703 Matching Annotations
  1. Jan 2019
    1. A memex is a device in which an individual stores all his books, records, and communications, and which is mechanized so that it may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility. It is an enlarged intimate supplement to his memory.It consists of a desk, and while it can presumably be operated from a distance, it is primarily the piece of furniture at which he works. On the top are slanting translucent screens, on which material can be projected for convenient reading. There is a keyboard, and sets of buttons and levers. Otherwise it looks like an ordinary desk.

      A desktop computer, but via a transparency projector...in any case, fun that Bush named his early PC "meme." I'm imagining his concept of a network to accomplish this would be something of a vacuum-tube system.

    2. The personnel officer of a factory drops a stack of a few thousand employee cards into a selecting machine, sets a code in accordance with an established convention, and produces in a short time a list of all employees who live in Trenton and know Spanish. Even such devices are much too slow when it comes, for example, to matching a set of fingerprints with one of five million on file.

      Tonally, post-apocalyptic – there's a wonder at the future in this article, but also a strong current of fear. This very common, current technology reads like something straight out of 1984 – a book which would not be published for another 4 years.

    3. Combine these two elements, let the Vocoder run the stenotype, and the result is a machine which types when talked to.

      Text to speech, in a nutshell.

    4. Two centuries ago Leibnitz invented a calculating machine which embodied most of the essential features of recent keyboard devices, but it could not then come into use. The economics of the situation were against it: the labor involved in constructing it, before the days of mass production, exceeded the labor to be saved by its use, since all it could accomplish could be duplicated by sufficient use of pencil and paper. Moreover, it would have been subject to frequent breakdown, so that it could not have been depended upon; for at that time and long after, complexity and unreliability were synonymous.

      Reminds me of the current struggle with things like quantum-computing and renewable energy. Their complexity and cost, in a capitalist economic system which values profit over all else, make it so that investing in technology which would improve over time or has the potential for greater uses down the line, just for the sake of improvement (or even for more pressing reasons) when their work can be replicated with existing technology no matter how laborious or harmful, is dis-incentivized.

    5. it has provided a record of ideas and has enabled man to manipulate and to make extracts from that record so that knowledge evolves and endures throughout the life of a race rather than that of an individual.

      Wikipedia anyone? Though, generally this seems like what would now be a reference to many institutions and libraries' efforts to digitize books, research, and culture – I doubt that Bush could have imagined (or wanted) the limitations on access to this information that broadly exist (or its use as a vector with which to make money).

    6. Science has provided the swiftest communication between individuals

      Seems a lot like internet messaging and texting – although I'd imagine here, Bush is talking about more basic telecommunications.

  2. Jul 2018
    1. It works like magic.

      ...even though I try to make myself feel good by not owning an iSheep phone, I'm not so sure I like the 21st century magic much these days. Let's hope the new generation of creators are more conscientious

    2. colonial times

      ah, the lasting impacts of Colonial Spain on the world...

    1. We produced an entire new episode about the retraction, featuring Marketplace reporter Rob Schmitz, who interviewed Mike’s translator Cathy and discovered discrepancies between her account and Mike’s, and New York Times reporter Charles Duhigg, who has reported extensively on Apple. Ira also re-interviewed Mike Daisey to learn why he misled us.

      I think that the redaction is going to be informative, but the story is one of the most read and downloaded, so the damage has been done.

    2. And the first thing I see at the gates are the guards

      Daisey claims that there were guards at the factory, but later confirmed my Kathy that was a lie. #dgst101

    3. It's like they were coming to work every day, thinking, you know what would be great? It would be so great if somebody who uses all this crap we make every day, all day long-- it would be so great if one of those people came and asked us what was going on. Because we would have stories for them.

      Here Daisey states that the worker are coming up to them to talk to the, wanting to hear their voices. However, In the interview with Kathy afterwards, she confirmed that no more than 4-5 people talked to them. #dgst101

    4. And the first thing I notice is the silence. It's so quiet.

      That's terrifying. To think about all those people, silenced by a power much bigger than them.

    5. It's a really basic thing. It's a basic thing that we fought for in this country. It took 100 years of labor struggles to get to a place where that happened for most workers.

      Definitely agreed with him here. It's kind of frustrating to hear people say we should feel fine about these conditions. It's a very privileged and ignorant thing to say. That some must suffer for this world to be successful.

    6. And you need to know that this is eminently avoidable.

      That's the whole point, isn't it? It's avoidable, but inconvenient.

    7. young woman

      Did he just not realize she was a girl? It seems kind of strange to call her a young woman knowing she's 13, unless she just looked much older. It seems counter-intuitive to call her a woman if your goal is to share how messed up this reality is.

    8. Every time. Every time.

      This is...really sad.

    9. I can't get anywhere. All the doors are closed.

      This sentiment here probably explains why Daisy felt the need to lie to get his point across. It's probably frustrating to run into walls when you're trying to spread awareness about something important.

    10. That would require someone at Apple and Dell and the other customers to care. Currently, no one in the ecosystem cares enough to even enforce that.

      nobody cares as long as the work is getting done as quickly and quietly as possible

    11. She cleans the screens of iPhones by hand, in these huge racks.

      when I think of factories I think of machines doing the work so it's crazy to think she does this every single day with thousands of phones a day

    12. And in all that time, until I saw those pictures, it was only then I realized, I had never thought, ever, in a dedicated way, about how they were made.

      I feel like nobody really takes how they were made into consideration

    13. Good question. Anything else I can do for you?

      it doesn't acknowledge the fact that it can't answer and tries to change the subject

    14. Foxconn always knows when there is going to be an inspection

      This is disgusting. The fact that they know when inspections occur and hide all the negative things they do is appalling.

    15. 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.

      I think it's a little insulting that these companies think by putting up a net it will solve this issue.

    16. I'm not allowed to say.

      I am questioning the validity of this.

    17. significant fabrications

      Did Mike Daisey lie?

    18. I wish it was like the old days. I wish things had that human touch.But that's not true. There are more handmade things now than there have ever been in the history of the world.

      I didn't even think about this during my reading of this transcription but he's right everything has been touched by numerous humans before we touch it.

    19. a worker at Foxconn dies after working a 34-hour shift. I wish I could say that's exceptional, but it's happened before. I only mention it because it actually happened while I was there.

      I'm a bit disturbed how he brushes this off and only reports it because it occurred when he was there.

    20. And it is constant. 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 like our hour. What's our hour now? 46 minutes? You have a bathroom break, and you have a smoke break, and if you don't smoke, there's a yoga break.

      I never thought about the difference of a working hour in relation to different countries. This is such an interesting concept.

    21. What would you change at Foxconn if you could change anything?That question always gets them. They always react like a bee has flown into their faces. And then they say something to Kathy. And Kathy says, "He says he never thought of that before." Every time. Every time.

      This proves his point that the way things are people just get used to it because they aren't used to positive change occurring at this company.

    22. 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.

      He's right. This is hard to imagine only one venue this large, it's even harder to think of 20 of these venues this large under one roof.

    23. And at the end of the day, I am large, I am American, and I am wearing a goddamn Hawaiian shirt. And we are going to the main gates.

      I just had to annotate this because it's absolutely hilarious.

    24. 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

      This is beyond severe

    25. 14 hours a day, 15 hours a day.

      Seems like small business owners in the U.S.

    26. And in that space, there are 13 beds, 14 beds-- I count-- 15 beds.

      Made me think of the pictures from the Holocaust.

    27. Shenzhen is a city without history. The people who live there will tell you that, because 31 years ago, Shenzhen was a small town. They had little reed huts, little reed walkways between the huts. The men would fish in the late afternoon. I hear it was lovely.

      This is a sad passage because it makes you realize the positives and negatives industry can bring to formerly small towns like this.

    28. And in all that time, until I saw those pictures, it was only then I realized, I had never thought, ever, in a dedicated way, about how they were made.

      This is interesting because not until this class did I start thinking about how technology I own is made.

    29. So the truth is, I never would have questioned this religion.

      I find it interesting how he correlates the type of technology you like to a religion or a faith.

    30. Can I say, I love, especially, "I am not allowed to say"? Because it implies that Siri somehow knows the answer, but she's just not allowed to tell me, which is insane, because she's a machine. Especially because-- flip over the phone. Right here, on the back, it's printed-- "Assembled in China."

      This comment reminds me of how I've heard some people say how much they love that Apple is a product made in the United States, but in actuality it's not.

    31. 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 talk to people whose joints in their hands have disintegrated from working on the line, doing the same motion hundreds and hundreds of thousands of times. It's like carpal tunnel on a scale we can scarcely imagine.

      This again proves my point that they see workers as commodities and not living people.

    32. 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.

      This particular phrasing reminded me of a textbook excerpt I read in high school that described the living conditions for slaves on the Middle Passage. They were stacked liked sardines, essentially unable to move.

    33. The official workday in China is eight hours long, and that's a joke. I never met anyone who'd even heard of an eight-hour shift. Everyone I talked to worked 12-hour shifts standard, and often much longer than that. 14 hours a day, 15 hours a day.

      Corporations like this are all about exploiting their workers for as much work as possible. I highly doubt that they are accurately compensated for their work.

    34. And it is constant. 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 like our hour. What's our hour now? 46 minutes? You have a bathroom break, and you have a smoke break, and if you don't smoke, there's a yoga break.

      This makes me wonder if China has any sort of labor laws that address this like we do in America. However, then I think that even if there were, there is no guarantee that they would be enforced.

    35. 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--" She says, "Oh, no." And her friends all agree. They don't really check ages. The outside companies do have inspections. But the workers told me Foxconn always knows when there is going to be an inspection. So what they do then-- they don't even check ages then. They just pull everyone from the affected line, and then they put the oldest workers they have on that line.

      This is something that seems to be true about many corporations. There are very easy ways for people to squeak around the rules.

    36. Apple has released a report stating in the year that Mike was in China, 2010, Apple's own auditors went into 127 facilities around the world that make its products and say they found 91 underage workers. It doesn't say which facilities the workers were at. The report states that Apple helped install systems to verify ages, educated suppliers on recruiting practices, and made them return underage workers to school, and made them pay for the kids' education, and then it stopped doing business with one supplier that had 42 underaged workers and showed no commitment to addressing the problem.

      Well, this is actually a slight positive to a very negative and horrifying truth.

    37. Mike DaiseyWell, I don't know if it's a big problem. I just know that I saw it.Ira GlassAgain, Mike Daisey. He says, sure. Maybe it's not prevalent.Mike DaiseyI know that I met people that were there. And I know that I talked to them. I mean, there weren't very many as a proportion of the total group. I talked to more than 100 people. I met five or six who were underage.Ira GlassAnd they were over the course of days?Mike DaiseyNo, they were together in a group.Ira GlassSo it's basically the girl who you described, who deals with the iPhones, who wipes off your thing, and then her friends?Mike DaiseyAnd then some people that were with her. They seemed like savvy kids, honestly.

      Ah, yes. Daisey is rather defensive when asked about his own statements.

    38. Ira GlassAnother thing that Mike Daisey says that is disturbing to hear, is he says that the companies will deceive the auditors when the auditors come in. Have you seen that?Ian SpauldingYeah. That actually is quite common. And I think many other people have also exposed this problem.

      Yeah, kind of figured that.

    39. And he says, he worked on the metal enclosures for the laptops, and he worked on the iPad. And when he says this, I reach into my satchel, and I take out my iPad.

      This is rather specific.

    40. "I did. I went to the labor board, and I told them about my problem. And they took down my name and my address and my company. And they took my name, and they put it on the blacklist, and they fired me."

      I can assume that this is due to bribery of the labor board; pretty common in such cases.

    41. a worker at Foxconn dies after working a 34-hour shift. I wish I could say that's exceptional, but it's happened before. I only mention it because it actually happened while I was there.

      Granted, this account in its entirety is false, however I wouldn't be surprised if this actually does happen. It's awful..

    42. "Yes, Kathy. I'm going to lie to lots of people."

      I mean...he didn't lie about that though???

    43. The outside companies do have inspections. But the workers told me Foxconn always knows when there is going to be an inspection. So what they do then-- they don't even check ages then. They just pull everyone from the affected line, and then they put the oldest workers they have on that line.

      This is the most frightening part; they are aware of inspections, so they are able to hide any evidence that they're hiring underaged children. While Daisey lied, this isn't not the norm.

    44. 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.

      This is quite reminiscent of the "Phone Story" game we played just yesterday...it is rather horrifying to think about.

    45. 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. That's Foxconn.

      Holy crap, I literally had no idea about where these electronics were made and they're all by the same company...SO WHY AM I PAYING SO MUCH FOR APPLE?????

    46. Can I say, I love, especially, "I am not allowed to say"? Because it implies that Siri somehow knows the answer, but she's just not allowed to tell me, which is insane, because she's a machine. Especially because-- flip over the phone. Right here, on the back, it's printed-- "Assembled in China."

      Not going to lie; this is frightening. I tried to ask Siri the same question (my phone is in Japanese...) and she acts like she doesn't know...BUT NOW I KNOW.

    47. And along the edges of each enormous building are the nets. Because right at the time that I am making this visit, there has 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.

      I feel as though these nets were not put up to protect the workers, but rather to protect Foxconn's public image. Workers seems to be more of a commodity to them.

    48. And I'm involuntarily reminded of a Google News alert that popped into my inbox a few weeks earlier about a Reuters photographer who was taking pictures not at the Foxconn plant, but near the Foxconn plant. And Foxconn security went out, scooped him up, and beat him before releasing him.

      It seems as though corporate companies with do anything to protect their "secrets".

    49. 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.

      By the way Daisey talks about these cafeterias, I highly doubt that they were designed to hold that many people.

    50. 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 talk to people whose joints in their hands have disintegrated from working on the line, doing the same motion hundreds and hundreds of thousands of times. It's like carpal tunnel on a scale we can scarcely imagine.

      Again, WOW.

    51. Everyone I talked to worked 12-hour shifts standard, and often much longer than that. 14 hours a day, 15 hours a day.

      Looking back at my previous annotation about Foxconn putting up nets to catch suicidal workers... how about they give them shifts that aren't so long? How about they pay them a fair wage? How about they give them better working conditions?

    52. 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--" She says, "Oh, no."
    53. 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.

      Again, I am speechless.

    54. And Foxconn security went out, scooped him up, and beat him before releasing him.

      All I can say is WOW.

    55. cafeterias can hold up to 10,000 people.

      That is either a really large cafeteria that holds a lot of people or a tiny cafeteria where people are being crammed into.

    56. I understand, as best I can, how the hardware works and how the software rests on the hardware

      I feel like most people are like Mike Daisey. No one thinks beyond this phase. Not many people question how some of their technology comes about. I think it's something people just accept.

    57. So the truth is, I never would have questioned this religion. I never would have looked deeply at this belief system, because it gave me so much pleasure, if it hadn't been for the pictures.

      I think it's very interesting how much of a die hard fan Mike Daisey was for the Apple company. When reading this I almost feel bad for Mike because he is about to be exposed to a harsh reality that might make him "question his religion"

    1. So far, no country has decided to use this international law to help Congo end slavery, but the tools are there.

      I hope that soon another country decides this is an important issue (because it is) and they use the international laws and tools to help the Congo over come this. No one deserves to be treated so poorly.

    2. The thugs have total control and can do whatever they please, so just crossing from one part of town to another means paying a tax or risking attack or even enslavement.

      This is something I wish more people would learn about and try to help stop.

    3. Slaves are producing many of the things we buy, and in the process they are forced to destroy our shared environment, increase global warming, and wipe out protected species.

      I wish that more people knew this. I feel like many people are fighting for a cleaner Earth, but our first priority should be ending slavery. With the end of slavery all over the world we can then focus on conservation and being eco-friendly.

    4. Our lives are full of ways that we connect with other people—the food we serve and share, the rings and gifts we exchange—and we understand these objects primarily from the point at which they arrive in our lives.

      Phones give us such joy and make our lives so much easier, but the phone game taught us how difficult we are making the lives of slaves in the Congo. It sucks to think that my need for a phone is more important then their need for freedom, because I don't think that it is.

    5. We also know that, while some polishing and skillful carving of names and dates is needed, those heavy, dense, and sharp tombstones will first be handled by children, though they will be taking “great care,” of course, since the slave master is watching.

      This makes death seem even more sad to me. I feel like now when I go to visit a grave, I'm just going to think of the memories I have with the person who's grave I am visiting, but I will also be thinking of the poor children who are having their childhood ripped away. Which will make the process even worse.

    6. If we think about where the markers come from at all, we might imagine an elderly craftsman carefully chiseling a name into a polished stone.

      That is a 100% accurate description of what I would have thought and answered if someone asked me where tombstones came from.

    7. Expecting industrial operations, they found medieval working conditions and families in slavery

      Slavery is obviously one of the worst forms of labor since you are taking away that persons choice to work, but with "medieval" conditions, it makes the work even worse.

    8. “See the little girl playing with the hammer?” asked a local investigator. “Along with the child, the size of the hammer grows, and that’s the only progress in her life.”

      This sentence is the hardest to read so far. I love children and have thought about doing something with kids instead of hopefully working in a lab, and this breaks my heart. The preschool my mom teaches in sums up my idea of childhood "Children should learn through, laughing, playing, and loving." I feel like this girls childhood is being taken away. She isn't allowed to play and laugh with her friends as the play with minnows or building sand castles, she is hammering in a granite quarry.

    9. And in India, the most cost effective way to achieve that is slavery.

      That is so saddening. I wish that the world could stop caring about money for five minutes and focus on creating a nice place for everyone in every social class. I hate to think that I am buying something that was made by slaves. I helped my mom pick out a tombstone for my dad and I wish had read this before so I could have researched where the materials were coming from.

    10. Granite for German tombstones used to come from the beautiful Harz Mountains, but now no one is allowed to mine there and risk spoiling this protected national park and favorite tourist destination.

      I know that tomb stones are important, but I am glad that now no one is allowed to mine in the park. Even if it's because it is a tourist destination it's still a win for the environment.

    11. It was brilliant, but it had a cost.

      incredible innovation but at what cost

    12. Slavery, one of the world’s largest greenhouse gas producers, is hidden from us.

      this is never talked about so nobody knows

    13. Out of our sight, slaves numbering in the hundreds of thousands do the work that slaves have done for millennia: digging, cutting, and carrying.

      we think of slavery as something that happened in the past but unfortunately in reality it is something that is constantly happening, producing the products that we constantly use

    14. Round and round it goes— our spending drives a criminal perpetual motion machine that eats people and nature like a cancer.

      it is truly a never-ending cycle

    15. But all this normally happens far from any prying eyes. It’s a hidden world that keeps its secrets.

      nobody wants to really learn about the dirty business behind where there favorite stuff comes from so keeping things a secret is a little easier when not everyone is begging to know the truth

    16. And pulling things from the earth can be a dirty business.

      never realize how many of our favorite things are actually so harmful

    17. some ways they spring from the same root. Our consumer economy is driven at its most basic level by resource extraction, pulling things from the earth, an extraction that we never actually see

      Nobody really thinks about how slavery and environmental destruction have similar beginnings and how so many aspects of them are related.

    18. Slaves are producing many of the things we buy, and in the process they are forced to destroy our shared environment, increase global warming, and wipe out protected species.

      A powerful statement about how in reality our consuming needs and wants are one of the real reasons for the increase of global warming, destroyed shared environment and wiping out of our protected species.

    19. orrupt politicians often rule

      Corrupt politicians... definitely something we can all relate to.

    20. One, two, or three soldiers will force their way into a family’s home, announcing, “We’re living with you and you will do as we say.” Anyone who resists will be killed. Then the men and boys are put to work digging and hauling minerals. Women and girls also dig and sort stone, do the housework, cook, and suffer regular sexual assaults. The violence and rape increase when the soldiers get drunk or stoned.

      Wow. The horrors these people endured really sticks with you. Even reading this is a challenge.

    21. A little chaos is good for criminal business, but too much is disruptive, even for warlords

      Funny idea. Even warlords need some kind of balance.

    22. Nature is willing, but the people are broken. War has shattered minds and bodies and any semblance or expectation of order; life has become a scramble for survival in a population divided between those with guns and those without. This chaos is the perfect breeding ground for slavery. When valuable minerals are stirred into the mix, the odds of a slavery outbreak are even higher.

      This really makes you think about what is going on in other countries. Perhaps if we opened our eyes and dont just think about what is on our computer screen.

    23. He sold these “concessions” to speculators who used torture and murder to drive whole communities into the jungle to harvest rubber.

      Makes you wonder if rubber is even worth it at that cost.

    24. These eastern provinces are called North Kivu and South Kivu, and they hold some of the wildest, most deeply beautiful and seriously dangerous terrain on the planet. The mixture of mountains, river valleys, great lakes, and volcanoes is spectacular, though the endemic parasites and diseases, including typhoid and plague, are a constant threat. The nature reserves and national parks in the Kivus are some of the last places to find a number of threatened animal species, like the great gorillas. Two kinds of elephants roam the forests, and hippos work the riverbanks. High in their treetop nests, this is the only place in the world to find our closest relative, the bonobo chimpanzee. Sometimes called the “hippie chimp,” bonobos are known for resolving conflicts peacefully, through sexy cuddling rather than violence—a trick humans haven’t quite mastered. But when the rebel groups pushed into these protected forests and habitats, deforestation and illegal poaching followed, and the bonobo population fell by 95 percent. But this isn’t the first time the Congo has been trampled.

      This imagery is astounding.

    25. Yours is probably within arm’s reach right now.

      Yes, it is. Right on the chair next to me. I can even see the yellow notification from snapchat. Made me turn my phone away.

    26. As we climbed the hill from the landing field, I took my cellphone from my pocket, out of habit more than anything. I assumed it would be useless here, but then watched as the little bars built up on its screen. No electricity or running water, no paving on the roads, and good luck if you needed a doctor, but incredibly I had a signal. “This is why I am here,” I thought, “I can’t live without my phone, and people here are dying because of it.”

      Interesting... cell reception where there should be none. Why?

    27. Let’s talk about our phones

      And here is where it gets relatable! Focus will be on the phones.

    28. I started in the Eastern Congo, where all the pieces of the puzzle are exposed—slavery, greed, a war against both nature and people, all for resources that flowed right back into our consumer economy, into our work and homes and pockets. I knew if I could get there—and stay clear of the warlords and their armed gangs— I could begin to uncover the truth.

      A beginning for the story.

    29. Slavery, one of the world’s largest greenhouse gas producers, is hidden from us.

      This line screamed out to me.

    30. Slavery is a great way to keep your costs down, but there’s another reason why that granite is so cheap—the quarries themselves are illegal, paying no mining permits or taxes.

      Ahhh. And the truth comes out!

    31. Slavery in granite quarries is a family affair enforced by a tricky scheme based on debt

      Wow this really creates a vivid image. "Family affair" the intimacy this associates with slavery is hard to swallow.

    32. Careful handling means handwork, which requires people with drills and chisels, hammers and crowbars gently working the granite out of the ground. And in India, the most cost effective way to achieve that is slavery.

      Now it seems we are getting to the point. Slavery is going to be a huge topic within this article.

    33. Granite for German tombstones used to come from the beautiful Harz Mountains, but now no one is allowed to mine there and risk spoiling this protected national park and favorite tourist destination

      The concept that something was once taken for granted and over used and now is banned... interesting idea. Wonder how it will relate?

    34. tombstone

      "It's never a happy moment when you're shopping for a tombstone." What an introduction to this article. Definitely set the mood for what is going to be discussed and this leads me to believe that the discussion regarding our smart phones is probably not going to be a positive one.

    35. We think of Steve Jobs in his black turtleneck as the origin of our iPhones.

      The inventor of the IPhone maybe, but is he the origin? Perhaps not.

    36. Yet children stood a few feet from the soldiers, complaining about the disruption to their soccer game.

      This is extremely sad, show how use to this they are, it did not even phase them.

    37. It makes sense that slavery and environmental destruction would go hand in hand.

      Right! Most people do not want to hurt the earth willingly, yet they do not realize they are by supporting companies that do.

    38. “See the little girl playing with the hammer?” asked a local investigator. “Along with the child, the size of the hammer grows, and that’s the only progress in her life.

      Definitely a clear image on what is going on, seems they are only worried about the hammer getting bigger becaquse if she does not grow, neither does it.

    39. We think of Steve Jobs in his black turtleneck as the origin of our iPhones.

      I've actually never even owned an iPhone, and after this article and PhoneStory I am not sure that I ever will.

    40. In the United States, the average cost of installing those countertops runs from $2,000 to $8,000, but the price charged by Indian exporters for polished red granite is just $5 to $15 per square meter—that comes to about $100 for all the granite your kitchen needs. The markup on tombstones is equally high. The red granite tombstones that sell for $500 to $1,000 in the United States, and more in Europe, are purchased in bulk from India for as little as $50, plus a US import duty of just 3.7 percent.

      It's sad that not many people are aware that this occurs all throughout the world regardless of the material.

    41. “This is why I am here,” I thought, “I can’t live without my phone, and people here are dying because of it.”

      An amazing realization that our eyes always go to a screen no matter what's happening around us.

    42. And to stop them, we don’t need more laws. We need to end slavery.

      YES

    43. Here’s how: slaveholders are criminals, operating firmly outside of any law or regulation. When they mine gold they saturate thousands of acres with toxic mercury. When they cut timber, they clear-cut and burn, taking a few high-value trees and leaving behind a dead ecosystem.

      This passage explains clearly how slavery creates such massive destruction in the natural world.

    44. I can’t live without my phone, and people here are dying because of it.

      This is the sad truth. People today feel as if they can't go an hour without their self phone, when people are dying creating, and producing our phones that we use...

    45. But all this normally happens far from any prying eyes. It’s a hidden world that keeps its secrets.

      This is interesting because it really is a hidden world. We're so blinded by consumerism that we don't care to learn how our things are made. It takes horrifying images, games like Phone Story, and articles like this to finally open our eyes.

    46. freed slaves tend to be willing workers in the rebuilding of our natural world

      I like to have hope that slavery can be stopped, but seeing how much gets brushed under the table with huge, international businesses, my hopes are crushed. If there were to be a change and a stop to slavery, we'd need a large moral flip in the views of these producers.

    47. If slavery were an American state it would have the population of California and the economic output of the District of Columbia, but it would be the world’s third-largest producer of CO2.

      This is an eye opening statement. It makes you realize the amount of people who are enslaved, how much damage occurs to our environment because of slavery, but also how much economic profit is due to slavery.

    48. The idea that people once had to call a telephone wired to a building in the hope of reaching a person who might be there seems quaint, clunky, and a little absurd to our children.

      ...I feel so old now...

    49. local police and forest rangers turn a blind eye.

      This sounds a lot like a corrupt form of government. Comparable to my Latin America class I took, Latin American police forces turn a blind eye to violence because most of the time those sources of violence and gang members are a lot stronger then the government. This illegal quarrying and slavery shows how strong consumerism is.

    50. the quarries themselves are illegal, paying no mining permits or taxes. The protected state and national forest parks rest on top of granite deposits

      This reminded me of something I learned in my geography class called "Geography of Latin America and the Caribbean", because in Brazil, oil is a huge market. There have been recent national parks that have been protecting the rainforests that the oil deposits sit on. However, there has been illegal mining and usage of those deposits in the so called "protected" areas...

    51. This is rather disturbing; let's try and spin this tale to ensure we sucker as much people into purchasing at 10000x the actual cost!

    52. Just when the family feels they may have finally found some security, they are being locked into hereditary slavery.

      How sad is this? I agree with @e_estes34 because it truly is a big business mentality, scamming their way into cheap labor.

    53. I was always aware of the rather high markups of granite and such; but holy crap...this is ridiculous and exceptionally abusive of any country who uses such labor and mark ups.

    54. Whether we are grilling shrimp for our friends or buying T-shirts for our children we generally think of these things as beginning where we first encountered them, at the shop, at the mall, in the grocery store. But just as each of us is deeper than our surface, just as each of us has a story to tell, so do the tools and toys and food and rings and phones that tie us together.

      We don't tend to think about where our goods come from before arriving at the store we buy them from.

    55. Cellphones have become electronic umbilical cords connecting us with our children, our partners, and our parents with an immediacy and reliability hardly known before.

      Powerful metaphor explaining our reasoning why cellphones are viewed as a necessity to our generation

    56. The peace and order of the graves surrounding ancient churches was suddenly marred by images of slave children shaping and polishing the stone that marked those graves.

      Death is supposed to be a time that the person who has died is at peace with themselves and the images of the children creating these tombstones completely dissolves that peace of mind.

    57. they were shocked by what they discovered. Expecting industrial operations, they found medieval working conditions and families in slavery.

      This is such a vivid image and a reminder that slavery does still exist and though we are more technologically advanced, slavery drags us back to another time.

    58. This debt bondage is illegal, but illiterate workers don’t know this, and the bosses are keen to play on their sense of obligation, not alert them to the scam that’s sucking them under.

      This reminds me a lot about sharecropping and how in America post-Civil War and liberation many former slaves went back to make a living as sharecroppers however the owners of the land would "lend" them supplies but rack up their debt even more making them property again and it became a family and generational debt.

    59. “See the little girl playing with the hammer?” asked a local investigator. “Along with the child, the size of the hammer grows, and that’s the only progress in her life.”

      This is such a powerful quote because it shows that in other countries the growth is more than just the girl growing up but her capabilities of work being exploited also grow.

    60. We think of Steve Jobs in his black turtleneck as the origin of our iPhones.

      After playing Phone Story, I still see Steve Jobs as the mastermind behind inventing the iPhone but I recognize the other work and lives across the globe that go into creating just one iPhone.

    61. So far, no country has decided to use this international law to help Congo end slavery, but the tools are there.

      The UN Human Rights Council exists for this exact purpose, yet they do nothing to help. What is the point of signing to protect human rights if you aren't going to? All of the countries that are a part of the Human Rights Council are obligated to fight out against injustice and assist those in need. They need to care more about people than they do money.

    62. For the poor South, it was cotton and iron ore that carried the “resource curse,” and kleptocratic and racist local governments moved quickly to stabilize and legitimize their control. Whether it was sharecropping or peonage slavery, the result was great riches for a white elite, and an ongoing degradation of the land and destruction of the vast Southern forests.

      History always finds a way to repeat itself. You would think that people would learn from their mistakes, and yet here we are.

    63. The Second Congo War is the modern world’s greatest forgotten war. Raging from 1998 to 2003, and overshadowed on the global stage by the events of September 11, 2001, and the subsequent “War on Terror,” it involved eight countries and about twenty-five armed groups. By its end 5.4 million people were dead, a body count second only to the two world wars.

      The world has always had a strong Western focus on history that important and devastating events like this are often swept under the rug because they do not benefit the Western narrative. In order for us to have a more united and better world, we have to learn about more than just positive Western history. We must learn more.

    64. It is the great forgotten genocide of the twentieth century. One witness was an African-American journalist named George Washington Williams. He coined the phrase “crimes against humanity” to describe what he saw.

      History often tries to exclude that which makes the country or its allies look bad. This is a dangerous thing to do, as history repeats itself. We must learn from our past mistakes so that we do not repeat them. We must be better. We must improve; however, in order to do that, we must learn the dark, bloody past.

    65. We also have to understand that slavers—who don’t adhere to those laws and treaties—are a leading cause of the natural world’s destruction. And to stop them, we don’t need more laws. We need to end slavery.

      Governments need to take action. They need to investigate and enforce their laws. They need to remember than human life is invaluable. Money is an object. A human is a living thing. We need to do more.

    66. Well, we know environmental change is part of the engine of slavery. The sharp end of environmental change, whether slow as rising sea levels and desertification, or disastrously sudden like a hurricane or a tsunami, comes first to the poor. I’ve seen men, women, children, families, and whole communities impoverished and broken by environmental change and natural disasters. Homes and livelihoods lost, these people and communities are easily abused. Especially in countries where corruption is rife, slavers act with impunity after environmental devastation, luring and capturing the refugees, the destitute, and the dispossessed.

      People often don't care about things unless they are directly effected. We don't care enough about others now. We don't care enough about others in the future. We are often such a selfish world. We take and we take without considering the consequences. Convenience often wins out over what is right.

    67. The profits generated when we go shopping flow back down the chain and fuel more assaults on the natural world, drive more people toward enslavement, and feed more goods into the global supply chain. Round and round it goes— our spending drives a criminal perpetual motion machine that eats people and nature like a cancer.

      The first step to fixing any issue is acknowledging that we are part of it. We have to remove the notion in our minds that we are not having any effect on these people. We are not innocent bystanders in this process. Just like when you drop a small stone in a pond, there is a larger ripple effect to consider. We have to do our part to not support businesses and corporations that exploit labor from the poor and enslaved. Every little bit helps.

    68. The peace and order of the graves surrounding ancient churches was suddenly marred by images of slave children shaping and polishing the stone that marked those graves.

      The sad and horrific truth is that a large portion of things that we see as good, holy, etc. often contains parts done by slave labor. Very little in this world is clean from the blood of slavery.

    69. This debt bondage is illegal, but illiterate workers don’t know this, and the bosses are keen to play on their sense of obligation, not alert them to the scam that’s sucking them under.

      Things are made illegal for a reason. Slavery is a complete and utter violation of basic human rights. Governments need to stop turning a blind eye to this unacceptable violation of human rights merely because it benefits them financially. Enforce the laws.

    70. but the tools are there

      The fact that the tools are there and we have done very little to nothing is very sad. This blind ignorance is making us mindless consumers and allowing the exploitation to continue to thrive.

    71. It’s a four-step process; simple in form yet complex in the way it plays out

      Similar to how it will stopped. It is a simple concept: slavery needs to stop. But it is very complex to actually make that happen.

    72. Yours is probably within arm’s reach right now

      Again this obsession with the digital. Anything to get away from our reality.

    73. The good news is that slavery can be stopped

      Slavery CAN be stopped. What is sad is that everyone has this mentality that someone else will do it. This procrastination and lack of responsibility is the real root of the problem.

    74. It makes sense that slavery and environmental destruction would go hand in hand

      Again, people not valuing other's lives also don't value our environment.

    75. Cellphones have become electronic umbilical cords connecting us with our children, our partners

      This relates to what I did in Module 1. Our society has become obsessed with the digital world and portray themselves differently online than they really are sometimes. This disassociates us from reality and sort of dehumanizes us. We see others just as their profiles and don't value them as people as much anymore. Very sad.

    76. Our view of cemetery monuments is normally restricted to what we see when we bury our loved ones or visit their graves.

      This makes me think of Washington DC in a whole new way....

    77. Slavery is a great way to keep your costs down

      I wouldn't say that its a "great way." It is very unethical and I think most people would agree that they would rather pay more for something ethically made.

    78. the quarries themselves are illegal

      Which is probably why slavery is used to mine them. As awful as it sounds, it doesn't matter if someone else gets in trouble with the law as long as you are making profit. Many of the slave owners probably don't care about risking their saves.

    79. Surprisingly, slavery is at the root of much of the natural world’s destruction.

      If we get rid of slavery, we can not only help find jobs for the individuals who are working as slaves, but we can help the environment.

    80. We pull food from the earth, of course, but we also pull our cellphones from the earth, our clothing, our computers, our flat-screen televisions, our cars—it all comes from the earth, ultimately.

      This is true and for that reason we must care for the planet and think about where our minerals are being sourced from and what effect that has on the individuals producing the material, as well as the environmental impact.

    81. It makes sense that slavery and environmental destruction would go hand in hand.

      Two horrible things, yet both are legal worldwide.

    82. If slavery were an American state it would have the population of California and the economic output of the District of Columbia, but it would be the world’s third-largest producer of CO2

      But that's the thing. Slavery isn't legal in America so companies choose to use slavery produced minerals abroad. That should be illegal.

    83. Slaves are producing many of the things we buy, and in the process they are forced to destroy our shared environment, increase global warming, and wipe out protected species.

      You would think slavery would be illegal in 2018, but unfortunately it is not. As consumers, we must make educated purchases.

    84. Cellphones have become electronic umbilical cords connecting us with our children, our partners, and our parents with an immediacy and reliability hardly known before

      This is true, but as consumers we have to be aware of where we are getting our devices from.

    85. We know that, even though it comes all the way from India, slave-produced granite is cheap.

      It shouldn't be produced by slaves. I would pay more for ethically sourced minerals.

    86. Slavery is a great way to keep your costs down

      It is, but it is unethical. Like I mentioned earlier, I would rather pay more knowing it was ethically made.

    87. Slavery in granite quarries is a family affair enforced by a tricky scheme based on debt. When a poor family comes looking for work, the quarry bosses are ready to help with an “advance” on wages to help the family settle in. The rice and beans they eat, the scrap stones they use to build a hut on the side of the quarry, the hammers and crowbars they need to do their work, all of it is provided by the boss and added to the family’s debt. Just when the family feels they may have finally found some security, they are being locked into hereditary slavery.

      This is not how it should be. No one should be tricked into slavery, especially for phones. I would rather pay more, knowing that my phone was ethically made than be made by slaves.

    88. We think of Steve Jobs in his black turtleneck as the origin of our iPhones.

      I think this is interesting because when most people think of iPhones, they think of Steve Jobs, but now after playing Phone Story and learning about iPhones, I think of slavery.

    1. the Video Computer System was manufactured in Sunnyvale, California

      And then I can post a comment on this now.

    2. move to compete directly with the Channel F, Atari named the machine the Video Computer System (or VCS for short), as the Channel F

      Add your comment here.

    3. $804 adjusted for inflation

      That's a lot of money!

  3. Mar 2018
    1. If you were a young, strong-looking African-American male, you were fair game. Brought before a local justice of the peace or sheriff, the prisoner would invariably be found guilty and ordered to pay a fine well beyond his means. At that point the sheriff, another official, or a local businessman would step forward and say that they would pay the fine, and in exchange the convict would have to work off the debt under their control.

      This is so sad. Individuals would be targeted for something such as their strength and would be brought in for a "crime" such as hitching a ride on the road. This system is extremely messed up an sad. The people they would target were determined by the number of workers they needed. This is sad that people were targeted in this way.

    2. Slaves are producing many of the things we buy, and in the process they are forced to destroy our shared environment, increase global warming, and wipe out protected species

      It is interesting that the first section talked about tombstones. It leads up to the section talking about CO2 which is harmful to our planet's environment, and harmful to us.

  4. Feb 2018
    1. Homes and livelihoods lost, these people and communities are easily abused.

      It is sad that slavery still happens today in some countries.

    2. Slaves are producing many of the things we buy, and in the process they are forced to destroy our shared environment, increase global warming, and wipe out protected species

      This has been proven in China with many citizens, including children, being forced to work long hours with measly pay. China is a major manufacturer for dozens of countries, and even though we know the Chinese government is mistreating it's citizens, why do we continue to use China as a key country in making our products?

    3. quizzed

      quizzed or interrogated?

    4. It’s just over one hundred years later and anti-slavery workers are back in the Congo; the sense of déjà vu is strong.

      If we're really returning to the way that things were 100+ years ago that probably means we need to try something different to prevent it, instead of returning to this state of "déjà vu."

    5. We think of Steve Jobs in his black turtleneck as the origin of our iPhones.

      We can't forget the blue jeans. Those were the other half of his iconic look.

    6. Leaving aside what this says about the high cost of dying

      If granite is so expensive, then why don't we just cremate everyone. If the family would like the remains, give them a jar made from material based on their financial funds. If the family does not want the remains, use it as fertilizer for plants and trees.

    7. bonobos are known for resolving conflicts peacefully, through sexy cuddling rather than violence—a trick humans haven’t quite mastered

      Could you imagine if this was how people resolved things? Presidential elections would be much more interesting.

    8. a force that is not democratic and has never tried to liberate anyone or anything

      How ironic...

    9. The idea that people once had to call a telephone wired to a building in the hope of reaching a person who might be there seems quaint, clunky, and a little absurd to our children

      Dang kids and their TECK-KNOLL-OH-GEE

    10. There’s always been a moral case for stopping slavery; now there’s an environmental reason too

      Unfortunately, there's not an economical reason which would be the only reason the people and nations in power would actually care.

    11. we don’t need more laws. We need to end slavery

      This sounds interesting because it almost seems like to stop slavery, we have to go against the law ourselves.

    12. It makes sense that slavery and environmental destruction would go hand in hand.

      If they don't care about their people, why would they care about their environment?

    13. There’s an intimacy in the stone we use to mark the final resting place of someone we love; there’s another sort of intimacy in the less obvious but still essential minerals that let us speak with our loved ones on phones or write to them on computers

      The relation of slave labored granite to cell phones is interesting and certainly a great segue for the article.

    14. these men were appalled when they saw footage from the quarries

      So they didn't know exactly where they were getting their material from, they just knew it was cheap and didn't ask questions.

    15. People have found it easy to just walk into the forest and start mining

      It's difficult to believe that this is public knowledge, but nothing can be done about it. I understand that these are third world countries, but if this keeps being ignored, they will remain that way forever.

    16. The protected state and national forest parks rest on top of granite deposits

      It's amazing to think that, just because it's in a third world country, the authorities can be bribed so easily while in Europe and the US parks are (overall) effectively protected. There's a sort of cycle that's happening to influence this type of behavior on both sides (the importers and exporters).

    17. gles, like wate

      write something here. add links

  5. Dec 2017
    1. Improving myself, everyday

      Digital identity is sparsely identified. Would include social media in analysis of digital identity. What was shown mostly just shows understanding of how to operate the basics of Wordpress. Good start to domain. Would be good to have landing content for the home page. Also, play with the theme to make it more visually engaging!

    1. Official Website

      Good PDF embed! Would also suggest having some content on your homepage. LinkedIn connection is good, I get the impression that employment is an important aspect of digital identity. Domain operates mainly like a resume.

  6. Jul 2017
    1. "Amazon should be ashamed that they pay their worker so little that they have to camp out in the dead of winter to make ends meet"

      Again, no one is forcing these workers to take these jobs, i am sure Amaozn makes them aware of their wages before they start.

      "the least they should do is pay the proper living wage"

      This is the real issue at hand, the fact that they do not pay what Rennie belives is a proper living wage.

    2. "One worker, who did not wish to be named, was reluctant to speak to The Courier but did describe the firm as a "poor employer" and criticised working conditions at the Fife site"

      This is the only real first hand account of the feelings of the workers and it is by an unamed person who gives with a general didain for his job. It is a temp job at a warhouse at peak season, it is not expected to be an enjoyable job.

    3. "He had opted to stay in a tent as it was easier and cheaper than commuting for his home in Perth"

      I think this shows his living situation as a choice, there is no rule stating they have to pay them "livable wages" and no one is forcing them to work a job that is that far from their home in the first palce.

    1. or a range of issues, professionals in a given area might have better insight than researchers, especially where question deal with common practice.

      Why people always view wikipedia as an unreliable source. Anyone has access to post to wikipedia which means that yes a person who is very knowledgable can post, but also someone who does't have much knowledge can too.

    2. the New York Times is thought by many to have a center-left bias and the Wall Street Journal a center-right bias, and USA Today is prone to centrist bias

      like when people say Fox is a more conservative news show and CNN is more liberal. It's not even if the information presented is accurate, how its presented can determine accuracy.

    3. the trustworthy publications are the ones saying things that are correct, and we define what “correct” is what we believe to be true. A moment’s reflection will show the flaw in this way of thinking.

      I think this is because we already go into reading stuff with preconceived notions so when we read things that line up with these notions we view that information as true and agree with it automatically.

    1. Many people are taken that way and then die there from disease or cave-ins, and your family never even knows you’ve died; you just disappear.

      This is so sad. My heart goes out to all the families that have experienced this and all the workers that have been lost due to this cruel scam.

    2. Yours is probably within arm’s reach right now. Our phones are so ubiquitous, we tend to forget that they only arrived on the scene about twenty years ago.

      It's sad to admit but my phone truly is right next to me the majority of the time. A lot of people including my self are very dependent on this technology.

    3. Surprisingly, slavery is at the root of much of the natural world’s destruction.

      I truly didn't even think this was a contributing cause. It really is surprising.

    4. Slaves are producing many of the things we buy, and in the process they are forced to destroy our shared environment, increase global warming, and wipe out protected species

      Every one is so quick to say slavery doesn't still exist but it does...

    5. Cellphones have become electronic umbilical cords connecting us with our children, our partners, and our parents with an immediacy and reliability hardly known before.

      We are so lucky to be able to communicate with loved ones whenever we want through the use of a laptop or cell phone. I can't believe people used to have to wait weeks to get a reply from a loved one via mail!

    6. The red granite tombstones that sell for $500 to $1,000 in the United States, and more in Europe, are purchased in bulk from India for as little as $50, plus a US import duty of just 3.7 percent.

      This is so sad...it's crazy to think that when someone is grieving a lose they are getting scammed for tons of money. It's absolutely ridiculous that funeral homes will charge anywhere from $450 to $950 more for a tombstone.

    7. The red granite tombstones that sell for $500 to $1,000 in the United States, and more in Europe, are purchased in bulk from India for as little as $50, plus a US import duty of just 3.7 percent.
    8. This is so unfortunate. My mom had her house built just two years ago and the builder told her that if she wanted different granite counter tops than the ones being offered she would have to pay a lot more. The profit made on granite is ridiculous and it all comes down to the good old supply and demand. People want the durable yet classy granite and they will pay to get it.

    1. And Kathy says to her, kind of sharply, she says, "You should have gone to the labor board. That's what they're there for. You should have gone to the labor board." And the woman says, "I did. I went to the labor board, and I told them about my problem. And they took down my name and my address and my company. And they took my name, and they put it on the blacklist, and they fired me."

      When there are no rules enforced within a big company mistreatment occurs. If only companies like Foxconn had an HR that truly looked out for the well being of employees. China is more concerned with getting products shipped than how employees are treated.

    2. I talk to an older man with leathery skin. His right hand is twisted up into a claw. It was crushed in a metal press at Foxconn. He says he didn't receive any medical attention, and it healed this way. And then when he was too slow, they fired him.

      It's ridiculous that companies overseas are allowed to do this...something like this would never fly in the United States.

    3. And you need to know that this is eminently avoidable. If these people were rotated monthly on their jobs, this would not happen. But that would require someone to care. That would require someone at Foxconn and the other suppliers to care. That would require someone at Apple and Dell and the other customers to care. Currently, no one in the ecosystem cares enough to even enforce that.

      Sadly this statement seems to be true.

    4. If they can't do it, there are people behind them, watching them. And there are cameras watching both sets of people, and people watching the camera as they lock it down. They sharpen it to a fine, sharp edge every hour. And those hours are long.

      That must be so unnerving to have someone watching your every mood every minute of every hour.

    5. They don't really check ages. The outside companies do have inspections. But the workers told me Foxconn always knows when there is going to be an inspection. So what they do then-- they don't even check ages then

      Daisey is claiming that Foxconn never checks the age of workers.

    6. They don't really check ages. The outside companies do have inspections. But the workers told me Foxconn always knows when there is going to be an inspection. So what they do then-- they don't even check ages then.
    7. 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.

      Sounds like jail, perhaps?

    8. , there has been an epidemic of suicides at the Foxconn plant.

      Reminder of the game we played in class.

    9. Because the air in Shenzhen-- it's not good in Hong Kong, but when you get to Shenzhen, you can actually feel it, like a booted foot pressing down on your chest

      A vivid image of the damage that is being done to the environment