Showing posts with label Steve Jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Jobs. Show all posts

Thursday, June 3, 2010

The new “blood diamond?”

Several years back, the world was up in arms over the trafficking of “blood diamonds” – gems mined and sold out of Africa, which funded all sorts of nasty activities…like wars.

Hollywood, led by The Social Conscience That Is Leo, even made a movie about the horrors.

Eventually, panged by guilt, the West passed laws and made it socially taboo to purchase “a girl’s best friend” from anyone/anywhere it couldn’t be ascertained that the jewels were free of sin…of the taint of sub-Saharan coup d’états, jungle warlords conducting mining operations with slaves, and all the brutality one can imagine in a Third World environment fueled by First World money (and weaponry).

Now we have the new blood diamond. Perhaps a better name might be the “iBlood Diamond.”

Today, in one of China’s fastest-growing, most globally capitalistic cities, more than 300,000 workers toil in the biggest manufacturing facility in the world, owned by electronics giant, Foxconn. If you own any number of electronic and computing gadgets, chances are the drones of Foxconn put it together (for just a few hundred dollars a month – at best). Most notably, Apple’s products – the iPhone, Mac Books and the hugely popular iPad – are all produced at mega-plants in Longhua and Shenzhen (employing 300,000 and 120,000 workers, respectively).

A busy worker is a happy worker - right?

Working in shifts that run 10 -12 hours and perhaps longer, employees live at the facility 24/7 and life is Spartan and very regimented. While workers are provided food, shelter and medical care (often in shorter supply than what they receive at Foxconn’s facilities), the life of a Foxconn worker closely resembles something more akin to the endeavors of colonizing insects than it does modern day humans. Socializing on the factory floor is strongly discouraged and output quotas test even the most able. Before long, like at most sweatshops, employees are burnt out. (A Foxconn worker recently died from “overwork and fatigue.”)

The facility and the conditions workers toil “against” have been coming under tremendous scrutiny lately, as more than a dozen Foxconn workers have committed suicide, numerous others have attempted to do so, and others have run away from the facility. Reacting to the harsh glare of international criticism, Foxconn has taken a “humane” approach to helping its workers: additional counselors have been made available; and workers now have to sign a pledge promising not to hurt or kill themselves or others.

According to a report by The New York Times, Foxconn, “Stung by labor shortages and a rash of suicides this year at its large factories in southern China, Foxconn Technology said Wednesday that it would immediately raise the salaries of many of its Chinese workers by 33 percent. The pay increase is the latest indication that labor costs are rising in China’s coastal manufacturing centers and that workers are demanding higher pay to offset an increase in inflation and soaring food and property prices.” As my colleague on the John Batchelor Show, Gordon Chang, points out, “…this isn’t about money [to the workers]. This is about human dignity.”

Apple's Steve Jobs (left); and protesters decrying working conditions at Foxconn...

In a story posted by Reuters, “Apple Inc Chief Executive Steve Jobs finds ‘troubling’ a string of worker deaths at Foxconn, the contract manufacturer that assembles the company's iPhones and iPads, but said its factory in China ‘is not a sweatshop.’ But a string of deaths at Foxconn's base in southern China, which critics blame on stressful working conditions, threatens to cast a shadow over the device's success. ‘It's a difficult situation,’ Jobs, dressed in his customary black turtleneck and jeans, said on stage. ‘We're trying to understand right now, before we go in and say we know the solution.’"

In one of his recent columns for Forbes.com, Chang writes “The mystery of the suicides is that Foxconn's facilities are by no means the worst in China. On the contrary, because the company is so visible, its working conditions, as dehumanizing as they are, are considered to be among the best of the mass manufacturers in the country. That's why, on one level, the suicides are so troubling. They strike at the heart of the Chinese industrial system, perhaps signaling the questioning of the Communist Party's model of manufacturing. That model worked because peasants were willing to travel a thousand miles to live in labor-camp conditions. Today, we see the social detachment, alienation and despair that are the result of an efficient--but ultimately unsustainable--system. The inspectors from Apple will examine the details of Foxconn's facilities, which they have seen before, but they will not look at the larger issue: the compatibility of China's economic model to a modernizing society.”

Chang is absolutely correct, but there is another side to this we must consider (beyond the failings of China, the thugocracy that rules it and the outside capitalists willing to take advantage of slave labor-like conditions there). We must consider our own actions.

If, during the “blood diamond” conflicts in Africa, you’d been offered a gem you knew came to you along a route of blood, sorrow and misery, would you take it? Would it matter the price? That may be where we are – or are heading – with products manufactured/assembled at Foxconn (and other similar facilities). It’s one thing to be able to stand back and point at wealthy, bejeweled people and demand they forsake their diamonds. It’s always easier to ask for sacrifice if you can’t/won’t yourself. But devices like smart phones and laptops are so ubiquitous these days, I’m afraid that when the true story of Foxconn and the life of indentured servants throughout China come to light, there won’t be much of a push from the West to change things.


They're everywhere...

You see, we love the convenience of our gadgets. We love how fun the apps are and how nice it is to chat, email and web-browse on the go. And most of all, we love the price. They are ubiquitous because they are affordable. Business depends on the devices, families stay connected with them…they’ve even become de rigueur among the youngest in society.

In one sense, these iMachines could very well be the new blood diamonds: socially unacceptable pariahs. On the other hand, they never will be. There is no desire among the comfortable to become afflicted…nor is there the will among them to comfort the afflicted.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

What's news?

A quick rundown of the people and events making news that matters to you:

California / the West

The Los Angeles Times endorses San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom over L.A. City council member Janice Hahn on the Democratic side for lieutenant governor, saying "whoever fills the job must be ready to become governor at a moment's notice. Newsom, for all his cockiness, is a dynamic leader — one who is more suited than Hahn to guide the state." LAT editorial

Meg Whitman is coming off an extraordinary successful quarter – at least when it comes to adding money for her campaign. California Watch. Plus: Her tax return for 2008 shows Carly Fiorina and her husband had income of more than $2.75 million. LAT

Tom Campbell: Arizona immigration law is constitutional

Poizner's tilt right is in keeping with record

Building sell-off slammed - Report says guv's plan to unload buildings would lose state $1.5 billion...

CA gov backs health overhaul...

Franken to raise money with SNL alums at LA event...

Weren’t we supposed to be boycotting California for its homophobia?...

Tourism chief opposes Arizona boycott - SF's Joe D'Alessandro says it could hurt the very people it is trying to support...

Newsom edging toward the boycott bandwagon...

SF's Proposed Arizona Boycott Threatens Job Program...

‘Little decisions’ could have big impact - The bad news we already know: San Francisco has a $483 million budget deficit that must be resolved before June 1.


Gavin - he was against the post of Lt. Gov. before he was for it...

The Economy / Wall Street

Volatile Jobs Data Point To Uneven Recovery...

Goldman's Gift to Democrats - "Lawmakers have been haggling over financial reform for 18 months, but it took Goldman Sachs just one day to get it done," the Washington Post reports. "Of course, the Wall Street giant wasn't intending to get the financial legislation done. Quite the opposite: Like most in the investment world, Goldman would generally prefer that regulators leave it and its billions of dollars of profits alone. But when Goldman executives faced a Senate panel on Tuesday, their performance was so obnoxious, their contempt for lawmakers so palpable, that their appearance had the effect of dissolving the Republican resistance to what Democrats are now calling 'Wall Street reform.'"

U.S. / Politics

Bush Was Right - Obama’s predecessor would have passed immigration reform if not for 9/11. He was correct to shift focus then—and Obama shouldn’t let the Arizona debacle force him to push for a new law during an election year...

Senate Dems will move campaign finance legislation before July 4...

Republicans Eye Three Symbolic Senate Seats - Washington Post: ""Every now and then, there comes a congressional race so fraught with history and symbolism that it becomes as much about sending a message as winning a seat. This year, Republicans are looking to hit the trifecta in the Senate. As things stand now, they are well within striking distance of winning President Obama's old seat in Illinois and Vice President Biden's former perch in Delaware, and of toppling Majority Leader Harry M. Reid in Nevada."

Senate Democrats to unveil immigration plan

Reid Still Trails Badly - A new Rasmussen survey in Nevada finds Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) still struggling against his possible Republican challengers. Sue Lowden (R) is ahead 52% to 39%, Danny Tarkanian (R) leads 51% to 41%, and Sharron Angle (R) is in front 48% to 40%.

Al Gore buys $8.8 million ocean-view villa...

The Most Polarized Congress in Modern History - William Galston: "The current Congress -- the 111th -- is the most ideologically polarized in modern history. In both the House and the Senate, the most conservative Democrat is more liberal than is the most liberal Republican. If one defines the congressional 'center' as the overlap between the two parties, the center has disappeared."

Motor City Madman Backs Palin - Rock star Ted Nugent endorses Sarah Palin: "We who are driven to be assets to our families, communities and our beloved country connect with the principles that Sarah Palin embodies. We know that bureaucrats and, even more, Fedzilla, are not the solution; they are the problem. I'd be proud to share a moose-barbecue campfire with the Palin family anytime, so long as I can shoot the moose."

McCain Holds Double-Digit Lead Over Hayworth - A new Public Policy Polling survey in Arizona finds the Republican U.S. Senate primary much closer than a Rocky Mountain poll released yesterday. Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) leads challenger J.D. Hayworth (R), 46% to 35%, though a majority of Republicans think "he's too lenient on immigration" and a plurality feel that "he's too liberal in general." Hayworth actually leads McCain 46% to 38% with conservative voters. But McCain's 60% to 15% advantage with moderates is so overwhelming that it allows him the double digit lead...


Al Gore - feeling the heat over his new digs...

International

Tribal elders refuse to return to former Pakistani Taliban base, jeopardizing military gains...

Saddam's loyalists in Syria blast US...

Gordon Brown's Disastrous Day - The British prime minister’s spectacular gaffe has further imperiled his faltering campaign. Alex Massie on how upstart Nick Clegg is taking advantage—and what he wants...

All hail the success of Hugo Chavez's bolivarian socialism: "What we're seeing in Venezuela is a phenomenon where productivity, private activity and private business is falling"...

Latin America Will Expand In 2010...

AHMADINEJAD TO ATTEND CONFERENCE AT UN NEXT WEEK...

US Navy has encounter with Iranian jet...

US gives $2.5 million more to help pay for Charles Taylor war crimes trial...


Iran's Ahmadinejad - coming soon to a UN near you...

Defense / Terrorism-related

Could drone pilots be tried for war crimes?...

Navy to allow women to serve on subs...

Health/tech/science/Environment

APPLE WANTED A “PUBLIC EXECUTION” in the iPhone case?...

Steve Jobs' scathing bash of Flash - Apple CEO lays out 6 reasons why he won't support the Adobe technology on the iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch...

Water Ice and Organic Material Found for First Time on Asteroid...

U.S. Escalates Oil Spill Response...

Microsoft Tablet Project Shelved...

Google to Show TV Software in May...


Boss Jobs...

China / Asia







The start of something bad?

Hat tip (sources): Los Angeles Times, NY Times, LA Observed, SF Chronicle/SFGate, SF Examiner, The Hill, Legal Insurrection, KCBS, Forbes.com, the Wall Street Journal/Online WSJ, the Drudge Report, Taegan Goddard’s Political Wire, Gawker, Instapundit, Philly.com, BBC, PopSci.com, AP News/MyWay, Boing Boing, Breitbart.com, The Daily Beast, Comcast.net, Korea Times, the Washington Post, Reuters, California Watch, TIME, Rheilworldview.com, Telegraph UK, Big Journalism, Moonbattery.com