see docks. as you know morehead city and the whole carolina coastal areas big into shipping and boating. this is the capital right here in this area of beaufort, morehead city for the north carolina shrimp industry. it s going to be interesting to see if you come over this way just a little bit i m going to turn you mike towards. this you see the tug boats pulled into shore. you see those cranes that are sticking up. those huge cranes which is what offloads a lot of the shipping, the fishing, the bigger ships that were pulled out. you know, it s a rare thing, shep, for a storm to come for fishermen to really pull the big industrial fishing vessels out. but that was done before this storm because they looked at florence s size and if you look, just here, you can see what was really more recreational docks, some people this their own fishing vessels and can you see these docks are still under water. so the surge is certainly
taken on human trafficking. there are also problems with forced labor in industries such as the shrimp industry, the electronics industry, mining and other extraction industries, anywhere where there s a lot of manual labor at stake, there can also be forced labor. if we take a stand with our dollars, perhaps a change can be made when we talk about slavery in the united states and abroad. and a part of what you re saying is electronics and brought the ces to mind, with the commuter electronics show, we also have the super bowl coming as well. those have been reportedly events where sex slavery happens at higher rates. certainly around any sports event there is increased attention to sexual exploitation and sex trafficking. i as a federal prosecutor was
slave labor from the shrimp industry what we see on the tables here in the united states? we re so comfortable with low-priced seafood. there is no reason in a world of globalization that the desire for cheap products and cheap food means there has to be slavery. it touches our lives. and as the guardian has done a great service of taking studies that were done by the international organization for migration, the u.n. office on drugs and crime, and others and gotten into the detail of the evidence of how it touches the supply chains. i shop at walmart, i shop at costco. other consumers like me should be stunned a the possibility what they buy, you know, is in fact made of slave labor. many would be surprised to hare a report, no doubt. they expect it wouldn t be the case here, ambassador. the u.s., as you know, about to put out the annual slavery
know the long lasting effects on bottom feeding things? we don t because the oil settled on the bottom of the gulf and it settled on the rises as they come to the beach. we went to visit grand isle, king of the shrimp industry and it is slow but he is concerned with the long-term effects of the oil, of the dispersants with some boats tied up because they were vessels of opportunity skimming oil and they have not been decontaminated and this man lost a lot of money with only 30 percent of it back. i should have grossed $5 million this year, i had $3 million left and they gave me $1 million so i am 30 percent of being whole and i cannot find a university who can explain how 30 percent makes you whole.
starting to boycott the state of arizona? feds say no. some democrats say yes, they are. we investigate with allan combs. stossel is here to tell us why gun control is bad. and sex-crazed poodle or innocent man? al gore is in kelly s court today. all starts top of the hour. see you then. jamie: the oil disaster in the gulf is putting another spill back into the spotlight. it happened in 1979 when some 140 million gallons spilled into a deep water well that had blown out. it happened off mexico s yucatan peninsula. but the gulf recovered surprisingly quickly and a sizeable shrimp industry did return to normal. it did take a couple of years, though. adam housely is streaming live from mexico. tell us where you are and what happened there and maybe what we can learn from it. reporter: jamie, we re at campeche, mexico, on the