iPhone workers today are 25 times more exploited than textile workers of 19th century England
I do not agree with the authors, who are using a Marxist analysis, on calling Eeastern European countries before 1990 'socialist'. Their labbelling throws dust in readers' eyes.
If those countries were socialist, what do today's socialists are fighting for then? And if those countries were socialist, it is more of an argument for the defenders of capitalism: "if that was socialism, we don't want it."
The Rate of Exploitation
(The Case of the iPhone)
Related:
"Sucking up" (Apple's app and Hong Kong protests)
I do not agree with the authors, who are using a Marxist analysis, on calling Eeastern European countries before 1990 'socialist'. Their labbelling throws dust in readers' eyes.
If those countries were socialist, what do today's socialists are fighting for then? And if those countries were socialist, it is more of an argument for the defenders of capitalism: "if that was socialism, we don't want it."
The Rate of Exploitation
(The Case of the iPhone)
Related:
"Sucking up" (Apple's app and Hong Kong protests)