NORTON META TAG

12 August 2012

iPhones and the Poison Apple 11AUG12

I was never a steve jobs fan. I am sorry he suffered and died from a terrible disease, and I know he died too soon. But I think the business empire he created and ran is not good, and is a reflection of the callousness, greed, materialism and lust for power that are major problems in our country and around the world today. apple and the i products are not good for the world, but they could be with a change starting right at the top. apple needs to be a responsible employer and be fully committed to ending child labor and slave labor conditions at their suppliers factories. apple needs to accept responsibility for guaranteeing their suppliers pay a fair and living wage and that workers are not abused and that they have a safe working environment. So I am asking that you join the campaign by SumOfUs and Demand Progress calling on apple to step up and address the issues of worker abuse, slave labor, child labor, inadequate wages and worker's human rights in all the Third Would countries they outsource their production to. Click the link to participate and please pass this on...(And by the by, I don't own anything made by apple because of their current corporate irresponsibility)

Please read on: We're partnering with our friends at SumOfUs.org in an effort to hold Apple -- the world's most profitable corporation -- accountable for extraordinary abuses.  If you've already signed this petition, please forward this email to your friends or click here to share on Facebook
Every day, tens of millions of people will swipe the screens of their iPhones to unlock them.

On the other side of the world, a young girl is also swiping those screens.

Six days a week, twelve-plus hours a day, she repetitively swipes tens of thousands of them. She spends those hours inhaling chemicals that are never disclosed to her. For her labor, she makes less than $17 a day[13], is forced to work unpaid overtime, and, when her supervisors want to punish her, she is humiliated and forced to clean toilets.

Sound like a horror story? According to recent reports, scenarios like this are a waking nightmare for many workers in Apple’s Chinese supply chain.[1]

Tell Apple: You’re the most profitable company in the world.[2] It’s time to treat your workers ethically.

Right now we’re partnering with corporate accountability group SumOfUs.org because we have a huge opportunity as citizen-consumers: 

Apple is under enormous, sustained pressure to reform its supply chain in the run-up to its new iPhone. 

It even hired the Fair Labor Association (FLA), to inspect its factories, and publicly vowed to reform.[3] But an independent investigation by Students & Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior found that, for many workers things are actually getting worse.[1]

That’s right, after vowing to fix its problems, Apple is turning a blind eye as many workers now report lower wages and forced overtime, along with continued, humiliating punishments by management.

In extreme cases, people have literally been dying while making Apple products. 

Reporters have documented cases of deadly, preventable, explosions at iPad factories, and repeated instances of employees dying of exhaustion after long shifts.[4,5,6]

Tell Apple that it’s time to start treating workers like human beings, with safe, legal hours and a living wage.

Can Apple truly reform? Absolutely. Apple is the richest company in the world, posting a record-breaking gross profit margin for the last quarter of 45.7%[7]. 

It’s sitting on $110 billion in cash.[8] And while Apple makes hundreds of dollars of profit on each iPhone or iPad it sells, only $8 and $10 (respectively) goes to the workers that make it.[9,10,11] Simply put, Apple could double or even triple the amount it pays to laborers without a serious impact on its bottom line. 

But instead Apple has been paying out its shareholders, and set aside a record-shattering $378 million for its CEO Tim Cook last year. 

That’s over $1,000,000 a day, or nearly 60,000 times the salary of the people who make the products that make Tim Cook rich. [12,13]

Why are we targeting Apple specifically? This is a bigger problem than Apple, but no company is in a better position to improve things than Apple: Its record profits and eye-popping cash-on-hand have come off the backs of workers pushed to the brink -- and sometimes beyond -- by its tight deadlines and impossible demands.

In addition, Apple, as the largest customer of Foxconn, is in a unique position to improve the lives of literally hundreds of thousands of human beings. And if Apple actually did mandate changes at Foxconn, it would ripple across the sector to raise wages and improve working conditions for everyone making our electronics in China.

According to an anonymous Apple executive quoted in a major exposé in the New York Times, all Apple has to do is demand change, and it’ll happen:

“Suppliers would change everything tomorrow if Apple told them they didn’t have another choice.”[4] As a company that prides itself on being an industry leader in the tech world, Apple needs to take the lead in ethical treatment of its workers.

Tell Apple to improve conditions in the factories that make its products in time for the next iPhone to be made ethically.
Thanks.
-Demand Progress
org/go/631?t=6&akid=1450.

1801662.2I42s1ers

[2]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/633?t=9&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1

[3]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/634?t=11&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1

[4]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/635?t=13&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1

[5]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/636?t=15&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1

[6]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/637?t=17&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1

[7]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/638?t=19&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1

[8]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/639?t=21&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1

[9]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/640?t=23&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1

[10]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/641?t=25&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1

[11]http://www.isuppli.com/

PublishingImages/Press%
20Releases/2011-03-12_iPad2_BOM.png

[12]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/632?t=27&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1

[13]http://act.demandprogress.

org/go/642?t=29&akid=1450.
1801662.2I42s1
Paid for by Demand Progress (DemandProgress.org) and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee. Contributions are not deductible as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes.

No comments:

Post a Comment