99% Invisible - The New Jungle
Episode Date: September 23, 2025In a Colorado meatpacking town, refugees fleeing persecution find themselves in some of the most dangerous jobs in America.This episode was produced in partnership with the Food & Environment Reportin...g Network, an independent, nonprofit news organization.The New Jungle Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of 99% Invisible ad-free and a whole week early. Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
Greeley, Colorado is a mid-sized city out in the eastern plains of the state.
The landscape is simple and flat.
Cow pastures stretch as far as the eye can see, and most days, the breeze smells of manure.
Greeley is a meatpacking town.
The world's largest meat processor, JBS, has its U.S. headquarters there,
and many people in the town work for the company.
When most Americans imagine a place like Greeley,
they think of cowboys, farmers, political conservatives,
and mostly white people.
That's reporter Esther Honig.
That was my assumption about Greeley,
at least until I worked there as an agricultural reporter.
That's when I realized the city is actually incredibly diverse.
Test, test.
A few years ago, I went to interview a man we'll call Muhammad.
Hello.
He lived in a small, single-story house in a quiet neighborhood on the northeast side of town.
How old are you?
Daddy, cheers.
Okay.
Muhammad spoke Rohingya in only a little English, so we used a translator to communicate.
At an old for Micah dinner table, Mohammed served me coffee.
He wore a long skirt that's customary in his home country of Burma, and he told me what life was like there.
So he's talking about the paddy, the rice.
So he plow the land and then he pull in the seedlings, then he transplanted.
Mohamed was a rice farmer.
But then he faced persecution by the government and had to flee his country.
He was registered as a refugee by the UN.
And eventually, after undergoing a rigorous background check,
he was one of the lucky ones selected for resettlement.
I was always thinking how America would be and what I will do there.
And I was exciting, especially.
In 2015, Mohammed left the refugee camp where he'd been living and flew across the world, ending up here in Greeley.
This would be his new home.
So when I get in America, then my caseworker, within one month, I got the job in JBS.
JBS.
the massive meat-packing plant in Greeley that we mentioned earlier.
To get his job, Muhammad didn't have to speak English.
He didn't need any prior experience.
The caseworker didn't even really explain what JBS was.
He only said JBS there's a many different kind of job.
Then you will do one of them.
He said just like this.
So he didn't tell him that it was a slaughterhouse
or that he would be working with meat?
He didn't know that?
And he didn't know that.
After his first week at JBS,
Mohamed realized just what kind of work he'd be doing.
He used a large electric knife to remove the skin from cow legs.
It was bloody, exhausting labor.
In most plants, workers assemble things like cars.
But in a meatpacking plant, the workers disassemble animals.
They stand along conveyor belts where line speeds run incredibly fast.
Up to 450 cows are killed every hour,
and the workers used wickedly sharp electric knives
to break them down into cuts of meat like chalk and rib.
And as conveyor belts, meat grinders, and saws rumbled around Muhammad,
he looked around the factory floor and noticed something else.
Many of the other workers were from places like Somalia, Eritrea,
and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
They all arrived here as refugees, like him.
I understand that people are getting their job
as I did.
As I did, there's a caseworker.
Caseworker, my brother.
So he knew that
that was, everyone was getting the job the same way.
The same way, yeah.
The scale of meatpacking in this country is staggering.
Half a million people work in the industry,
producing tens of billions of pounds of meat every year
and generating billions of dollars in profits.
Companies like JBS are among the largest employers in rural America.
But the industry doesn't just process animals. It churns through people. The work is so brutal
and physically punishing that many don't last long on the job. Workers often suffer chronic
injuries from the repetitive nature of the work. They can also lose fingers, even whole appendages.
Research shows that there are about two amputations a week across the entire industry,
which means that meatpacking companies are always searching for new bodies to run the line.
But in the last 20 years, companies like JBS have come to rely on a new source of labor, refugees,
arriving through humanitarian programs that are supposed to offer safety and a shot at the American dream.
And it's through this particular arrangement that rural Midwestern towns like Greeley
have become home to thousands of people like Muhammad,
men and women who fled violence and persecution,
only to find themselves doing what has long been one of the most dangerous jobs in America.
In 1904, the journalist Upton Sinclair went undercover working in meatpacking plants in Chicago.
Then he wrote a novel based on his experiences called The Jungle.
He described poor, newly arrived immigrants mostly from Eastern Europe who worked in dangerous, squalid conditions.
These immigrants came to America chasing the promise of a better life.
Instead, they found themselves teetering on the edge of poverty and hunger and facing working conditions even worse than to date.
The work left their hands so mingled that their fingernails wore off, and they were exposed to deadly infections.
They'd pour acid on sheep pelts and yank out the wool with their bare hands scalding their skin.
With the slip of a sharp knife, many workers had severed the tendance of their thumbs.
But it wasn't those brutal conditions that captured the public's outrage.
As Sinclair later said, quote, I aimed at the public's heart and by accident I hit it in the stomach.
End quote.
People cared less about exploited workers than about it.
about what was ending up on their plates.
Sinclair described poisoned rats ground into sausage,
or how cows covered in oozing boils
were butchered and made into canned meat.
Those were the images people couldn't forget.
Even if Sinclair's book didn't do exactly what he wanted it to,
it was still influential.
Federal laws were enacted to enforce inspections and sanitation.
But in the 1940s, it seemed like things were finally going to change for the workers.
A boom in the post-war economy meant that people were eating more meat, which in turn increased the hiring at meatpacking plants.
Workers' jobs became skilled labor and were unionized.
For the first time, their positions were salaried.
Meatpackers could finally afford a middle-class lifestyle.
They had boats in their driveways and pools in their backyards.
But the relief was short-lived because meatpacking companies made a decision that would transform the entire workforce and add a whole new labor.
layer of vulnerability in an already dangerous industry.
In the 1960s, meatpacking companies left the cities where they've been based for decades and moved their plans to rural America.
The shift put them closer to livestock and cut down on transportation costs.
Critically, it also let them escape the unions in the cities and the prying eyes of pesky reporters and politicians.
But there was a problem.
Rural communities that they relocated to did not have sufficient labor for them.
This is Donstool, a professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of Kansas.
He told me that without the unions, the working conditions and pay inside the plants declined once again.
And to attract the workers they needed, companies looked south to Mexico.
Well, meatpacking companies had always advertised on radio stations in South Texas and elsewhere,
which broadcast into Mexico, that there were jobs available in meatpacking plants.
But in the 1980s, with the blessing of the INS,
they were actually set up recruiting stations in Mexico City.
There were many reasons that these Latin American workers were drawn to meatpacking,
despite its gruesome reputation.
One of the attractions of meatpacking for immigrants
is that you don't have to speak English to work in a meatpacking plant,
and you don't have to have any pre-existing job skills.
By the 1960s, Greeley was becoming a little.
leader in meatpacking. It was one of the first small towns to build a big modern packing plant,
and ranchers from all around came there to harvest their cattle. Increasingly, Mexican immigrants
staffed the factory. Many of them had previously worked in nearby agriculture, but these
packing jobs were inside, shielded from the hot sun, and they paid better than field work.
In the 1980s and 90s, new waves of workers arrived in Greeley, not just from Mexico, but other parts
of Central America. They moved into the neighborhoods around the
packing plant, which was now called Swifton Company.
By the early 2000s, about one-third of Greeley's population was Latino.
You could see it everywhere.
The local grocery stores started selling fresh tortillas and dried chilis imported from Mexico.
The schools created ESL courses.
But the change also brought backlash.
The city was starkly divided along racial lines.
And meanwhile, in the background, another labor problem was brewing.
It was an open secret that hundreds of workers at the plight.
plant were undocumented. The meatpacking company reviewed their workers' documentation with a
federal system called E-Verify, which was known to be deeply flawed. And on the morning of December
12, 2006, the situation reached a breaking point. That morning, Greeley's meatpackers started
the day, like most other days. The first shift arrived at the factory before sunrise. They put
on their hard hats and white smocks and took their positions along the massive conveyor belt,
ready for the first slaughter of the day.
But then, just before the giant factory rumbled to life, all hell broke loose.
Just after dawn, federal agents from ICE, immigration and customs enforcement, descended on plants run by Swift and Company, the nation's third largest meatpacker.
It's the largest ever crackdown on illegal immigration in the workplace.
1,200 arrests now reported across six states.
Shortly after 7 a.m., agents from immigration and customs enforcement charged inside.
and swarm the factory floor.
People ran like mad.
Some tried to hide in the cattle pens
or inside the bathrooms or supply closets.
But in the end, hundreds were rounded up and arrested.
Several hundred family members gathered along the fence
between the Swift Company and Highway 85.
Some were crying.
Some were praying.
Others were yelling at the federal agents.
On the scene today, there was no word.
Similar scenes,
played out in six different meat-packing plants across Middle America.
At the same time, on the same day, ICE agents arrested close to 1,300 workers for having, quote, questionable documentation.
Overnight, Swift lost about 10% of its workforce.
Without enough people, some factories could not operate, and the company was hemorrhaging money.
It was a crisis of epic proportions, and it raised the same old question.
Where on earth would Swift find more people willing to perform this day?
dangerous work. This time Swift found its answer in an unlikely place. A federal program meant to
help people fleeing war and persecution. That's when we return.
Before the raids in 2006, Swift and Company was already limping along financially. For years,
they'd struggled to make a profit and that only got worse when they lost a large,
fraction of their workforce.
Five months after the rates, it was announced the company was being sold to JBS, the Brazilian-owned
meatpacker.
The new owners got busy trying to solve the labor problem.
One news article from that time reported how company officials met in a war room with maps pinned
to the walls.
They marked the cities and towns outside their meatpacking plants as potential recruitment zones.
They advertised the open positions on the radio, newspapers, and billboards.
But not many people wanted to sign up.
And so, to dig themselves out of this labor shortage, JBS adopted a new strategy.
The company set its sights on a new population.
Like the undocumented workers before them, these workers didn't speak much English.
They were eager to find jobs and willing to do hard labor that many others refused.
And crucially, they were in the country legally.
JBS turned to refugees.
An aggressive recruitment campaign began.
Company representatives went to Denver and staked out East African restaurants and mosques.
They offered new hires a cash bonus of up to $1,500 and more for referrals.
And they used these same tactics across the heartland, convincing refugees to move away from the cities
where they had access to federally funded support services.
They chartered buses and drove hundreds of refugees to isolated meatpacking towns like
Cactus, Texas, Grand Island, Nebraska, and Greeley, Colorado.
At the time of the Swift raids, right, everything changed in 2006.
Paul Stein was Colorado's refugee coordinator at the time, the most senior person at the
state level, and he started to notice more and more refugees moving to Greeley.
They were recruited by Swift, vigorously recruited.
You had a lot of, at that point, primarily Somalis, some Burmese,
who moved in to take advantage of the employment opportunities,
and then those refugees would petition and bring their families.
According to Stein, as well as several other people I interviewed for the story,
the number of refugees living in Greeley ballooned overnight.
This is a story of backing into a plan rather than having the plan.
It totally started because of meatpacking.
But when refugees live,
landed in Greeley, they struggled with everything.
Most of the services Greeley had developed over the years were tailored to Spanish speakers,
not speakers of Rohingya, Somali, or Tigray.
Housing was hard to find, and without translation services, families struggled to enroll
their kids in school or see a doctor.
Soon, an office for refugee resettlement opened up.
We started with a very limited presence.
I think we had a mighty team of one, one case manager, who for a time actually,
worked out of his vehicle.
This is James Horan, the president and CEO of Lutheran Family Services, Rocky Mountains,
which ran the office.
I think, you know, there really wasn't an infrastructure for other than Spanish-speaking newcomers,
right?
And so I think a lot of it was just as simple as making the adjustment of new languages,
new cultures, and everything that came along with that.
Gradually, you could see another wave of change washing over a Greeley.
Once again, driven by the meatpacking plant.
For decades, the town had been mostly white.
Then it became white and Latino.
Now it was increasingly international.
On the main boulevard, there was the Mexican grocery store,
but you might also see women walking by in a bias.
Eventually, a halal market, and an East African restaurant opened up downtown.
And the population of refugees continued to grow.
Not long after JBS bought Swift, they announced a second shift,
meaning the plant would operate more than 18 hours a day and they'd have to double their workforce.
Lucky for JBS, America's refugee resettlement program became a steady source of workers.
When I first noticed how this had happened, I was shocked.
A program meant to be humanitarian in practice was pushing people into some of the hardest,
most dangerous jobs in the country.
But as I dug deeper, I learned this wasn't part of a
grand malicious scheme. The meatpacking companies were just taking advantage of America's flawed
resettlement system and how it was designed to work. America's current refugee system first
emerged in the aftermath of the Vietnam War with the Refugee Act of 1980. It increased the number
of refugees admitted each year into the country. And for the first time, it created a standardized
resettlement process overseen by the federal government. New system,
helped to resettle the hundreds of thousands of refugees
arriving from Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.
Asian refugees.
They could be called the new settlers of the United States,
and they come to America's shores out of desperation,
sadness, violence, and deprivation from their own battered homeland.
Many have escaped by small boats from the new communist governments.
Often they've braved dangerous seas in small boats,
attacks by pirates, and months of overcrowded conditions
in refugee camps.
They're part of the 300...
The resettlement program was well-intentioned, a way to welcome people and offer them a shot
at the American dream.
But it carried a built-in flaw, rooted in another American impulse.
We wanted them to lift themselves up by their bootstraps.
That's why the very first priority of the 1980s Refugee Act was economic self-sufficiency.
Refugees were expected to find work and get off-government support as quickly as possible.
job counseling is a key part of the orientation effort.
Job skills previously learned are sometimes adaptable.
In other cases, however, entirely new jobs must be learned
and training programs must be set up.
In the 45 years since the passage of the Refugee Act,
making it to the U.S. as a refugee has become a significant feat.
To start, you have to undergo several interviews
with international and U.S. agencies who decide if you qualify.
They ask a series of questions.
Like, are you fleeing political persecution?
Will you be killed if you return home?
If the answer is yes, and you can prove it,
then the U.S. government subjects you to a series of rigorous background checks and medical screenings.
The process takes up to two years.
If you're approved and you already have family in the U.S., you'll be sent to live near them.
Otherwise, the State Department decides which relocation site to send you to.
Historically, the U.S. has accepted more refugees than any other nation.
But once people get here, we offer them little support.
Places like Canada give newly arrived refugees up to a year of services and financial assistance.
But the U.S. gives people just three months, and then they're on their own.
When a refugee arrives in the U.S. to a place like Greeley, one of the first things that happens is that they're assigned a caseworker who teaches them the basics of life in America, like how to find an apartment, how to take the bus and buy growth.
and how to see a doctor.
But the most critical thing a newly arrived refugee needs to learn is how to get a job.
I started as just what's called like a job developer.
Back in 2008, early on in his career, John Tabor worked at a refugee resettlement agency in Illinois.
I found John Thuwer researcher on refugee resettlement who worked with him at that same organization.
They both thought they'd be helping refugees, but soon learned that wasn't necessarily
true. In fact, years later, when I spoke with John over the phone, he felt a lot of remorse,
which is why he was so honest and candid with me about what his work was actually like.
There is only a very, very small amount of resettlement money that these families are allocated.
You know, if they don't get a job pretty much immediately, they're unable to pay their bills.
So, you know, within a few months, they'd be facing homelessness.
You know, like literally, welcome to America.
Now you're going to be evicted.
At his job, John was up against the same clock as the refugees he was helping.
He had to get everyone gainfully employed before their three-month safety net ran out.
And he might have a caseload of 50 to 60 people.
You know, did a little bit of sort of skill development, but frankly, we didn't really have a lot of time for that.
It was mostly get their resume together, try to figure out what they did in the past.
and get them into work as soon as possible.
But it was rarely that straightforward.
We're talking about some of the most vulnerable people on the planet.
Many didn't have any skills that would translate to the modern American job context.
Some had lived in refugee camps for their entire lives.
They didn't have any work experience.
You know, you couldn't put like sitting around the refugee camp or you couldn't put like tilling the field, you know.
It just wouldn't translate.
And so John and his fellow job developers connected the refugees with whatever employment options they could find.
It's not like they were applying to some high-level management position.
They were at entry-level meatpacking jobs.
Meatpacking.
Remember Mohamed, the Burmese refugee from the beginning of the story?
This is exactly how he got his job.
A caseworker referred him to JBS.
John remembers it was one of the most reliable choices because meatpacking plans.
plants were always hiring and they paid better than most of the other options.
With the high rates of injury and turnover, plants were constantly looking for new workers
and the jobs didn't require any English or previous experience.
There's one company, Tyson Foods.
Like JBS, Tyson is also a massive American meatpacking company.
Tyson would announce like eight positions or nine positions and you'd get, you know,
we would all show up with our refugees and,
And it was a very, a very well-established feeder.
He wasn't a humanitarian project for them.
It was here as a group of workers that will be efficient and effective
and, you know, we'll work faster and better than your American employees.
And so that was the kind of relationships that we would form.
So, like, we were selling a product, really.
And as time went on, John noticed that the recruiters he was in touch with at Tyson
became more specific about what type of worker they wanted?
Not so subtly would say, you know, we give us Burmese.
You know, they were just sort of, you know, these workers have worked out in the past.
And there was this sort of tacit understanding was we should deliver them these workers.
Like if we showed up with five or six, I'm just saying like Iraqis, let's say.
Because, you know, Iraqis had personalities, you know, big personalities.
They came from different culture.
That we knew that wasn't going to satisfy their,
demands. And that's not something I'm particularly proud of, but it was just the realities we were
facing. He says this part of the job kept him up at night. He and his team at the agency even
tried to come up with alternatives. But nothing ever really worked. You know, it just, the American
machine just swallowed him up. And there was never any breathing room. I mean, the margins are
tiny in our system. After a few more years in this work, John left the field.
but it taught him something about America's refugee resettlement program.
The narrative that we're giving people these great opportunities, you know, like there's a dark side.
The system is supposed to get refugees out of danger, but it then leaves them with little support.
Many don't have language skills or a safety net.
Compared to other immigrant groups, they're overrepresented in low-skilled work, they earn less, and are more likely to live in poverty.
That's what makes them ideal recruits for meatpackers like JBS.
With so few options, they take jobs most others won't.
And even when the work leaves them injured,
pushes them to work at impossible speeds,
or exposes them to religious discrimination,
many feel they have no choice but to stay.
We reached out to JBS for this story,
but they declined to comment.
Back in Muhammad's home,
he tells me a bit about what it would.
like when he first came to Greeley.
It was a shock to leave behind the hot, tropical climate of Burma.
He remembers he saw snow here for the first time.
What's something that Greeley doesn't have that you miss
from your home country, Burma?
I think he's going to have.
He said Greeley didn't have the same vera.
Yeah, so he's talking about the gardening.
Oh.
The gardening?
He said Greeley didn't have the same verbal.
variety of fruits and vegetables he was used to.
So he started a garden in the backyard.
How did he grow?
Redis, watermelon, pumpkin.
When I met him, Muhammad had been off work for several weeks on disability with an injured hand.
He showed me how when he tried to.
To make a fist, some of the fingers wouldn't bend.
It gets stuck like that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just from the same gripping motion.
Yeah.
He had surgery a few years ago, but it still doesn't work like it used to.
And I cannot fix.
It's made a fist properly.
And I cannot hold something as a firm way.
So this is the problem.
Still, he tells me he.
he's eager to get back to work.
When we spoke, his immediate family, including his wife and five kids,
were still displaced and living in India.
And he helped support about 20 members of his extended family as well.
Yes, I want to go back as soon as possible
because there's many kind of bills I have to pay.
So I can't go because I don't get doctor's approval yet.
With this influx of refugees, the city of Greeley,
was once again transformed. In 2007, just one year after the ice raids, the foreign-born
population grew to about 13,000, a 76% increase from seven years earlier.
In 2008, Greeley became an official refugee resettlement site. Now instead of moving to Greeley
from a nearby city, a person could be brought there directly from a refugee camp, and
inevitably, they'd be recruited for a job at JBS. It was a lot for a small city of 90,000.
And just like before, it wasn't always pretty.
A local mosque was shot at in broad daylight.
There was a small anti-Sharia law protest.
In the lens of history, that was not long after 9-11.
Here's James Horan again from the Refugee Resettlement Agency.
And so I think there was a lot of focus on Islam.
And what does it mean that now there is an Islamic community in my community?
James spent a lot of time holding community meetings where people could come to ask questions.
He remembers he had to dispel a lot of the same myths that persist today.
Another thing I would talk to people a lot about is the security clearances that refugees go through.
Because that was another question. Is this a public safety issue?
But with time, Greeley, once again, adjust it.
Today, there's a strong network of support services like food pantries and driving courses.
There are free English classes and GEDC.
courses taught in the evenings at the local library.
The public schools have a successful ESL program.
And then there's the Immigrant and Refugee Center of Northern Colorado, which helps
refugees do everything from interpret their mail to apply for citizenship.
Yeah, I'm just helping him pay the bill.
I think this is the toll bill that he needs help paying.
So this is like a regular.
that we do here.
This is Karim Abdulmanaf, who works at the center.
And why is that?
Just because it's all in English?
Yeah, sometimes it's all because it's all in English.
And at the times, they don't know how to navigate all those websites and everything.
So that's one of the reasons they come here.
Kareem arrived in Greeley about eight years ago.
He and his family became refugees after facing persecution in their home country of Burma.
He speaks Rohingya and helps other Rohingya refugees.
translate things from English,
like they're phone bills and big statements.
So you're kind of able to be the
helping hand that you didn't really have.
Yes, and I'm glad
that I can help
the community to give them back.
Because I know how it feels
to be lost
in a new place.
Kareem worked at JBS for two years,
and so did his four older brothers
when they were first resettled in Greeley.
It was and still is
the primary job in the area that doesn't require English or any previous experience.
I wouldn't say JBS is a long-term job, but for some of the families, they are planning to
just do JBS for as long as they can. They have to do it because they have no other options
here in the GRILE. And recently, there's been yet another new wave of arrivals, the many
thousands of Haitians and Venezuelans who came to the U.S. on temporary protected status.
TPS allows people from certain countries to stay and work here if it's too dangerous to go back home.
What community do you primarily work with?
Haitian community.
This is Dree.
He originally came to Greeley from New Jersey because he heard about the work available at JBS.
But after a few weeks, he quit.
It was overwhelming, a lot of pressure.
especially from the management staff.
They're trying to get stuff done like, you know, record time.
So it's kind of challenging for your body and your man's hole.
Then he showed up at this refugee and immigration center with a friend
and was quickly offered a job because he speaks English and Haitian Creole fluently.
Just like Kareem, he helps Haitians navigate life in Greeley.
But the day we met, things got a lot more complicated.
The Trump administration canceled, temporary.
protected status for Venezuelans.
Haitians with protected status would be next.
The Supreme Court just canceled the TPS for Venezuelans now.
Like, we're talking about like 300,000 people.
And that just happened.
Yes.
Probably going to cancel for Haitians.
Do you think you'll get a lot of people in here today asking about that?
The TPS, the fact that the new just came out, like minutes ago, for sure next week,
it's going to be like overwhelming for them,
like to come and ask you a question,
what can I do, what can I do, what would be the next step.
The refugee program as we know it,
the one created in the 1980s, is on pause indefinitely.
The flow of people like Mohammed, Karim, and Dree,
has all but stopped,
which raises the same question the industry has faced for generations.
Where will the workers come from?
If I were the CEO of a big company like JBS, I might be wringing my hands right about now.
Of all U.S. industries, meatpacking has the fifth highest concentration of refugee workers.
And more broadly, about 40% of meatpacking workers are foreign-born.
I think there's definitely an economic conversation to be had.
And I think employers will probably be the drivers of that.
That's James Horan again.
It's just going to be a math issue.
right? I think when you're an employer and you have a workforce need and you have a certain number of jobs open and you don't have people to draw on to fill those jobs, you are limited.
As a country, we're once again in a fiercely anti-immigrant climate. And while every country needs a fair immigration system, we can't deny that the populations we're targeting play an essential role in our economy. They don't just fill jobs. They feel hard. They feel hard.
dangerous jobs, the ones that most people will avoid if they have the choice.
When people are deported in droves, it leaves a vacuum.
When refugees aren't allowed to come, it leaves a vacuum.
And when there's no one left to slaughter our cows,
we're reminded of a truth, Upton Sinclair tried to tell us in the jungle.
This country depends on vulnerable people to do its dirtiest, most grueling work.
We've just never wanted to see it.
99% Invisible was reported this week by Esther Honig
and was produced and edited by Delaney Hall,
mixed by Martine Gonzalez, music by Swan Real and George Langford.
Fact-checking by Naomi Barr.
This story was reported in collaboration with Fern,
the Food and Environmental Reporting Network,
and with funding from the 11th Hour Food and Farming Fellowship at UC Berkeley.
thanks this week to Colin Cannon, Ted Genoese, and Brent Cunningham.
Kathy, too, is our executive producer.
Kurt Kolstad is the digital director.
The rights of the team includes Chris Baroube, Jason DeLeon, Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher Johnson, Vivian
Leigh, Lajman, Joe Rosenberg, Kelly Prime, Jacob Medina Gleason, and me, Roman Mars.
The 99% of his logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We are part of the Serious XM Podcast family, now headquartered six blocks north, in the Pandora,
building in beautiful uptown oakland california you can find us on all the usual social media
sites as well as our own discord server there's a link to that as well as every past episode of
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