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Mike Daisey Takes a Bite Out of Apple
If you would seek proof of that famous Margaret Mead adage, “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has,” look at what’s happening as more and more people protest Apple Inc.’s labor practices in China.
Take it one step further: if you should ever doubt the impact a solitary artist can have against injustice, meet Mike Daisey.
Mike Daisey
Daisey is a monologist, a creator of one-man shows, whose performance piece “The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs” has jolted audiences into action as he parallels the obsessions of Jobs, the recently deceased former CEO of Apple; our consumer-driven lust for iPods, iPhones, and iPads and the human toll taken by their manufacture.
Apple – like virtually every other electronics manufacturer – subcontracts much of the work that goes into building its devices to companies in Asia. One of them, Foxconn Technology, is the largest private employer in China. Its factories there and in other parts of the world put together approximately forty percent of all the consumer electronics devices on the planet. Their largest facility, Foxconn City, is in Shenzhen, just across the border from Hong Kong, and employs nearly a quarter of a million workers.
As The New York Times reported late last month, “Employees work excessive overtime, in some cases seven days a week, and live in crowded dorms. Some say they stand so long that their legs swell until they can hardly walk. Under-age workers have helped build Apple’s products, and the company’s suppliers have improperly disposed of hazardous waste and falsified records, according to company reports and advocacy groups that, within China, are often considered reliable, independent monitors.
“More troubling, the groups say, is some suppliers’ disregard for workers’ health. Two years ago, 137 workers at an Apple supplier in eastern China were injured after they were ordered to use a poisonous chemical to clean iPhone screens. Within seven months last year, two explosions at iPad factories, including in Chengdu [the capital of Sichuan province in southwest China], killed four people and injured 77. Before those blasts, Apple had been alerted to hazardous conditions inside the Chengdu plant, according to a Chinese group that published that warning.”
The explosions were due to accumulations of aluminum dust from the polishing of thousands upon thousands of iPad cases. There have been more than a dozen suicides as well – part of Foxconn’s solution was to install nets around buildings to catch jumpers – and accounts of workers fired after their hands were made useless by repetitive stress injuries.
Many have reported on the working conditions at Foxconn, but it’s Mike Daisey’s one-man play, media coverage of his work and the broadcast of a one-hour version on the public radio series This American Life that seem to have galvanized public opinion.
Physically large and in charge, Mike Daisey’s performance style suggests a peculiar combination of the late Spalding Gray and Lewis Black of “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.” He sits at a table on a bare stage with some notes and a glass of water and simply tells his story; at times hysterically funny, at others, poignant, withering and accusatory. Some might find his manner a bit loud and overbearing: the night we were there last fall, media moguls Barry Diller and David Geffen were sitting a couple of rows in front of us and walked out after the first fifteen minutes or so. (Don’t try to deny it: we have your ticket stubs.)
But maybe it wasn’t Daisey’s profanity and mild bellicosity that got under their skin and instead, some simple truths. Daisey begins by detailing his own passion for all things Apple (“I am an Apple fanboy, I am a worshipper in the cult of Mac”) and slowly segues into stories from the company’s history and its increasing dependence on Chinese labor. Daisey traveled to China to see it all firsthand.
“You know,” he says, “when we dream of a future when the regulations are washed away and the corporations are finally free to sail above us, you don’t have to dream about some sci-fi-dystopian-Blade Runner-1984 bull____. You can go to Shenzhen tomorrow – they’re making your s___ that way today.”
All the bad publicity and petitions that sprang up, especially after Daisey’s public radio appearance apparently have gotten to super secretive Apple, which at an estimated worth of more than $465 billion has now surpassed ExxonMobil as the largest publicly traded company in the world. They’ve launched a PR counteroffensive that included this week’s “exclusive” visit to Foxconn City by Bill Weir of ABC’s “Nightline,” who reported on the suicides and other health issues but said, “China has very different values when it comes to gainful employment” and compared some of the complaints to what “you’d hear at any factory or college campus.”
Weir breathlessly referred to Apple products as “precious objects” and “works of art” and said that although Bob Iger, the CEO of the Walt Disney Company, ABC’s owner, sits on Apple’s board and the Steve Jobs Trust is Disney’s largest individual stockholder, “I only agreed to report exactly what I saw.”
In its latest, annual Supplier Responsibility Progress Report, Apple for the first time released a list of its subcontractors and announced that it has joined the Fair Labor Association, which makes unannounced factory inspections to check on working conditions and report violations. And last Saturday, Foxconn announced it’s raising salaries by as much as 25 percent (to $400 a month) and reducing excessive overtime.
But not so fast. According to the activist, Hong Kong-based Students and Scholars against Corporate Misbehavior, “The new basic wage… only applies to the workers in Shenzhen. In inland provinces, where two-thirds of production workers are based, basic salary remains meager. Given that inflation in China is high. Foxconn is just following the trend of wage increases in the electronics industry in China.”
As for the Fair Labor Association, it’s not all that independent. Writing on the CNN website, Scott Nova, executive director of the Worker Rights Consortium notes, “… Most of its money -- millions of dollars per year -- comes from the very companies whose labor practices it is supposed to scrutinize. Although Apple has not disclosed its financial relationship with the Fair Labor Association, it is likely now the organization's largest funder. Moreover, on the association's board of directors sit executives of major corporations such as Nike, Adidas and agribusiness giant Syngenta. The job of these executives is to represent the interests of other member companies, such as Apple. Under the Fair Labor Association's rules, the company representatives on the board exercise veto power over major decisions.”
Jeff Ballinger, director of Press for Change, a labor rights group, told The New York Times, “The Fair Labor Associaion is largely a fig leaf. There's all this rhetoric from corporate social responsibility people and the big companies that they want to improve labor standards, but all the pressure seems to be going the other direction -- they're trying to force prices down.”
Yes, Foxconn employees make well above the average salary of Chinese workers and yes, there are cultural issues and the overwhelming tide of globalization. But Apple is sitting on cash reserves of nearly $100 billion. As others have noted, just one tenth of one percent of that could go a long way toward improving conditions for its workers in China. They could even set up a health care plan. And as an anonymous former Apple executive said, “Suppliers would change everything tomorrow if Apple told them they didn’t have another choice.”
Meanwhile, Mike Daisey keeps performing “The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs” around the country. He finishes another New York run at the Public Theater on March 18, but you can listen to the This American Life radio version and at his website, MikeDaisey.com, you now can download the entire script.
Daisey says, “If Apple would spend less energy finessing its public image, and instead apply its efforts to real transparency and accountability, it could be a true leader for the electronics industry. Apple today is still saying what it said yesterday: trust us, we know best, there's nothing to worry about. They have not earned the trust they are asking for.”
There’s much protesters can do: petitions, letters, phone calls, boycotts. And Daisey has written that, “Talking about it, thinking about it when making purchasing decisions, and understanding it is not just symbolic. In a world of silence, speaking itself is action. It can be the first seeds of actual change. Do not be afraid to plant them.”
In other words, Mike Daisey proclaims, “Spread the virus.”


12 Comments so far
Show AllThe 400 lb. gorilla in the room is never talked about.
Trade and Tax Policies.
Trade and Tax Policies.
Trade and Tax Policies.
Trade and Tax Policies....
Off shore manufacturing is a result of trade policy and tax policy that has been shoved down the throat of the US worker at the hands of the Democrats and Republicans alike. All this talk about making the workplace better for the Chinese worker should be talk about US jobs and why the f**k they are gone. We don't make anything anymore but war and debt.
We lead the world in exporting war and mass murder. We should feel proud.
i have been telling the truth about apple for months and months - nice to see this article because i have been attacked by the apple clones more than a few times
apple has always tried to weave a fantasy about their machines - that way liberals feel better about paying three times what a device is worth
steve jobs is burning in hell and the robber barons of yesteryear are chilled to the bone at what he did
makes rockefeller look like a human being
bill gates aint any better
fascist little pricks the both of them
or as steve jobs used to say:
child labor rocks!
Well - helpless to stop, my mind drifts back to the classic work (1904-1905, English translation 1930) by German sociologist Max Weber called =The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism=. This was assigned reading in 1963 at the UCC Illinois institution, Elmhurst College. I kept my student copy some 25 years.
By now, I do not recall if Max Weber discussed in detail the Chinese motivations for the Boxer Rebellion, but I do know that Christian missionaries did not take the Hint. They redoubled their efforts to make as many Chinese converts as possible to Christianity. This scared their competitors for souls, Catholic missioners - see history of Maryknoll & Bishops Walsh plural.
I suspect Bill Moyers knows what I'm talking about. The largest red herring in modern history is that world imperialism was only driven by STUFF. This is a mantra for "n" generations of Economists, few of whom have ever gone to church more than thrice. Not one in 500,000 has read =A History of Christian Missions= by Stephen Neil, Penguin Books 1964. This is a mind blower for autodidacts like me. It's like rotating an objective lens on a microscope and - voila! -finding the root base of iSTUFF potential way back in the 19th century.
This only seems off topic. It is not.
Trylon
Trylon,
Thank you for saying that. I too believe that Christianity, not capitalism, provides the greatest impetus for mass murder, war, and world conquest. Of course STUFF matters in the analysis, but too many people ignore the much greater power of religion. If you read the history of slavery in the US, the Bible justified it in the minds of almost everyone. They enslaved Africans for profit, but God approved.
I'm a 10th generation American - my paternal forebears arriving in Virginia 1640-50. By 1650 they were slave owners. Their descendants owned succeeding slave descendants until Emancipation - a staggering 210 years. As KY Baptist clergy the last 60 years, they were prominent in forming the denomination today known as the Southern Baptists.
Christian mission, however, began with the Age of Discovery. The first voyage of Vasco de Gama precedes the fracture of Christendom by 20 years. Nota bene =The Oxford Illustrated History of Christianity= 2001, is superb, a GEM of a book presently selling at a bargain rate on Amazon. - Trylon
All the conclusions stated in this article may be true, but there's no way to tell. The number of them that have no factual support given is staggering. We continually put down right-wingers for clinging to ideology based on "faith" instead of facts, yet we apparently do the same thing, as does this article.
What is the Hong Kong-based Students and Scholars against Corporate Misbehavior? Have you ever heard of it before? Any reason to believe it is credible and bases its accusations on facts? Beats me.
"...according to company reports and advocacy groups that, within China, are often considered reliable, independent monitors." Reports of what companies? What advocacy groups? Considered reliable and independent by whom? Why?
It's so easy to state conclusions, and to re-state other people's conclusions without even saying who those people are or what their conclusions are based on. This is like Fox News saying, "Some say..." followed by whatever they wish were true.
Like I say, it may all be true, but I prefer to based conclusions on facts, not on broad conclusions parroted from unnamed sources.
But wait: there has been some fact-checking, actually: This American Life did a fact check on Daisey's claims.
Also, Daisey himself went there and based his monologue on his direct conversations with Chinese Workers at Schenzhen. (He had a translator, so some things may have been lost in translation, but still.)
"This American Life did a fact check...."
Which facts? Checked how? With what source(s)? And concluded what?
See how this works? Just repeating accusations and conclusions without actual facts is of no value. We'll never fix anything without some actual effort, some verification of *something*.
Apple sells Ipads to the military. Apple owns a company that makes essential parts for missiles. Because a cloak of secrecy covers military spending, we can't know what else Apple may have done. Apple has all kinds of secret spyware in their phones and other products (as I write from my Mac).
Steve Jobs made his money by enslaving and exploiting other human beings. And people venerate him. Sad.
"You can go to Shenzhen tomorrow"
You don't have to go to Shenzhen. The disconnect from reality taught to each Merkan in early elementary school is felt by each of them as confusion. Notice how confused Merkans are as they learn about their world - a world that doesn't make sense, taught through a school curriculum that doesn't make sense, devised to achieve an agenda that doesn't make sense for the people. The Pink Floyd video of The Wall is appropriate - the children on the conveyor belt, being fed into the meat grinder.
The iPads play the video very nicely. The people who design them are completely detached from the message.
One thing I would have liked was to have seen the ownership of Foxconn mentioned. I think many of those reading the article might just assume that Foxconn is a Chinese company, albeit, a private one. But Foxconn is not a Chinese company, it is a Taiwan company. So just one more benefit of foreign investment.
One comment complained "What is the Hong Kong-based Students and Scholars against Corporate Misbehavior? Have you ever heard of it before? Any reason to believe it is credible and bases its accusations on facts? Beats me." Well, I just did a search on that organization just like that person could have done and he or she would have had their answers. It has been around since 2005, and has a very informative website. http://sacom.hk/ I am not sure why that person believes that his or her own ignorance is a basis to criticize others.