In amongst various other things Donald Trump has been doing to kneecap personal liberty, he has also been championing high tariffs and export taxes in an attempt to pressure domestic companies to utilise American labour rather than outsourcing their production to other countries. Superficially, this seems like a good idea, insofar as it would create paying jobs and stable positions for unionised workers. However, unions are the furthest thing from Trump's senile mind.
Honestly, this was happening long before Trump ever showed up, it's just that no one ever talks about it. All those products you find at the Dollar General or Dollar Tree, or the discount section of the grocery store, that have "Made with pride in the USA" on them (typically deployed as this phrasing superimposed over a billowing American flag) were made by slaves in a prison sweatshop. Many states, including my own, have a "work-release" programme for inmates of state and city penitentiaries, wherein prisoners are conscripted into menial labour away from the prison grounds. While the prisons in my state are all operated, and therefore funded, by the government, there are a lot of privately-owned prisons in the United States, all of them run like businesses. While this isn't the rule, obviously, you tend to find them a lot in the Deep South (viz. Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida), which, incidentally, happen to be the exact same US states where Black people get arrested and locked up for either very minor or entirely made-up crimes. This isn't to say that Black people don't get locked up disproportionately in other states, of course. In high school, I knew 2 guys who got nicked for cannabis possession at different times. Travis (White guy) got a slap on the wrist and was told to attend a class on why meth was bad (meth, when he got nicked for cannabis?); while Bobby (Black guy) got the book thrown at him and was tried as an adult, causing him to incur a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years. Both boys were only 17, but the white boy was let free, while the black boy was sentenced to 10 years in adult prison. This is the way it is across the board, it's been that way basically ever since the Emancipation Proclamation; in order to keep Black people in servitude, police look for reasons to lock them up, even if it's just lingering too long at a green traffic signal.
For all my non-US readers, Section 1 of the 13th Amendment allows slavery as the punishment for a crime. Since a quorum of state legislatures needs to vote in favour of a proposed constitutional amendment in order for it to take effect, a backdoor for continued slavery had to be essentially baked into the 13th amendment in order to get the racist state governments to vote for it.
As you'll recall, the very first thing (maybe the 2nd thing) Donald Trump did when he returned to power was to direct the justice department to investigate so-called "diversity, equity, and inclusivity" (DEI) in private-sector hiring practises, which scared much of the corporate feudal state into kicking its Black workers to the kerb. Target, Walmart, Samsung, Netflix, Google, and a dozen other very large companies or corporations caved to this pressure, disenfranchising literal thousands of Black people nearly overnight. It's not as though non-White people have an easy time getting jobs to begin with, you know. If there's an over-qualified Black woman applying for the same job as an under-qualified White man, HR's gonna go with the White man. Post-Trump, basically the only place where Black people can get work anymore is at specifically far-left independently-owned businesses or a menial, servile position, such as refuse collection or janitorial work.
Now, with the new push for American labour, specifically the directive to grow sugarcane to replace high-fructose corn syrup, domestic producers are going to need workers. Considering how anti-union this country has always been, their first choice is not going to be any labourer's guild, they're going to want cheap labour, preferably no-cost.
At this point, let's turn to the recent purge of Central and South Americans from this country. In what is probably the highest-profile effort of the entire Trump regime, immigration troops are arresting people who have Spanish or Portuguese names, who look Latino, or who are being discharged from immigration court. The regime's stated goal is to arrest 5000 people per day, and the immigration troops aren't smart enough or paid enough to be very discriminating about who they toss into the paddywagon. Naturalised citizens and people with verifiable generations of North American ancestry are being hoovered up in these raids, too. Even White tourists are being detained. While the White people only stay in prison long enough to rattle them, Brown people and southeast Asians are packed onto airliners and deported to El Salvador, Libya, South Sudan, and Costa Rica.
Until this fascist policy took effect, Latines and southeast Asians were the most common workforce in commercial farming and manufacturing. With the new deportation policy, these companies will be forced to look elsewhere for their workers, and will arrive at highly-lucrative contracts with for-profit prisons. While instances of police officers killing Black people in cold blood are still relatively common in this country, more common is the tendency to carry on locking them up for minor infractions of the law. Officers tend to plant drugs on Black people they pull over in traffic stops and then state for the official record that the car reeked of cannabis or something. This ensures a mandatory minimum sentence for drug possession will be handed down (since these are summary judgments that require no jury trial), thereby forcing the victim into a decade of slavery.
TL;DR, African slavery has been reintroduced into American commerce, using Trump's deportations and this society's natural consumerist tendencies to drive it. Essentially, treat every "Made in the USA" label you find as though it were made by slaves in a sweatshop, because, in all likelihood, it was.