Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
 

grahamhgreen

(15,741 posts)
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 11:13 AM Feb 2012

Foxconn Increases Wages, Raises Pay By 16-25% For Chinese Workers - TechCrunch

"The company just released a statement indicating pay raises for Chinese workers just before the Fair Trade Association is set to interview employees about life at Foxconn.

The base pay of junior level worker in Shenzhen is now at 1,800 yuan ($290) per month and, if the worker passes a technical examination, it will be raised to 2,200 yuan. Three years ago the base pay was just 900 yuan per month."

http://techcrunch.com/2012/02/17/foxconn-increases-wages-raises-pay-by-16-25-for-chinese-workers/

43 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Foxconn Increases Wages, Raises Pay By 16-25% For Chinese Workers - TechCrunch (Original Post) grahamhgreen Feb 2012 OP
Guess they are learning where the Greeks haven't..... Historic NY Feb 2012 #1
No, I don't think they are learning that at all. denverbill Feb 2012 #4
They are learning to toss a few crumbs off the table to offset all the bad PR Blue_Tires Feb 2012 #8
Apple is the only tech company that has joined the Fair Trade Association. onehandle Feb 2012 #2
+1 think Feb 2012 #3
+2 n/t Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #7
Yep. Wait Wut Feb 2012 #9
+3 we can do it Feb 2012 #11
It's a great start. harun Feb 2012 #13
The pressure on Apple made this happen. Anyone saying otherwise is not thinking. joshcryer Feb 2012 #23
Then why hasn't pressure been placed on the other tech companies? Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #27
Because Apple is the most profitable. It wouldn't even make a blip in the media... joshcryer Feb 2012 #30
Are you trying to tell me that Microsoft, Amazon, Hewlett Packard etc etc. wouldn't make a blip? Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #31
Miscrosoft was called out hard over the 360 suicide threats. joshcryer Feb 2012 #32
Is FOXCONN's suicide rate lower than China's average? Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #33
I'm not making any statement about the suicides. joshcryer Feb 2012 #34
Do you have a link of Microsoft getting hammered because virtually everything I've seen has been Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #35
They get credit when they stop the labor practices completely. joshcryer Feb 2012 #38
Who did Microsoft payoff? Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #39
I personally don't think that's what happened. joshcryer Feb 2012 #40
well there`s always vietnam and burma for cheaper labor... madrchsod Feb 2012 #5
Kicked and recommended. Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #6
$290/mo xxqqqzme Feb 2012 #10
Whatever it works out to be, it's a step up for them. To take a spin on Einstein, it's all relative. Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #12
According to this site, it costs 1,500 Yuan for a decent apartment in Shenzen, so it's grahamhgreen Feb 2012 #15
According to the OP, I assumed their housing and meals were covered. Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #17
The alternative would be the way it used to work in America, grahamhgreen Feb 2012 #18
Alexander Hamilton, Lincoln and every President up until a quarter century after WWII Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #19
Easy answer: Retail prices would go up significantly. Amonester Feb 2012 #22
+1 joshcryer Feb 2012 #24
The keywords were much needed goods, not "shiny object gimmicks," Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #26
In all, the USA would raise it's standard of living and quality of life. grahamhgreen Feb 2012 #28
In the 40s to the 70s we dominated the world because either Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #29
Good points, but I must respectfully disagree grahamhgreen Feb 2012 #41
I wish the prognosis was different as well but I only see two likely outcomes and Uncle Joe Feb 2012 #42
I'm happy for the Chinese Workers lovuian Feb 2012 #14
"By giving workers good wages the economy will be good and prosper " hedgehog Feb 2012 #20
That's fine and all, but the hours are still oppressive... Deep13 Feb 2012 #16
Now they are up to sweatshop levels JCMach1 Feb 2012 #21
But I was told the most profitable company isn't the only company that works with Foxconn... joshcryer Feb 2012 #25
No, you were told that we should criticize all of the offenders, woo me with science Feb 2012 #36
Yes, basic deflection. joshcryer Feb 2012 #37
How about moving production of the iPad and iPhone to the US instead? Neue Regel Feb 2012 #43

Historic NY

(37,453 posts)
1. Guess they are learning where the Greeks haven't.....
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 11:35 AM
Feb 2012

happy workers with money spend things that make the economy grow...wait what about US (us).

denverbill

(11,489 posts)
4. No, I don't think they are learning that at all.
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 11:49 AM
Feb 2012

They are learning that if you don't stop treating your workers like absolute shit you'll be fired.

I'm sure the raises will last about as long as the inspection team is there.

onehandle

(51,122 posts)
2. Apple is the only tech company that has joined the Fair Trade Association.
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 11:42 AM
Feb 2012

Foxconn is trying to get out ahead of the inspections.

Where's Google? HP? Dell? Amazon? Samsung? Asus? Microsoft? Any of the dozens of other companies that use the same workers as Apple?

joshcryer

(62,277 posts)
23. The pressure on Apple made this happen. Anyone saying otherwise is not thinking.
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 07:20 AM
Feb 2012

If it wasn't for Apple, the most profitable Foxconn contractor, being pressured, no progress would be made.

Since the pay raise is across the board, thanks to the pressure on Apple, and the criticism of Apple, the workers who make Asus boards will have 'better' conditions.

Instead of Apple getting credit, the people who put pressure on Apple should get the credit.

Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
27. Then why hasn't pressure been placed on the other tech companies?
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 02:16 PM
Feb 2012

Are they to be given a free pass?

Apple didn't have to listen to said pressure, apparently they've been quite successful regardless.

To deny giving Apple some measure of credit for listening to the people "is not thinking."

joshcryer

(62,277 posts)
30. Because Apple is the most profitable. It wouldn't even make a blip in the media...
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 06:15 PM
Feb 2012

...if someone went after some obscure company like ASrock. People don't even know who ASrock is, it's mainly a motherboard manufacturer.

Compare ASrock's revenue to Apple:

ASrock: http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/3515:TT

Market Cap: 12 billion
Value: 9 billion

Apple: http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/AAPL:US

Market Cap: 468 billion
Value: 370 billion

What? We're going to stand outside of the office of ASrock protesting and completely ignoring Apple's overwhelming hegemony on Foxconn produced stuff?

Really?

Apple deserves no credit, none. They are a multinational corporation that exploits slave labor and uses mass friendly consumerism coercion to get people to defend them and use false equivalence over and over again.

Right? I mean, you can’t, right, you can’t, you’re not allowed. “Why would you ever need to boot an Apple box from a USB key?” “You don’t need any software except the software he gave you.”, right? Nobody has yet fully documented what everybody who isn’t part of the cult understands, which is that nobody has ever had more contempt for customers than Mr. Jobs. Nobody.

Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
31. Are you trying to tell me that Microsoft, Amazon, Hewlett Packard etc etc. wouldn't make a blip?
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 06:21 PM
Feb 2012

"Less than a month ago, the Times ran a damning account of working conditions at the Foxconn factory. Although the company's suicides and potentially hazardous work environments have been covered for years, this was the powder keg that launched a very public backlash against Apple and sparked an independent investigation. As you may expect, Apple was probably none-too-pleased about the way the paper specifically called it out in the headline -- despite the fact that Foxconn manufactures products for Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), and many other companies."

Read more: http://www.minyanville.com/dailyfeed/2012/02/17/apple-exposes-bitter-grudge-with/#ixzz1mm5PwalU

joshcryer

(62,277 posts)
32. Miscrosoft was called out hard over the 360 suicide threats.
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 06:38 PM
Feb 2012

Amazon only has a penetration of a few million people, as far as Kindle is concerned (they sell their Kindle Fire at cost because they make more money from digital book sales), HP is a niche, Wal-Mart-style computer, which isn't present to any significant degree in the consumer psyche.

1) Apple is most profitable
2) Apple is most recognizable
3) Apple is most trendy
4) Apple is most profitable
5) Apple is most profitable

The criticism on Apple worked, didn't it? The pay raise was across the board. Apple was the only of those companies to make any effort to change the situation (again, because of the pressure). Because of that now Foxconn is acting.

Though I don't expect much to change, it's still more effective that the most profitable, most exploitive company be tasked to change it, as opposed to smaller, niche players who do not have the same penetration into mass consumer thought.

Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
33. Is FOXCONN's suicide rate lower than China's average?
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 06:50 PM
Feb 2012
http://www.forbes.com/sites/davidthier/2012/02/10/why-does-apples-manufacturing-bother-us-so-much/

"As Tim Worstall has pointed out, there’s nothing particularly noteworthy about Foxconn’s manufacturing in China, or Apple’s relationship with it. Oppressive conditions are par-for-the course over there, and Foxconn actually has a slightly lower suicide rate than China writ-large. and any electronics company worth their salt does their manufacturing in similar conditions: it’s the game they all play, and it’s the game we demand when we ask for cheap electronics.

And yet, there were no Microsoft protests yesterday, no Samsung protests or Nokia protests. Apple continues to receive the brunt of public fury over Chinese manufacturing conditions. Why?"

joshcryer

(62,277 posts)
34. I'm not making any statement about the suicides.
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 06:53 PM
Feb 2012

I'm saying Microsoft got a lot of criticism over the call for suicides.

Are you one of those people who defended Microsoft, too?

Did you go out and show the famous "list" only exchanging Microsoft's name on that list with Apple?

Please.

Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
35. Do you have a link of Microsoft getting hammered because virtually everything I've seen has been
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 07:11 PM
Feb 2012

almost exclusively focussed on or tying Apple to this.

You have said Apple shouldn't be given any credit for listening to the people or positively reacting to the pressure

My point is if you can't give them credit when they do right or correct themselves whether pressured or not, you make no distinction between progressive companies trying to do better and those corporations that simply don't give a rat's ass.

joshcryer

(62,277 posts)
38. They get credit when they stop the labor practices completely.
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 07:50 PM
Feb 2012

They can get credit for "listening to the pressure" but that's a subset of "pressuring Apple."

Meanwhile, Microsoft nipped it in the bud quickly, and they didn't have a Mike Daisey focusing solely on them:

http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/247984/microsoft_investigates_worker_protest_at_foxconn_factory_in_china.html

http://www.theatlanticwire.com/technology/2012/01/foxconn-still-hard-place-work/47193/

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2012/01/11/microsoft-investigating-mass-suicide-at-foxconn-plant_n_1198860.html

Finally:

http://www.cultofmac.com/139999/microsoft-and-foxconn-end-dispute-at-xbox-plant/

http://thenextweb.com/microsoft/2012/01/12/microsoft-claims-that-the-foxconn-labor-dispute-has-been-settled/

Microsoft nipped it in the bud by paying 'em off. Of course, we don't praise Microsoft for that, we don't credit Microsoft for that, because the labor practices still exist.

As a gamer, I followed the Microsoft thing closely and I was shocked with how quick it disappeared from the news. In the gaming community it was a one-two day thing and then poof, gone. But while it was on the news there were die hard "Xbox fanboys" who used these exact same, tired, bullshit justifications for these labor practices. I denounced it with Microsoft, and I denounced it with Apple. In fact, some "Apple fans" posted on DU about the Xbox problems, it would be interesting to go back and look at those discussions.

Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
39. Who did Microsoft payoff?
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 10:17 PM
Feb 2012

From what I could tell the resigned workers were never compensated.

"Instead of the raise they requested, these workers were given the following ultimatum: quit with compensation, or keep their jobs with no pay increase. Most quit and never got the money. That's when the mass suicide threat came in. The incident actually caused a factory wide shutdown, reports Record China."

http://www.theatlanticwire.com/technology/2012/01/foxconn-still-hard-place-work/47193/



joshcryer

(62,277 posts)
40. I personally don't think that's what happened.
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 10:42 PM
Feb 2012

I think Microsoft paid them off because we didn't hear a peep from that group since then.

Either that or something more sinister happened to them.

Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
12. Whatever it works out to be, it's a step up for them. To take a spin on Einstein, it's all relative.
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 02:12 PM
Feb 2012
“As a top manufacturing company in China, the basic salary of junior workers in all of Foxconn’s China factories is already far higher than the minimum wage set by all local governments,” the statement said. “We will provide more training opportunities and learning time, and will continuously enhance technology, efficiency and salary, so as to set a good example for the Chinese manufacturing industry.”

"Foxconn is often viewed as a good entry-level job in China. The work is hard, no doubt, but the pay is fair for the region and job seekers often line up by the thousands for a chance to work at Foxconn. Not only is the pay a good deal higher than the required minimum but the company also provides dorms, meals, and recreational facilities for its workers. Foxconn is viewed as a way to move from the fields to the city."



 

grahamhgreen

(15,741 posts)
15. According to this site, it costs 1,500 Yuan for a decent apartment in Shenzen, so it's
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 02:37 PM
Feb 2012

still not a lot of money.... Not enough to buy a house.



Living/work
rent house, 50m2 - 2.000Y/month
rent house, 100+m2, good location - 8.000Y/month
buy house (normally 70-150m2) - 7-25K RMB/m2

utility (electricity, water, management) - 200/month
internet 2MB ADSL - 1440Y/year

native english teacher, fulltime - 10.000+Y/month *see note below
taxi 5 km (start 12.5) - 20
bus/subway - 2-5/trip

http://www.startinchina.com/shenzhen/life/cost_of_living_in_shenzhen.html


But the real problem is that American workers are supposed to compete with these wages. That is impossible.

We must end these costly trade agreements IMHO.

Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
17. According to the OP, I assumed their housing and meals were covered.
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 02:53 PM
Feb 2012

"Foxconn is often viewed as a good entry-level job in China. The work is hard, no doubt, but the pay is fair for the region and job seekers often line up by the thousands for a chance to work at Foxconn. Not only is the pay a good deal higher than the required minimum but the company also provides dorms, meals, and recreational facilities for its workers. Foxconn is viewed as a way to move from the fields to the city."

I agree, American Workers can't compete with those low wages.

As to the trade agreements, what would be the alternative reality should they be scrapped?

 

grahamhgreen

(15,741 posts)
18. The alternative would be the way it used to work in America,
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 03:14 PM
Feb 2012

Goods produced overseas were taxed to the point where American businesses can compete.

Those taxes are used to run the federal government, and to subsidize American businesses.

Thom Hartmann has a great article about this here: http://www.commondreams.org/view/2008/12/17


Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
19. Alexander Hamilton, Lincoln and every President up until a quarter century after WWII
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 04:15 PM
Feb 2012

had a major advantage affecting their considerations, the West dominated the Industrial Age as that's where it was born beginning durig the middle to late 18th century in Europe followed by the U.S.

Those taxes used to run the federal government and subsidize businesses were easier to maintain when so much of the world was undeveloped and having few places to turn for needed commodities; whether it be manufactured or agriculture.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Industrial_Age

That dyanmic started to change as more nations came on board the Industrial Revolution Train in Asia, South America and Africa during the middle to late 20th century. The U.S. still domiinated for decades after WWII because so much of the developed world had been blown to the Stone Age.

Chomsky has a good analysis on this thread as to how the U.S. controlled 50% of the world's wealth at the end of WWII, today we still have a dominant positiion but it's only 25%

http://www.democraticunderground.com/101614303

If we raised taxes on imports from newly developed Industrial Nations, would they do the same to us?

Whether the answer is yes or no what would the affect be?

What would happen to imports and exports along with prices of much needed goods here at home?








Amonester

(11,541 posts)
22. Easy answer: Retail prices would go up significantly.
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 03:55 AM
Feb 2012

That would result in less sales, less polution, less worthless shiny-object gimmicks, less profits for the top 1%.

Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
26. The keywords were much needed goods, not "shiny object gimmicks,"
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 01:36 PM
Feb 2012

If retail prices went up here, and exports dropped wouldn't that create downward pressure on employment here at home as prices increased for those goods, raising unemployment?

If other nations of the world maintained their trade agreements while the U.S. withdrew, would the dollar stop being the primary currency of the world?

If the dollar stopped being the primary currency and was dramatically devalued, would prices here at home increase even more?

As our exports and imports dropped because of increased tariffs between us and other nations, and our systems become more closed would entropy set in quicker?

If entrophy; ie poverty, chaos sets in quicker would pollution increase as fewer people and businesses could afford to switch over to more energy efficient, sustainable means, ie; older cars on the road for longer periods of time, fewer homes able to insulate or convert etc etc.?

If prices dramatically increased as unemployment soared, would the 1% have even more power over the people?







 

grahamhgreen

(15,741 posts)
28. In all, the USA would raise it's standard of living and quality of life.
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 04:56 PM
Feb 2012

If retail prices went up here, and exports dropped wouldn't that create downward pressure on employment here at home as prices increased for those goods, raising unemployment?

- I believe that retail prices may not rise at all as the cost of "cheap" Chinese goods have ALREADY bloated back to where they were before we outsourced. Profits, however, may decrease to more reasonable margins.

If other nations of the world maintained their trade agreements while the U.S. withdrew, would the dollar stop being the primary currency of the world?

- I do not expect that they would maintain them.

If the dollar stopped being the primary currency and was dramatically devalued, would prices here at home increase even more?

- I actually think the dollar would strengthen, and I think that prices would stabilize here, the economy would resemble what we had in the 40's - 70's.

As our exports and imports dropped because of increased tariffs between us and other nations, and our systems become more closed would entropy set in quicker?

- No, I think this would re-ignite the kind of dynamism that America is known for. More money would be available for the kids of highly paid workers to tinker together projects in their garages that become multi billion dollar entities.

If entrophy; ie poverty, chaos sets in quicker would pollution increase as fewer people and businesses could afford to switch over to more energy efficient, sustainable means, ie; older cars on the road for longer periods of time, fewer homes able to insulate or convert etc etc.?

-No, I believe that alternative energy production would be one of the drivers of the post-costly-trade agreement world.

If prices dramatically increased as unemployment soared, would the 1% have even more power over the people?

-Unemployment would plummet as the factories come home, of that you can be certain.

Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
29. In the 40s to the 70s we dominated the world because either
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 05:24 PM
Feb 2012

the other nations were blown to hell from WWII having no industrial base, hadn't significantly entered the Industrial Age to begin with or were behind the Iron Curtain, that's why the dolllar was so strong.

If we raised tariffs on other nations, what motivation would China, India or the EU have for raising tariffs on each other?

It's seems to me those nations would be both more motivated and enabled to fill the demand vacuum created by the U.S. absence.

If they were trading among themselves while we were cut out, the dollar would lose much of its' international signifigance or reason for being the preeminent currency.

Their economies or systems not being as closed as the U.S. would thus be more dynamic while we accelerated entrophy here at home falling further behind, along the lines of the old Soviet Union and their closed system.

Why would the factories come home if they have a more lenient playing field abroad?

I suspect more of their headquarters would migrate to other nations.

 

grahamhgreen

(15,741 posts)
41. Good points, but I must respectfully disagree
Sun Feb 19, 2012, 12:39 PM
Feb 2012


The sad fact is that we must return jobs here or the country as a whole will continue to suffer. Americans can not compete with Chinese labor. There is no way that an American worker can live on the 2 or 300 dollars a month that they make in China. Wages are falling. The result of wage deflation could be truly disastrous for those that have assets based in this country. Housing prices are falling in part due to wage deflation already, who knows where it will end.

This reminds me of a software developer I met in Samui who was complaining because all of his jobs were being lost to Argentina where the coders were making half the Indian rate!

You mention headquarters moving. For me, I think if the companies that are outsourcing our jobs moved to other countries, that would be of great benefit to us. Instead of outsourcing our jobs, WE would be outsourcing THEM! If they want access to the demand created by our high paid workers, they would have to pay us for the privilege. Getting rid of these job-outsourcers who are corrupting our government, banks, and everything America stands for, would be the best thing that ever happened to us, IMHO, they are the problem. We can make shoes and everything else right here. We can afford to pay $10 more for a pair of shoes or an iPhone so that our relatives can afford to send their kids to college, especially if we have jobs.

You bring up a good point - "what motivation would China, India or the EU have for raising tariffs on each other?" I believe they already do, I know that they charge a high tariff on any imported textiles, while they pay almost nothing to export to the US.

Why would the factories come home? For the same reason they left - with the tariffs, it would become cheaper to produce the products here.

Anyway, i doubt we will agree on this, but I think we are far along the path you are prescribing, and our country is hurting. Perhaps as we slide further into the abyss you will take some of these ideas to heart.

I don't see where our jobs will come from if we don't produce goods at home, even if we get another Steve Jobs, the jobs will just go overseas. But especially, I don't see any evidence that these costly trade agreements have made things better for the average American, in fact I see the situation worsening daily.

Uncle Joe

(58,445 posts)
42. I wish the prognosis was different as well but I only see two likely outcomes and
Sun Feb 19, 2012, 03:11 PM
Feb 2012

they're both painful.

1. We adapt to the changing Industrialized world by investing, that does mean the creation of jobs in other nations by our corporations,

We've been the primary consumer but I believe that's changing and FOXCONN's recent actions are a microism of the changes taking place overseas as their salaries have doubled over the past three years far outstripping pay increases in the U.S. I believe that trend will continue.

Their workers will demand better wages, work hours and conditions as their lot improves and their consuming of product wll increase as well, in short Chinese Labor won't be able to compete with Chinese Labor.

I do believe the Chinese Government has been keeping the yuan aritificially low to the dollar but they can only do that for so long.

Second scenario

2. Nations retrench, every nation for them self and most efficient use of labor ie: developing world is left to its' own device.

World population and pollution increases faster as developing world is left behind while the prospects for major war and environmental calamity increases as well.

As I stated at the beginning they're both painful but the former holds the prospect for global equalization or balance, not to mention longer term survival of the human species.

My conclusion is that humanity is coming to a tipping point, we've played the empire game for about four millennium, and I believe we need to quit pushing that boulder up the hill.

In the long term I see scenario #1 as actually increasing the chances of "workers of the world uniting" as that equalization comes to fruition. But for the time being human society is in its' teenage years now with some parts growing faster than others.

Peace to you, grahamhgreen.

lovuian

(19,362 posts)
14. I'm happy for the Chinese Workers
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 02:24 PM
Feb 2012

this is Great news for them


I'm shocked at how Stupid these governments are

By giving workers good wages the economy will be good and prosper

It really is about the worker

hedgehog

(36,286 posts)
20. "By giving workers good wages the economy will be good and prosper "
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 05:06 PM
Feb 2012

Do you suppose we will ever convince Republicans of that basic truth?

Deep13

(39,154 posts)
16. That's fine and all, but the hours are still oppressive...
Fri Feb 17, 2012, 02:41 PM
Feb 2012

...and it is still a serious crime to unionize. As long as progress is dependent on the good will of the bosses, Chinese workers will never be free.

JCMach1

(27,575 posts)
21. Now they are up to sweatshop levels
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 03:34 AM
Feb 2012

So good for them!

They will now finally make as much as Dubai construction workers.

joshcryer

(62,277 posts)
25. But I was told the most profitable company isn't the only company that works with Foxconn...
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 07:22 AM
Feb 2012

...and we should criticize the other companies, not the most profitable one!

Doh! I am sure glad we didn't listen to that nonsense! Here's hoping for a pay raise of 6 times base pay (as I did the calculations and it would not make our shiny gadgets go up in cost by more than a few dollars at most).

They still work 16+ hours a day.

joshcryer

(62,277 posts)
37. Yes, basic deflection.
Sat Feb 18, 2012, 07:44 PM
Feb 2012

If you can't criticize all of 'em you have no right criticizing the worst.

I've seen similar nonsense over whaling, because the Sea Shepard focuses mostly on Japan, they must then somehow advocate Icelandic whaling, etc, etc.

Your basic false equivalence.

 

Neue Regel

(221 posts)
43. How about moving production of the iPad and iPhone to the US instead?
Sun Feb 19, 2012, 04:02 PM
Feb 2012

And pay the workers $25-$30 an hour?

Latest Discussions»Latest Breaking News»Foxconn Increases Wages, ...