Excerpts from a recent episode of
This American Life:
Shenzhen is a city without history. The people
who live there will tell you that, because 31 years ago Shenzhen was a
small town. It had little reed huts, little reed walkways between the
huts. The men would fish in the late afternoon. I hear it was lovely.
Today Shenzhen is a city of 14 million people. It is larger than New York City... And the most amazing thing is, almost no one in America knows its name...
Foxconn, a single company, makes a staggering amount of the electronics
you use every day. They make electronics for Apple, Dell, Nokia,
Panasonic, HP, Samsung, Sony, Lenovo, a third of all of it... including
MacBook Pros and iPhones and iPads...
The Foxconn plant in Shenzhen has 430,000 workers. That can be a
difficult number to conceptualize. I find it's useful to instead think
about how there are more than 20 cafeterias at the plant. And then you
just have to understand that workers told me that these cafeterias can
hold up to 10,000 people. So now you just need to visualize a cafeteria
that seats 10,000 people. I'll wait...
And along the edges of each enormous building [described earlier as an "arcology" :.) ] are the nets, because
right at the time that I am making this visit, there's been an epidemic
of suicides at the Foxconn plant. Week after week, worker after worker
has been climbing all the way up to the tops of these enormous buildings
and then throwing themselves off, killing themselves in a brutal and
public manner, not thinking very much about just how bad this makes
Foxconn look. Foxconn's response to month after month of suicides has
been to put up these nets...
And I say to her, you seem kind of young. How old are you? And she says,
I'm 13. And I say, 13? That's young. Is it hard to get work at Foxconn
when you're-- and she says oh no. And her friends all agree, they don't
really check ages... Do you really think Apple doesn't know? In a company obsessed with the
details, with the aluminum being milled just so, with the glass being
fitted perfectly into the case, do you really think it's credible that
they don't know? Or are they just doing what we are all doing? Do they
just see what they want to see?..
They work a Chinese hour, and a Chinese hour has 60 Chinese minutes, and
a Chinese minute has 60 Chinese seconds. It's not like our hour. What's
our hour now, 46 minutes? You know, you have a bathroom break, and you
have a smoke break. If you don't smoke, there's a yoga break. This
doesn't look anything like that. This looks like nothing we've seen in a
century...
And I go to the dormitories. I'm a valuable potential future customer.
They will show me anything I ask to see. The dormitories are cement
cubes, 12-foot by 12-foot. And in that space there are 13 beds, 14 beds.
I count 15 beds. They're stacked up like Jenga puzzle pieces all the
way up to the ceiling. The space between them is so narrow, none of us
would actually fit in them. They have to slide into them like coffins...
N-hexane is an iPhone screen cleaner. It's great because it evaporates a
little bit faster than alcohol does, which means you can run the
production line even faster and try to keep up with the quotas. The
problem is that n-hexane is a potent neurotoxin, and all these people
have been exposed. Their hands shake uncontrollably. Most of them can't
even pick up a glass...
I'll stop here, because it's not fair to borrow too much. There's much more at the text link, and it's
even better in audio, because, as the Ira Glass notes:
This American Life is produced for the ear and designed to be heard, not read. We strongly encourage you to listen to the audio,
which includes emotion and emphasis that's not on the page. Transcripts
are generated using a combination of speech recognition software and
human transcribers, and may contain errors. Please check the
corresponding audio before quoting in print.
Sort of related, and extremely interesting...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/22/business/apple-america-and-a-squeezed-middle-class.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all
Highly recommended reading.
-Chuck
Wait, weren't we just celebrating what a god Steve Jobs was? I am confused. Well, he probably did not know where those ithings were being made.
ReplyDeleteJon Stewart's segment on Foxconn was both enlightening and disgusting. We shipped most of our manufacturing jobs overseas so that companies wouldn't have to pay Americans a living wage and the products would be cheaper. Our middle class takes a huge dip, and Chinese workers have it so bad they have to keep watch to make sure they don't kill themselves.
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