If you want on or off the Mac Ping List, Freepmail me.
He’s still alive? Seriously?
Also, wages in China are rising quickly, so much so that Foxconn, the actual manufacturer of iPhones, is trying to replace as many workers with robots as it can. Chinese companies are outsourcing manufacturing jobs to lower cost countries, and even US firms are re-sourcing their manufacturing jobs back here.
I remember, after Nader claimed to be poor, it was revealed that he owned cars and homes in his sister’s name. He has always been a phoney with a boner against people who actually worked for the money that that have; something he has never done. Non-profits? Forgive me for what I want to say.
Ralph Nader needs to speak to my boss.
He’ll listen, I’m sure of it.
Apple doesnt have any Chinese factories, hence these are not Apples Chinese factory workers.
—
Technically probably correct.
But Apple sources quite a lot (a lot) of work there.
Bigtime.
Great idea, Ralph. Say, just out of curiosity, how many people have you employed over the decades (centuries?) you've blessed this earth with your business acumen?
Liberals are always so generous with other peoples money.
Me to Tim Cook: Move factories out of China and build in US.
He sent American companies a letter saying pay their workers the same hourly wage they were making in 2007, and cut their hours to 29 per week.
Nader is still unsafe at any speed.
He got some notoriety bashing mid sixties Chevy corvairs, which I always
thought were kinda cool.
A dollar an hour and 11 hour shifts? Well at least now we know what it takes to compete.
Ralph may be onto something - I’d love to be paid 40X my wages and have my hours cut to 1 a week - Two or three jobs would leave me rolling in the dough and with lots of time to enjoy it...
..., triple your prices, and, go out of business. Samsung is all we need.
http://www.wnd.com/2002/02/12665/
Ralph Nader is a hypocrite
Published: 02/06/2002 at 1:00 AM
author-image Paul Sperry About | Email | Archive
Paul Sperry, formerly WND’s Washington bureau chief, is a Hoover Institution media fellow and author of “Infiltration: How Muslim Spies and Subversives have Penetrated Washington.”
WASHINGTON Ralph Nader takes little stock in corporate America convinced, as he is, that big business is the root of all societal ills.
Or at least thats what he says.
His personal investment portfolio, worth millions of dollars, tells a far different story.
But before I tell you about all the corporate stock he owns, let me tell you why Im even bothering to expose such a cartoon-caricature of an unreconstructed market-bashing liberal for the hypocrite he is.
Nader has always been more of an entertaining sideshow to me than anyone to be taken seriously. I actually derive some secret pleasure from the supposedly anti-establishment gadflys shtick of puncturing the self-righteous rhetoric of the stuffed-shirts in both parties, because it injects a refreshing honesty perverse, misguided and, as it turns out, phony, as it may be into the otherwise stale presidential campaigns of poll-tested platitudes. I had hoped hed run again for kicks.
But recently Nader has become the liberal media elites go-to guy for bashing corporate management in the wake of Enrons pension-robbing collapse. And, frighteningly enough, hes starting to make sense to reasonable people particularly scared pre-retirement workers who normally would have turned him off before he could plunge into another of his eye-twitching fulminations against capitalism (and not just Enrons corrupt brand of crony capitalism).
On ABCs This Week, Nader charged that Enron is not a bad apple, but part of a corporate crime wave. On NBCs Meet the Press, he again attempted to demonize all corporations by arguing that Enron is symbolic of the corruption of corporate politics, whatever that means.
His host, Tim Russert, a former aide to liberal Democrat Mario Cuomo, just nodded, giving him an open field, whereby Nader demanded that government crack down on corporate crooks and crime in the [executive] suites.
This was bad enough.
But then I found out that my uncle, whom Ive always admired, even idolized, was one of the 2,882,955 Americans (2.7 percent of the total turnout) who voted for Nader in 2000.
That blew my mind.
After playing professional football for the Patriots (congratulations, by the way, to the franchise and all its players, past and present, and its long-suffering fans, such as myself, on the Pats first national championship), my uncle made a small fortune on Wall Street as a senior executive with Merrill Lynch.
So whats his fascination with Nader? Im not quite sure, but the fact that he studied socialism er, sociology at Dartmouth could explain part of it.
Still, theres no doubt Nader holds some weird attraction for many Americans, who clearly arent all environmental wackos picketing World Trade Organization summits. And that attraction is growing amid the mushrooming Enron scandal. At this rate, Senate Democrats may invite Nader to testify.
My uncle and other Nader fans, however, might be surprised to learn that Ralph the Mouth doesnt put his money where his mouth is. At the same time hes bad-mouthing corporations, he owns stakes in them. Most of his money, in fact, is parked in stocks and commercial paper not Appleseed Foundation or other bleeding-heart groups that defend the downtrodden.
Thats right. After hearing Nader cast one too many corporate aspersions, I marched down to the Federal Election Commission headquarters here and pulled a copy of the financial disclosure report he filed in 2000, knowing full well that Nader was no pauper.
In it, I found the tweedy do-gooders pin-striped underbelly.
On page 15 of Schedule A, Nader was forced to disclose his shares of Cisco Systems, valued at the time at $1,158,750; Fibercore Inc., between $15,000 and $50,000; Iomega Inc., $15,000-$50,000; 3 Com Corp., $50,000-$100,000; and Ziff-Davis Inc., $50,000-$100,000, among other corporate holdings.
Those were just his direct investments.
Nader held an additional $2 million-plus in Fidelity and other mutual funds.
Youd think that someone who so loosely throws around epithets like corporate criminals and corporate crooks would never trust corporate brass with so much of his own money.
But having said that, where did millionaire Nader get so much money to invest in the first place? Answer: by publicly demonizing the supposedly evil, greedy and exploitative corporate system that he uses to further enrich himself.
Turn to page 1 of his income statement.
There, youll find the start of a long list of payola Nader got from various lefty groups, colleges and media to bash corporations in speeches and columns from 1999 through the summer of 2000. Total: $378,726.
Is that all of his income, besides the $100,000-plus he made off his corporate investments in that reporting period? We dont know for sure. Nader refused to release his income-tax returns.
But he did say this in an addendum to his filing: Monies I earn are for strengthening civil society.
Really? Looks like a lot of those monies have helped strengthen, in the form of stock investments, the very corporations that he claims are hurting society.
Truth is, Nader benefits from the same corporate establishment he condemns, while his acolytes suffer on the sidelines and agonize on the fringe, sacrificing personal wealth for social justice and forgoing the American dream for his fake dream.
FMCDH(BITS)
Once more, Ralphie, pretty please. Please run third-party in 2016!
The Turd World needs you. Especially now that the Won is leaving office.
With your wise policies, those exploited Chinese workers will once again be pristine rice farmers out in the hinterlands.
Nader is a known liar who has done more harm to the US economy than anyone outside of government.
“Apple has done more to raise conditions and pay for Chinese factory workers than any other company on earth.”
Written by someone that doesn’t know anything about China. HP ad other companies were there doing that long before Apple.