Producing Apple products is a really tough job.
If we in America (the place that consumes the most Apple stuff) consider ourselves the world's moral authority on human rights shouldn't we be asking that the people who make the gadgets we use be treated better? Since they are humans and have rights and all. I don't think it is too much to ask that our conspicuous displays of wealth and toys are made by people who aren't driven to kissing pavement.
I also don't think making the lives of the workers a little better will bankrupt Apple or stop investors from making some sweet dividends. Considering how expensive Apple products are, and that the company has a market cap of $600 billion as well as $100 billion in the bank, Apple can afford to improve working conditions at the factories that make Apple products. At the very least they can take measures to make sure people don't breath aluminum dust.
I know what you are thinking. Yes I own foreign made products. I don't mind paying a bit more for my stuff if it means my toys aren't produced by slave labor. I'm sure my car would be cheaper if it was produced and assembled by Chinese workers instead of Japanese and American. I'm okay with it not being cheaper though.
I could be wrong though! Maybe we don't have any responsibility to the people who make our things. Maybe its is every man for himself in our free market societies. Maybe it is not our problem.
It doesn't matter what I think about Apple though. I haven't owned an Apple product since 2006 when my parents bought me an Ipod video. So there is no blood on my hands.
What do you think?
Working conidtions have led to suicides. Apple responded by putting up nets to prevent jumpers.FLA auditors found that some employees worked more than seven days in a row without stopping, despite requirements that workers have at least a 24-hour break. More than 50 percent of workers at each of the factories audited exceeded the legal limit on overtime — 36 hours per month.
The auditors also found urgent health and safety issues, including the presence of aluminum dust, which caused a fatal explosion at a plant in Chengdu, China, in 2011.
...
Living conditions in Foxconn campus dormitories remain cramped, with 20 or 30 workers sharing three-bedroom flats, sleeping eight to a room in bunkbeds.
They are forbidden to use power-hungry electrical items such as kettles or laptops on pain of confiscation, says Sacom, which published the study to coincide with Foxconn's annual general meeting in Hong Kong on Thursday.
Where most assembly staff were previously forced to stand, stools have now been introduced for some workers. However, they are under instructions to sit on only a third of the seat, so that they remain "nimble" enough to do the work.
If we in America (the place that consumes the most Apple stuff) consider ourselves the world's moral authority on human rights shouldn't we be asking that the people who make the gadgets we use be treated better? Since they are humans and have rights and all. I don't think it is too much to ask that our conspicuous displays of wealth and toys are made by people who aren't driven to kissing pavement.
I also don't think making the lives of the workers a little better will bankrupt Apple or stop investors from making some sweet dividends. Considering how expensive Apple products are, and that the company has a market cap of $600 billion as well as $100 billion in the bank, Apple can afford to improve working conditions at the factories that make Apple products. At the very least they can take measures to make sure people don't breath aluminum dust.
I know what you are thinking. Yes I own foreign made products. I don't mind paying a bit more for my stuff if it means my toys aren't produced by slave labor. I'm sure my car would be cheaper if it was produced and assembled by Chinese workers instead of Japanese and American. I'm okay with it not being cheaper though.
I could be wrong though! Maybe we don't have any responsibility to the people who make our things. Maybe its is every man for himself in our free market societies. Maybe it is not our problem.
It doesn't matter what I think about Apple though. I haven't owned an Apple product since 2006 when my parents bought me an Ipod video. So there is no blood on my hands.
What do you think?