its not hard for us to have time to find an opinion

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its not hard for us to have time to find an opinion

Postby winston smith » Wed May 26, 2010 5:32 pm

referenced from The Independent UK.

The Foxconn factory in the southern Chinese boom town of Shenzhen is so vast that walking around its outer perimeter takes two hours. Its workers turn out components that are supplied to big Western electronics brands including Nokia, Hewlett-Packard and Dell. And it is here that most of the parts for Apple's iPhone, and the much-awaited iPad, which goes on sale in the UK this week, are manufactured.

Yesterday, Li Hai, a 19-year-old employee of the firm, jumped from the top of the building in Shenzhen to his death. It brought the number of suspected suicides at the factory this year to 10. There have been another two attempted suicides.

All of the deaths have been of youngsters between 18 and 25 years old. Li Hai had only been working at the plant for 42 days. The incidents have prompted intense soul-searching in China, about conditions in its factories and the social cost of breakneck economic development.
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Foxconn, one of the world's largest manufacturers of electronic equipment, is huge. The chefs slaughter 6,000 pigs a day to feed the company's nearly 400,000 workers in this giant industrial complex, spread over 1.2 square miles.

But the Taiwanese owners now face a major problem. Li Hai's death, and those of his colleagues, have raised questions about working conditions in Chinese factories, with labour activists alleging that long hours, low pay and high pressure make for an unbearable working environment.

Chinese media have suggested that what is driving the suicides is the feeling among the workers that they are machines. Many start work at 4am, then go through the motions thousands of times over during their often long shifts. "Every shift we finish 4,000 Dell computers, all the while standing up," one Foxconn worker told China Labour Watch for a recent report.

In July, a Foxconn worker committed suicide when the company held an inquiry into the disappearance of an iPhone prototype, for which he had had been considered responsible. The founder of Foxconn's parent company in Taiwan, Hon Hai Precision, Terry Gou denied that his factories were sweatshops and he was confident the situation would be resolved soon.

The company, which employs over 800,000 workers around the world, is now playing soothing music along the production lines. Over 2,000 singers, dancers and gym trainers have been recruited, and the group is also hiring psychiatrists and Buddhist monks to help with stress. New fences are also being installed on every worker's dormitory building, according to local media, which are up to three metres high and are meant to prevent suicidal workers from jumping off the roof.

But local media said the workers, many of whom are migrants and isolated from their home communities, found the fences even more depressing. "Young workers born during 1980s or 1990s are becoming the mainstream of our workforce. In this context, the Foxconn employee 'jumping' incidents should arouse the vigilance of the whole society. Companies, government and society should pay more attention to the spiritual crisis of young lives," said the Xinhua news agency in an editorial.

Zhang Ming, a political science professor at the People's University of China, said workers were reacting to feeling as if they were machines or spare parts. "To many post-Eighties or post-Nineties migrant workers, it is unbearable for them to live in a place without cultural entertainment and communications with their friends. They are psychologically weak. The Foxconn 'jumping' incident is a call for life."

One worker told the Southern Weekend newspaper that he would deliberately drop something on the ground so that he could have a few seconds of rest when picking it up.

Nine mainland Chinese and Hong Kong academics have issued an open statement calling on Foxconn and the government to do more for the workers. "China's development strategy throughout these 30 years not only accomplished an economic miracle, it deepened regional inequalities, prolonged stagnation of wages, and deprived migrant workers' citizenship and human rights," it said.

Hou, a 19-year-old Hunan worker, was found hanging in the toilet of her dormitory room. Ma Xiangqian, 19, from Henan, jumped on January 23, and Foxconn was forced to refute local reports that he had been assigned to cleaning toilets after damaging equipment by accident. A shift typically lasts between 10 and 12 hours and staff complain that overseers enforce military-style discipline.
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Re: its not hard for us to have time to find an opinion

Postby JackRiddler » Wed May 26, 2010 5:57 pm

winston smith wrote:Zhang Ming, a political science professor at the People's University of China, said workers were reacting to feeling as if they were machines or spare parts. "To many post-Eighties or post-Nineties migrant workers, it is unbearable for them to live in a place without cultural entertainment and communications with their friends. They are psychologically weak. The Foxconn 'jumping' incident is a call for life."


Who the fuck is this guy? Last of the Long Marchers?! "In my day we didn't need no tweetering or televising like these young people to work ourselves to death on command!"

Thank you for posting this saddening, maddening story. Anyone able to read this knows we are all simultaneously incriminated and probably helpless to do anything about it.

At the same time, a full strike at such a facility -- workers and their guards included -- is beautiful to imagine. Even in China, what force could move them once united?

Do you realize the sooner-or-later likelihood of it, and the enormous consequences on the world it will have?

The documentary of this name:

Image

-- starts with a long tracking shot in a production hall of one of these Chinese megafactory towns. Goes on for what feels like a mile, past dozens of work lines, each with dozens of workers gluing, screwing, packing. Overwhelming stuff. Then comes the morning roll call. The assembly hall is on the left side of a street that seems to run miles into the distance. The uniformed workers emerge from the rows of dormitories on the right and assemble in little numbered squads, each with its supervisor giving the morning performance talk.

I'm sure parts of this documentary have been posted on the endless video thread.

Manufactured Landscapes

“Documentarian Jennifer Baichwal's latest film, Manufactured Landscapes, represents a multifaceted effort. The picture ostensibly provides a thought-provoking investigation of photographer Edward Burtynsky's legacy, with its aesthetic studies of industrial landscapes. But Baichwal's documentary probes deeper than a mere surface-level glimpse of Burtynsky's life and work. It uses the topic of Burtynsky as a springboard, segueing, from there, into a protracted exploration of "the aesthetic, social and spiritual dimensions of industrialization and globalization." Whereas Burtynsky's photographs reveal human beings dwarfed by the massive industrialized landscape that surrounds them, Baichwal (much as Louis Malle did in his Humain, trop Humain) sheds a light on the tedium and monotony suffered by workers who are assigned small components of huge manufacturing processes, and must endure the repetitive work that it entails. She and cinematographer Peter Mettler also travel to China and Bangladesh - the corner of the world that serves as a destination for much of the west's industrial waste - and convey the devastating impact that corporate disposal makes on indigenes - such as the two young men who must wade around, waist deep, in toxic sludge while tearing ships apart with their bare hands. The picture thus raises some significant and sobering questions about the impact that we, as humans, make on our environment. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide


Um, more relevantly, questions about the impact that we, as the consumers of the rich countries, make on their environments, as the producers and disposers of our junk. (And yes, I'm aware that ultimately all that goes around comes around and it's one environment.)

Apropos, this Web film that somehow explains consumer economy and ecology in 20 minutes can never be promoted enough.

THE STORY OF STUFF
http://www.storyofstuff.com

(By the way, do we have readers besides us what post here? Goeffrey? Joffry? Jeffy?)

And after reading the OP, this thread seems very relevant:

How to Shrink Corporate Tumors With Immunogentility

by bks » Tue May 25, 2010 11:43 am
This approach, redefining corporations as living systems or "Big Bodies" really has promise, IMO. I can remember conversations with him from five years ago in which this same theme was explored, so Kubiak's executive idea here has been germinating for at least that long. It offers an answer to the so-called 'single-issue' problem in activism and reminds us that simply responding to the symptoms and effects of corporate destruction will never get at the core problem. ...SNIP...

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Last edited by JackRiddler on Wed May 26, 2010 6:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: its not hard for us to have time to find an opinion

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed May 26, 2010 6:27 pm

Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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