…there before me was a black horse! Its rider was holding a pair of scales in his hand. Then I heard what sounded like a voice among the four living creatures, saying, “A quart of wheat for a day’s wages, and three quarts of barley for a day’s wages, and do not damage the oil and the wine!”
January 26, 2012
Apple reported their 2011 fourth quarter profits at a record $13.06 billion! That would be fine if it wasn’t for the fact that Chinese workers are being pushed so hard to make Apple products that they’re literally going over the edge to their deaths!
I love my Apple computer (it’s lasted longer than any other computer I’ve had, and with far less glitches), but, one of the factors in me buying an Apple was that I thought they were made in the U.S. Apparently after (evil) Bill Gates became a major investor in Apple, production was shipped overseas.
Around the time Apple was reporting their record profits, Chinese media was reporting on a factory that made Apple products. Turns out the workers there threatened suicide because of slave labor conditions.
It’s so bad that a Catholic Online article says Chinese factories are spending money to put up nets around their buildings, to keep workers from jumping to their deaths.
You see, working in Chinese factories is not like working in a U.S. factory (not yet anyway): “Chinese factories are self-contained cities with workers living side-by-side in dorms. Workers spend an average of 10-12 hours per day working, six days a week.” Also: “…life in a Chinese factory is unpleasant, boring, repetitive, and workers have little to no privacy, and few rights-if any. The food is nothing to write home about either. Employers can set workers to task at any hour, force them into overtime, and arbitrarily fire them if desired. It’s as near to slavery as one can get without the chains.” -Catholic Online
When I realize how much I paid for my Mac (more than double what I was paying for cheapo IBM types) it sickens me to know that it could have been made by wage slaves! I thought one of the reasons for the higher price was that I was supporting U.S. jobs!
This month Apple’s contracted factory in China, run by a company called Foxconn, reported that workers threatened to commit mass suicide. To give you an example of the crowded working conditions, Foxconn admits they have at least 32,000 workers living on their factory ‘campus’! That’s not a factory, it’s a self contained slave city!!!
But guess what? The state government of Idaho has been toying with Chinese contractors to build such a slave city right here in Idaho, U.S.A. They call it an “industrial complex”.
In 2010, the Idaho Statesman reported that state officials were working on a project that would allow the China National Machinery Industry Corporation (aka SINOMACH) to build huge a slave labor camp south of Boise. It could cover up to 30,000 acres, and is “…based on a concept popular in China today…”.
That camp would include retail shops and homes for workers, and some reports say the ’employees’ will come from China.
SINOMACH also got involved with a fertilizer project near American Falls, but since then all has gone quite on that project.
Lobbyists working for the Chinese say Idaho Republican leaders are great to work with: “One thing these Chinese see is we have a governor here who has a great big open door policy, and I think that’s making a difference in this SINOMACH project.”-Pat Sullivan, lobbyist
The Idaho Republican’s open door policy for China is part of their Project 60 Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) plan.
Idaho Republican leaders love China: “Idaho’s the last state that should say we don’t want to do business with Asia. Asia’s where the money is.”-Brad Little, Idaho Lieutenant Governor
I’ve also reported on how most of Idaho’s Republican politicians are in the pockets of for profit prison labor operations.
SINOMACH is also dealing with officials in Ohio, Michigan (is there a connection to the union busting going on in that state?) and Pennsylvania.
Also this month, SINOMACH announced they will increase their efforts to set up operations in other countries: “We encourage our subsidiaries, including scientific institutions and design, construction and industrial equipment manufacturing companies, to go overseas and explore and develop new services and markets.”: Ren Hongbin, chairman of SINOMACH
SINOMACH (short for Sino Machinery) reported a revenue increase of 17% in 2011, for a total of $30 billion. I wounder how much was from cutting costs with slave labor?