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Should You Feel Guilty Owning an iPhone?
Toms Hardware ^ | 5/28/2010 | Wolfgang Gruener

Posted on 05/25/2010 1:30:55 PM PDT by dangerdoc

Ahhh. The joy of unwrapping an iPhone. Or an iPad.

The box that protects Apple’s latest creation tells us why we just sacrificed a few hundred dollars for a gadget. The precision of the fit and finish of the card board box. The flawless protective plastics that keep your iPhone and iPod safe. The glorious moment and pride you feel when you turn it on the first time. But what are we exactly proud of? Shouldn’t we feel at least some sort of guilt?

Zoom Never in the history of earth have we been able to bridge or even eliminate geographic distances as we can today. Occasionally, and thanks to the Internet, you often forget the dimensions of our planet and you could almost believe there is a way that leads to one global community, with a few unpleasant exceptions.

That is, of course, only true in the case of those things we like to see and have an interest in. In others, we look the other direction, we show little interest for the needs of others and we pretend we have no clue what you are talking about. You can find examples of such scenarios in all walks of life, but for this column, I would like to direct your attention to the dark side of gadgets, the way they are manufactured. And no, of course, it isn’t just Apple and its manufacturer.

Countless big U.S. and non U.S. corporations are guilty of exploiting human workforce and looking the other way when it’s convenient. Chinese sweatshops have been making headlines for years and a recent article published on Gizmodo truly highlighted the ghastly working conditions at Foxconn, Apple’s contract manufacturer. When there are suicide attempts at a manufacturing facility, due to stress and working conditions, you know you are much closer to a modern form of slavery than an employer who makes sure its employees are taken care of.

The National Labor Committee regularly publishes reports on working conditions globally and you will find big names such as Microsoft, Nike, Wal-Mart, Disney, Timberland, Huffy, JanSport, the Kathie Lee (Gifford) label, and Dell, all of which have been accused of unfair labor practices involving contract manufacturers.

So take Apple just as an example.

When you look at the iPhone, you most likely see the design talent of industrial designers, you see the ideas that went into the device, you may think about the patents that enabled and protect this device, you may see the vision of Steve Jobs glorified in this one small handheld. But we really don’t see how this device was made. It was made in a factory that employees 20-something year olds, some of who get paid only $130 a month at less than the Chinese minimum wage of about 55 cents. Some are working 98 hours per week, are under permanent surveillance, by cameras and co-workers, are not allowed to talk during work hours.

Microsoft recently came under fire for having its mice manufactured in sweatshops by 15 and 16 year old teenagers who work 15 hour days, 6 days a week for 52 cents per hour. They have to assemble 2000 Microsoft mice per shift.

In factories near Hong Kong, workers in such factories reportedly lose 40,000 fingers on the job every year, due to unsafe manufacturing equipment, according to the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences. Consumer groups claim that companies consistently try to cheat their employees out of earned wages, do not provide health benefits and expose their workers to toxic materials like lead, cadmium and mercury. Here in the U.S. we are worried about baby bottles that may carry a potentially unsafe material and lead in toys. But we don’t care about those who assembled those products. Of course, Wal-Mart is the posterchild of suspected child labor violations.

The company is believed to import more than $10 billion of goods from China every year and you would have no trouble finding questionable working conditions. Take the Guangzhou Huanya Gift, for example, which describes itself as being "among the top three Christmas ornament producers in mainland China." 8000 workers in the factory have to deal with grueling working conditions that reportedly violate every single Chinese labor law: 10-15 hour shifts, seven days per week, 30 days in a row without a day off. Workers are required to work at least 84.5 hours per week, while only being paid for 77 hours. According to the National Labor Committee, at least half of the employee base “are routinely at the factory 105.25 hours a week and working 95 hours, including 55 hours of overtime, which exceeds China's legal limit by 562%. Any working daring to take a Sunday off will be docked 2.5 days' wages as punishment.”

Apple has been consistently in the crosshairs of human rights groups for having its products manufactured by Foxconn, which employs about 400,000 people and assembles products for other companies such as HP, Dell and Intel as well. What makes Foxconn a standout is not just the fact that it manufactures Mac minis or iPods and iPads, but the fact that there have been more than three dozen suicide attempts with seven confirmed deaths in recent months. Foxconn apparently has hired Buddhist monks as counselors to help. Perhaps they should think about changing their work conditions?

Of course, it is always difficult to judge a situation in a different culture, but there is clearly something wrong with the picture of workers clearly suffering on the one side of the globe and a buy-and-throw-away society on the other. Add to this scenario not just a somewhat ignorant pride when unboxing a new gadget, but those individuals who purchase those gadgets and subsequently think it is funny to walk out the store and keep smashing it on the sidewalk to find out how much it takes to destroy the device.

So, are we guilty of supporting an economy that can get away with operating a gigantic slavery machine? Of course we are, as consumers we keep fueling this machine. However, as so often, you can easily claim there is nothing you can do as an individual and calling for a boycott of buying Apple, Microsoft, Dell or Wal-Mart products is clearly not the solution. However, corporate responsibility should be a global effort. Yes, I do understand that manufacturing cost is a big deal and of course you give the contract to the company that does it for the lowest cost. And there is a whole chain of factors that favors low cost (and is willing to accept such work conditions), ranging from the companies themselves, the supply chain, unforgiving investors and consumers. But there needs to be a limit.

There needs to be a motivation for Microsoft, Apple, Wal-Mart and others to skip manufacturers that earn their money with outrageous working conditions, which, in part creates profits for the Apples and Microsofts as well. Ads a global society, we need to learn to honor the ethics that go into manufacturing and put a value on them. How proud can you be of a product that was built in a work environment I described above?

At least as far as I am concerned, I would like to know that the “incredible price” of the iPad was achieved through Apple’s innovation and not on the shoulders of severely underpaid workers and an hazardous work environment in a factory on the other side of the world. That whole thought puts Apple’s impressive profit margins into an entirely differently light as well.

Perhaps we all should be a bit more conscious and less selfish about our global society.


TOPICS: Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: communismkills; globaleconomy; iphone; maccult
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To: a fool in paradise
Hey if they paid a fair wage, that iphone might cost $450 instead of $400...

Given the volumes we are talking, and the automation - they are making a good wage. In volume manufacturing, the main reason they are made in China has to do with taxes, rather than wages.

And even then, the wages are good for the area. People travel vast distances to leave the agricultural areas to work for Foxconn. Foxconn has no shortage of eager workers. Now bear in mind, Foxconn provides dorms for the workers, food and clothing. I believe they sign on for several months, and get 1 day a week off. The work hours are ~10hrs a day (I believe) ... but the pay is better than anything else in the area.

Then again, if it would make the Libtards feel better, Foxconn could close up shop and move somewhere else and let those who depend upon those manufacturing jobs to starve to death.

21 posted on 05/25/2010 1:50:44 PM PDT by Hodar (Who needs laws .... when this "feels" so right?)
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To: dangerdoc

Yes, you should feel guilty, because until everyone can have an iPhone, no one should have an iPhone. — words of wisdom from Chairman O.


22 posted on 05/25/2010 1:50:48 PM PDT by newheart (History is an outbreak of madness--Ellul)
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To: Loud Mime

Here I will speak for myself: I am willing to pay an extra $100 for my future I-Pad if it is made in the U.S.A.

_________________________________________________

Why limit yourself to the I-phone? Why not go all they way and advocate EVERYTHING sold in the US be made in the US?

Why, I’m sure you’d be more than OK in spending 2 to 3 thousand dollars a month MORE just for the privelege of buying US products, right?


23 posted on 05/25/2010 1:51:39 PM PDT by Responsibility2nd (PALIN/MCCAIN IN 2012 - barf alert? sarc tag? -- can't decide)
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To: dangerdoc

Will these low cost labor markets evolve, though? Back in the day, Japan was the trademark of cheap. Now, working conditions are comparable or better than here. Will communism thwart what seems to always happen; i.e. living standards and wages improve over time. I think some manufacturers are already leaving China looking for the next stop in the cheap labor search. Eventually most of the world will probably come to parity.


24 posted on 05/25/2010 1:51:58 PM PDT by throwback ( The object of opening the mind, as of opening the mouth, is to shut it again on something solid)
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To: zeebee
Would you be willing to pay an extra 1000? That's what it would probably take.

Depends, at a Union manufacturing place ... maybe. But at a non-union shop ... the price difference between US made and non-US made is trivial. You go overseas to squeeze cents, NOT $$$ out of manufacturing. The per unit cost difference is measured in pennies - but millions of pennies add up. The big difference is not the labor costs ... it's TAXES!!

25 posted on 05/25/2010 1:53:21 PM PDT by Hodar (Who needs laws .... when this "feels" so right?)
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To: RightOnTheLeftCoast

I have the 3G, but only paid $99 for it.
Its a great phone.


26 posted on 05/25/2010 1:56:50 PM PDT by svcw (Habakkuk 2:3)
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To: Responsibility2nd
Why limit yourself to the I-phone? Why not go all they way and advocate EVERYTHING sold in the US be made in the US?

uh....it was the I-Pad.

I defined my action and advocated USA made choices, without getting silly.

27 posted on 05/25/2010 2:00:41 PM PDT by Loud Mime (Racial Profiling: Anti-Caucasian Racism hidden under a politically correct term)
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To: Swordmaker

Ummm..., Swordmaker, are you feeling guilty right now, for some unknown reason? This may be the reason why... LOL ...


28 posted on 05/25/2010 2:01:01 PM PDT by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: Loud Mime
You were saying ...

Here I will speak for myself: I am willing to pay an extra $100 for my future I-Pad if it is made in the U.S.A.

You gotta be kidding ... LOL ...

Try "double the price" -- and then -- no one buys it and everyone says, "We told you it would be a flop!" ... :-)

29 posted on 05/25/2010 2:02:49 PM PDT by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: devane617
You were saying ...

I LUV my iPhone...Hell no, I don’t feel guilty...

Abso-damn-lutely right! LOL ...

30 posted on 05/25/2010 2:03:55 PM PDT by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: Carley; dangerdoc
You were saying ...

Just reading that WalMart is selling out their current stock of iPhones for $97

New model coming hard on the heels of that sale... whoop-dee-doo ... :-)

31 posted on 05/25/2010 2:05:29 PM PDT by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: Star Traveler

No, I’m not kidding. That flipping pad does not cost THAT much.


32 posted on 05/25/2010 2:05:55 PM PDT by Loud Mime (Racial Profiling: Anti-Caucasian Racism hidden under a politically correct term)
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To: Aria; Loud Mime
You were saying ...

I agree with that....we need US manufactured alternatives - made by non-union workers.

Ummmm...., Americans won't work for $10 a day... good luck with that one ... LOL ...

33 posted on 05/25/2010 2:07:12 PM PDT by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: throwback
You were saying ...

Eventually most of the world will probably come to parity.

Yeah... we'll soon be down to $20 a day for labor here in the U.S. and they'll move up from $10 a day to $20 a day -- everyone's happy at that point in time ... LOL ...

34 posted on 05/25/2010 2:10:27 PM PDT by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: Loud Mime

No, not as long as it’s “made over there” it doesn’t ... :-)


35 posted on 05/25/2010 2:11:14 PM PDT by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: Star Traveler
Americans won't work for $10 a day... good luck with that one ...

Not true. Here in SoCal are loads of people who would love such a job. But, it all depends on the market, doesn't it?

Give Obama time. I'm sure his plan will "work"

36 posted on 05/25/2010 2:11:19 PM PDT by Loud Mime (Racial Profiling: Anti-Caucasian Racism hidden under a politically correct term)
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To: Aria; Loud Mime
What do you have against the Chinese?

Is it better for them to earn $10 a day, or nothing at all?

37 posted on 05/25/2010 2:12:18 PM PDT by TChris ("Hello", the politician lied.)
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To: Loud Mime
You were saying ...

Not true. Here in SoCal are loads of people who would love such a job. But, it all depends on the market, doesn't it?

Ummmm... if that's right, and if Americans in California will work for $10 a day -- then they are not putting gas in their cars to get to work ... LOL ...

What are they doing, riding a bicycle to work, or what?

38 posted on 05/25/2010 2:13:40 PM PDT by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: dangerdoc
Guilty? No.

How an employer or supplier treats his employees is not my doing, so it's not my responsibility.

39 posted on 05/25/2010 2:13:53 PM PDT by TChris ("Hello", the politician lied.)
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To: Star Traveler

Sheesh I sure hope I don’t get traded in for a newer model.


40 posted on 05/25/2010 2:13:54 PM PDT by Carley (WE CAN SEE NOVEMBER FROM OUR HOUSE)
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