> How can that be surprising? Fair trade means the farmers and suppliers
> have
> been given a decent price for their goods (their work), regardless of
> whether this is coffee, salt, sugar, rice or... cola. Large international
> companies typically have no or little ethics (economic incentives) to
> treat
> the environment, farmers, animals etc. properly. It's sort of the
> backside
> of the mass-marked capitalistic medal, which usually goes hand in hand
> with
> closing the eyes for a vast array of things, which we in the west seems
> to
> be particular good at doing.
Well, I think that in the west we're particular good at doing. For
instance, about worker exploitation in China's factories, I've never seen
a story that didn't start from west attention, or because a west
manufacturer was involved (e.g. Apple).
--
Fabrizio Giudici - Java Architect, Project Manager
Tidalwave s.a.s. - "We make Java work. Everywhere."
fabrizio...@tidalwave.it
http://tidalwave.it - http://fabriziogiudici.it
"blaming western companies for this is an extraordinary claim that
requires extraordinary evidence"
Apple has yearly reports about violations in its factories in China.
EVERY YEAR there are major violations. Do you not think if Apple
wanted zero violations it would get it?
I would strongly urge you to listen to the podcast episode of This
American Life (460) where they interview a journalist about the
'iEconomy'.
Rakesh
I would point you to the recent podcast by This American Life where
they had to apologise about the
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Reiner,"blaming western companies for this is an extraordinary claim that
requires extraordinary evidence"Apple has yearly reports about violations in its factories in China.
EVERY YEAR there are major violations. Do you not think if Apple
wanted zero violations it would get it?
I would strongly urge you to listen to the podcast episode of This
American Life (460) where they interview a journalist about the
'iEconomy'.
you didn't get what I was saying. I AM referring to the latest episode
where Mike Daisy's claims were challenged.
Towards the end of that episode, there is an interview with a
journalist who wrote an article about the 'iEconomy'. Apple knows
about violations.
Try again,
Rakesh
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> After Steve Jobs passed away, I predicted we would start seeing a new,
> more
> gentle and more humane Apple. I think this is yet another indication of
> this.
>
> Here is another quick prediction: in the next twelve months, Apple will
> start donating to charities again (Jobs killed all charity donations when
> he rejoined Apple in 1997).
>
I don't know about Apple's future, but what I don't get is "gentle" vs
"non gentle" corporates. Corporates are made to make money and their
primary moral obligations are towards their stakeholders. Period (that's
why I've always considered Google's "Don't be evil" an intolerable pulling
of my and others' legs). This means that they know about problems with
their providers, such as for Apple with their chinese providers, and tend
to ignore that. So, in this respect Rakesh is right. But it's irrelevant.
What makes the difference is the context where corporates operate: the
laws they're subjected to, the public opinion, free speech, etc... The
typical qualities of liberal democracies (we're lazily referring them as
"western countries", but fortunately they are more spread than the
geographic term "west" means). In countries where there's no or limited
free speech, thus a misinformed public opinion, corporates will do
whatever they want. That's why I'm always puzzled when I hear blaming of
"western / liberal democratic" countries as whether the problem was due to
them: as a matter of a fact, they are the only countries where the problem
is faced with.
That's why I'm always puzzled when I hear blaming of
"western / liberal democratic" countries as whether the problem was due to
them: as a matter of a fact, they are the only countries where the problem
is faced with.