Apple report reveals child labour increase
You can look it up further. Im not saying that its all feces feces feces, but personally I fail to see much of what apple really accomplished, as opposed to just continuing spreading the corporation/consumerism model that I think our world has had enough of.
Apple has copied a lot of it's products, and with very strong and well-funded marketing, they make people think its great and unique. Sure, I have friends who work with audiovisual, and they seem to think some of apple's software is really good for it, they can do stuff they couldnt really with other platforms, which I can accept. But how many of apple's products are so specifically unique and better, and how much is hype? How many apple users really actually need their products, for those specific uses, and how much is "created need" ? How much is real contribution to the world, and how much is pretty-masked noise and unsustainability?
How could we even begin to really measure the environmental impacts of all the useless iWhatever that is produced, consumed and discarded at lightning speed around the world?
The slave life's improvement wasnt ever made because of the slave, it's a small 'accidental' improvement which masks a much further extended corporate vampirism. Give a bread with one hand, take two breads with the other.
Im not sure if any big technological company is much better. I wish I knew where to get 'green/fair-trade' electronics. So what I do is just avoid buying as much as possible, have an old computer given to me, same with my very old mobile phone that works perfect even after having dropped thousands of times over many years. And I will use it till it breaks, and when that happens I will get some other old phone someone is throwing away or thats picking dust in someone's closet and use that. I dont need to play revamped space invaders in 3D in my fancy phone while im in the metro, I dont think its worth all the suffering created to make it.
I think whenever we buy anything, we are co-responsible for everything that happened from the material extracted and waste products, to the workers involved, to transport, to the marketing effects and side effects etc etc . So I think its reasonable that before buying anything, every person in their own situation, considering the contextual factors, should ask themselves: "Do I really have to buy this? Can I not buy it instead, or maybe buy something else more sustainable?"
You can look it up further. Im not saying that its all feces feces feces, but personally I fail to see much of what apple really accomplished, as opposed to just continuing spreading the corporation/consumerism model that I think our world has had enough of.
Apple has copied a lot of it's products, and with very strong and well-funded marketing, they make people think its great and unique. Sure, I have friends who work with audiovisual, and they seem to think some of apple's software is really good for it, they can do stuff they couldnt really with other platforms, which I can accept. But how many of apple's products are so specifically unique and better, and how much is hype? How many apple users really actually need their products, for those specific uses, and how much is "created need" ? How much is real contribution to the world, and how much is pretty-masked noise and unsustainability?
How could we even begin to really measure the environmental impacts of all the useless iWhatever that is produced, consumed and discarded at lightning speed around the world?
The slave life's improvement wasnt ever made because of the slave, it's a small 'accidental' improvement which masks a much further extended corporate vampirism. Give a bread with one hand, take two breads with the other.
Im not sure if any big technological company is much better. I wish I knew where to get 'green/fair-trade' electronics. So what I do is just avoid buying as much as possible, have an old computer given to me, same with my very old mobile phone that works perfect even after having dropped thousands of times over many years. And I will use it till it breaks, and when that happens I will get some other old phone someone is throwing away or thats picking dust in someone's closet and use that. I dont need to play revamped space invaders in 3D in my fancy phone while im in the metro, I dont think its worth all the suffering created to make it.
I think whenever we buy anything, we are co-responsible for everything that happened from the material extracted and waste products, to the workers involved, to transport, to the marketing effects and side effects etc etc . So I think its reasonable that before buying anything, every person in their own situation, considering the contextual factors, should ask themselves: "Do I really have to buy this? Can I not buy it instead, or maybe buy something else more sustainable?"
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