Walmart is able to ‘roll the price back’ or $stores can sell that stuff even cheaper.
I’m sure that there is an American auto company’s PR arm clinging to the bottom of the rock and hoping that it can scuttle away before anyone flips it over.
(Seriously, anything with a screen in it likely has some parts that were made by Chinese forced labour, including whatever device you’re reading this on.)
Does Samsung use Chinese factories to make their screens?
If it has a screen in it, it also contains basic electronic components—capacitors, resistors, diodes, etc. And unless something’s changed in the last few years, those are mostly made in China.
We don’t use slave labour in Canada. We just ignore a whole shitload of people who slip through the cracks because of little opportunity and they end up drug addicted in the center of most small towns and cities. We are morally superior. /s
Not or mention that we were all OK with slave-made shoes, clothes, appliances, toys, etc. As long as our consumer habits are satisfied.
…American forced prison labour has entered the chat
You know, I hear there are several things other than electric cars that Canada also imports from China. Enough so that all the focus on EVs looks a little sus.
Westerners are just trying to come up with as much bullshit as possible to convince each other to take a bad deal.
Cocoa, cobalt, and coffee are okay. But god forbid anyone buys anything that interferes with the profits of our rulers.
Who do you think made the onboard chip of your truck or your Tesla ? Now let’s talk about the anti suicide net in the Apple Chinese factories
Well, the word “robot” has it’s linguistic root in the Slavic word “rab” meaning “slave”, so yeah, there’s that.
And in Hungarian “rab” is prisoner. So prison labour being slave labour, we’ve come full circle.


