They have more options at home, with jobs available in small businesses, steel factories or construction sites.Of course it was for money! I can't believe that people actually thought it was for human rights.
"America is no paradise," said one man surnamed Zheng, who returned to the village of Shengmei a few years ago. He described a seven-year odyssey that started in New York but took him to many other places. "It was the same routine every day for six or seven years," he droned. "Get up. Work for 16 hours. Go to bed. Get up again. I was a fool. A machine."
In village after village, people outlined the same choices. If they got a good job here, they would stay. If not, they would try to borrow enough money to leave. Not one person talked about politics or human rights here, or China's one-child policy. The issue was money.
Monday, September 8
For Many Chinese, America's Allure Is Fading, By DAVID W. CHEN
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